Adam S. Ferziger talks to JNS about his new book, "Agents of Change."The post How American immigrants contributed to a new ...
In 1947, more than 400 million people in British India stood on the brink of freedom – but sectarian mistrust, rival national ...
In some ways, Thanksgiving is a tradition that unites Americans. But the classic image of the Pilgrims obscures important ...
Mattingly: For Orthodox Christians in America, the 20th century was shaped by waves of believers fleeing wars, revolutions and persecution elsewhere.
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For decades, liberal denominations have permitted women to be ordained. Orthodox Judaism, however, has largely prohibited it. Yet attitudes toward women’s study of rabbinic texts are changing.
For Orthodox Christians in America, the 20th century was shaped by waves of believers fleeing wars, revolutions and persecution in lands such as Greece, Syria, Russia and Romania.
From Wrangell, Alaska, to Oatman, Arizona, you'll be surprised to see what these places looked like a century ago.
Straddling the Rhine River and offering a glorious blend of Swiss, German and French culture, this city satisfies history ...
During World War II, MAGA was manifested in the Japanese internment camps in America and in the ethnic cleansing of Jews in ...
Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read. In that dystopian novel, published in 1993 and set in the mid-2020s, the United States still exists but has been warped by global ...
A new exhibit at American Writers Museum on Michigan Avenue has the words of Flannery O’Connor, Malcolm X, Harold Ramis and others about how they felt about religion and spirituality.