Every Day Is Tu B’Shevat at Adat Ari El’s ‘Green Adat’

Every Day Is Tu B’Shevat at Adat Ari El’s ‘Green Adat’













Israelis expected the war would end when Hamas is eradicated. They now have to face a different reality. After two years of blood, sweat and many tears, the enemy is still out there, lurking in the dark, waiting to fight another day.

In this selection of essays, op-eds and speeches, the first piece written six months after his son’s murder, Pearl gives us words that are, yes, sometimes heartbreaking, but also funny, profound, scrappy, informative and strikingly prescient.

My hope is that we, too, embrace the kind of wrestling that leads to blessing.

This is unmistakably a Jewish story: the mother is no preacher of martyrdom.

We can perhaps avoid fear, but we cannot avoid anxiety. However, we don’t need to get rid of it; we need to pass through it. But what’s on the other side?


It’s only through fully recognizing our individualism that we can be unified as a people. And it’s only through nourishing the soul that the bravery, nonconformity, and the true spirit and resilience of the Maccabees can be achieved.

It is truly in darkness, the night which starts the Jewish day, that we come to face our fears and uncertainties, to find the glow of light that reignites faith, hope and possibility.

As we mark the 45th anniversary of Bayh-Dole, we must remember its origins: a bipartisan solution that allowed science and taxpayer-funded research to deliver public benefits.

The conclusion of 2025 is an excellent occasion to step back and reflect on our failings.

Rahm Emanuel is one of four Jewish political leaders seriously considering a run for the Democratic presidential nomination, at a time when antizionism is growing and antisemitism is coagulating.

Will our descendants 100 years from now be living proud, happy and meaningful Jewish lives? This will largely depend on choices we make today.

Once Zionism is presented as a political stance rather than as the modern expression of Jewish peoplehood, antizionism is easily misread as ordinary political disagreement.

She understood immediately what few had yet recognized: a people cannot rebuild their homeland while battling diseases that modern medicine already knew how to prevent.


Marwan Barghouti is not the first killer to enjoy Paul Simon’s friendly attention. That distinction belongs to Salvador Agron.

“Crash of the Heavens” is a page turner. Century is able to transmit pride and pain on the page, like few can.

The way far too many valorize evil and demonize the good is truly breathtaking.

Over a career spanning more than 60 years, Gehry designed concert halls, museums, academic buildings and public spaces that shifted how people talked about architecture, Los Angeles and sometimes city planning itself.

With Zionism under siege, it’s time to delegitimize the antizionist movement.by exposing its hypocrisy. Who can trust a movement that betrays its own cause?