Why it's so wrong, and yet so troubling Delta's deal with Saudi Arabian Airlines brings inconvenient truths to light Remains in English well are those of persecuted Jews Preet Bharara vs. Raj Rajaratnam in 'The New Yorker' New political reality leads to divergent views in primary field American novelist's defense raises questions about the imminent flotilla | | Władysław Szlengel, a forgotten Polish Jewish poet who wrote a verse celebrating Joe Louis' 1938 victory over Max Schmeling, was once a celebrated and searing voice of the Warsaw Ghetto BY DAVID MARGOLICK How is it that books, especially books on historic topics, take forever to finish? One reason is that long after authors have gathered more than enough material, we still research compulsively—ostensibly for that precious but maddeningly elusive last detail, in reality to postpone that moment when we must let go. So, we turn over ever smaller stones. And sometimes, miraculously, beneath them we find gold. More | Seduced by lower rents and edgy bars, a former Hasid moves to hipster Brooklyn. But what he gains in nightlife, he loses in camaraderie. What happened to nosy neighbors? More BY SHULEM DEEN | | Blumi Lazar's nuptials—she's the daughter of Berel Lazar, the chief rabbi of Russia—attracted 1,500 people to one of Moscow's biggest parks, a scene that was unimaginable just 20 years ago More BY JULIA IOFFE | | Doreen Seidler-Feller, a Los Angeles psychologist, observant Jew, and rabbi's wife, has a thriving practice as a sex therapist to the Orthodox More BY REBECCA SPENCE | | The punk icon Ian MacKaye always wanted to create a tribe. Now an elder statesman of D.C. hardcore, the musician talks about organized religion, breaking toilets, and making peace with his mother's death. More | |
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