Posts tagged PJ Grisar
World Series Past And Present: Yankees, Dodgers And Baseball’s ‘Great Hebrew Hope’

(INTERVIEW) For the first time since 2009, the New York Yankees have made it to the World Series, where they will play an erstwhile favorite team of New York Jews, the Los Angeles Dodgers, formerly of Brooklyn. The fabled New York history of America’s pastime deserves another look as the Yankees and Dodgers face off in the 2024 World Series, a bicoastal series that will showcase the best of baseball.  

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Columbus Was Genetically A Sephardic Jew: Does It Make Him A Jewish Hero?

(ANALYSIS) To discover that Christopher Columbus, long whispered to have Jewish heritage, had markers of Sephardic DNA is to me about as monumental as learning the Earth is round circa 1492. In other words, it’s a belated conclusion that should effectively change little about how we understand the world today — even if some would have it otherwise.

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‘Hot Rabbi Autumn’: Why The Sexy Jewish Scholar Is Having A Moment

There is a long history of hot rabbis on our pages and screens dating back to the dawn of the rabbinic tradition. There are manhood-measuring contests in the Talmud, smolder-eyed gazes from young Hasidic leaders in Yiddish literature and Ben Stiller as a very eligible junior rabbi in a cult hit rom-com.

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Why Lena Dunham and Jesse Eisenberg made Holocaust tourism movies

In lieu of 3 million Jews murdered there, Poland takes its place on the map as a mass grave and, increasingly in films, a transformative locale for those hoping to eat, pray, cry their way into a sense of self-understanding. “Treasure,” directed by Julia von Heinz and adapted from Lily Brett’s 2001 novel “Too Many Men,” is one of three new movies where heritage tours form the backdrop for fraught relationships, grief and Jewish people’s search for meaning.

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What Houdini, Coney Island And Space Aliens Have To Do With The Book Of Exodus

Every year at Passover we are commanded to imagine ourselves leaving Egypt — Joel Silverstein painted himself into the picture. In “The Brighton Beach Bible” — an art book with narrative commentary — Silverstein envisions the boardwalks and abandoned attractions of his childhood in Brooklyn as the staging ground for the Exodus and 40 years in the wilderness.

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