What we can learn from the rescued children
Reflecting on the Kindertransport has led Daniel Finkelstein to think about refugee crises at large
We must not shield children from the diverse ways of living a British life
Exposing pupils to different ideas does not need to undermine a school's Jewish character, Daniel Finkelstein says
From Corbyn's point of view, Jews don't find a place as oppressed people
Daniel Finkelstein tries to see the world from the Labour leader's perspective
Farewell to the school that changed our lives
As a Liberal Jew, Daniel Finkelstein had concerns about sending his sons to a United Synagogue school. But now their journey is over, he believes it gave them all something precious
The man who kept Holocaust memory alive
We've all heard stories about the Holocaust, says Daniel Finkelstein, but it wasn't always so. Sir Ben Helfgott helped to change all that
Ben Helfgott, the man who kept Holocaust memory alive
We've all heard stories about the Holocaust but it wasn't always so
That mysterious sense of Jewish connection
Some of my best friends are Jewish, jokes Daniel Finkelstein
This Seder was no political error by Corbyn
This is less about antisemitism than it is about rows, writes Daniel Finkelstein.
Preservation is right at the heart of Judaism
Our heritage is vanishing, and we need to do something says JC columnist Daniel Finkelstein
When the comfort blanket needs to be changed
Daniel Finkelstein reflects on his decision to move shuls
Turning out the light and keeping the memories
Daniel Finkelstein writes movingly on a universal, but rarely-discussed rite of passage
Single-sex ruling does not make singular sense
There is a delicate balance to be struck between allowing faiths to maintain their own traditions and ensuring children are educated to be part of mainstream British life, writes Daniel Finkelstein
British Christianity is no longer bad news
I think we are going to have problems because Britain is no longer a Christian country, writes Daniel Finkelstein.
Orthodoxy should be able to evolve
The condemnation of Rabbi Dweck is a grotesque insult to many of our friends and family who are gay and an attack on civic equality, writes Daniel Finkelstein
What are we going to do now?
Many Jews, on the left, and justly proud of being so, tragically found they could not vote for Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour. Some did anyway, but many didn’t, writes Daniel Finkelstein.
Corbyn must lose — for our sake
There will be a time for people to go back to Labour, but that time isn’t now, writes Daniel Finkelstein
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