Daniel Gordis

Daniel Gordis (born 1959) is an American-born Israeli author and speaker, who is best known as a fierce defender of Israel. He is Senior Vice President and Koret Distinguished Fellow at Shalem College in Jerusalem, where he is also Chair of the Core Curriculum. The author of a dozen books on Judaism and Israel, and twice awarded the National Jewish Book Award (including Book of the Year for his history of Israel), The Forward has called Gordis "one of the most influential Israel analysts around." He was once recognized as a leading Conservative rabbi, but is no longer publicly associated with that movement. Slightly left of center when he arrived in Israel in 1998, his writings suggest a gradual move to the right. Most people now consider him a moderate conservative.

Daniel Gordis, 2018

Gordis has been harshly critical of American Jews who criticize Israeli government policies, sometimes publicly accusing them of either betraying Israel and the Jewish people (as in the case of Rabbi Sharon Brous[1]), having insufficient love for Israel (Rabbi Jill Jacobs[2]) or being a traitor to the Jewish people (Peter Beinart[3]). He has also extended this assessment to rabbinical seminaries and their students.[4]

Biography

Daniel Gordis was born on July 5, 1959, in New York City, but was raised in Baltimore where he attended public high school. He studied Political Science at Columbia University, and received a master's degree and rabbinic ordination from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. Gordis and his wife moved to California in 1984, and while there, he received his Ph.D. from the University of Southern California. He immigrated to Israel in 1998. From 1998 to 2007, he worked at the Mandel Foundation and the Mandel Leadership Institute in Jerusalem. He joined the Shalem Center in 2007 as Senior Vice President and Koret Distinguished Fellow at Shalem College.[5]

Academic career

While living in Los Angeles, Gordis worked at the University of Judaism for almost fifteen years, and was the founding Dean of its Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies, the first rabbinical college on the West Coast of the United States. He and his family moved to Israel in 1998. In 2007, after nine years as vice president of the Mandel Foundation and director of its Leadership Institute, Gordis joined the Shalem Center to join the team founding Israel's first liberal arts college.

Gordis has written for The New York Times, The New Republic, The New York Times Magazine, Moment, Tikkun, the Jerusalem Post, Haaretz and Conservative Judaism. He is now a regular columnist for the Jerusalem Post, for which he writes a regular column called "A Dose of Nuance," and for Bloomberg View.

Published works

Books

The book won the 2008 National Jewish Book Award under the Contemporary Jewish Life and Practice category.[6]

The book has been called by UK-based freelance writer and critic Stephen Daisely "the gold standard text in Begin studies".[7] Critics beg to disagree, such as Samuel Thrope who writes "The book is a paragon of overweening pride: smug, self-satisfied, convinced of its own conclusions, and disdainful of its presumed critics" and that the "black-and-white picture of [Ben-Gurion and Begin] is a caricature that does not do justice to either figure."[8]

Articles

Film

Gordis participated in the documentary film Indestructible about a man suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, in which he discussed theological explanations for human suffering.[9][10]

gollark: It's basically just "say arbitrary things and they happen and also you lose energy somehow".
gollark: Actual lasers. High-energy pulsed ones.
gollark: At GTech™ Fictional Site-1032483 we mostly just use orbital laser strikes against mages.
gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/426116061415342080/834064012337479750/image0.png?width=338&height=422
gollark: Worse variants of spells were secretly disseminated by the rulers of magical Britain.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.