podcast

The Jewish Question—Two historians try to understand antisemitism, one question at a time.

Co-Hosts Avinoam Patt and Lila Corwin Berman discover the stories and scholars to help make sense of antisemitism today. They start with a theory: the answer to understanding (and perhaps fighting) antisemitism is only as good as the questions one asks. And then they search far and wide for the best questions and the people who can ask and answer them.

And spoiler: Avi, Lila, and their guests don’t always agree. In fact, that’s the plot, or at least part of it. How scholars and other people can passionately disagree while remaining curious about one another and the world, one question at a time.  

EPISODES

Launching Fall 2025

What is a Jewish Question? Jewish questions have been at the heart of Jewish intellectual inquiry from the beginning. Good questions have been at the heart of Jewish wrestling with God, with tradition, with obligations to ourselves and our fellow humans, and more. Am I my brother's keeper? If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am only for myself, what am I? And if not now, when? Why is this night different from all other nights? Is it good for the Jews?

Beginning in the late-eighteenth century and the advent of the modern period, political thinkers began to discuss a different type of "Jewish Question." Could Jews maintain a distinctive identity while integrating into other emerging nations? Were Jews able to become British, French, American for all civic and political purposes, retaining their Jewishness only as a private expression of their religion? These questions were both about the nature of Jews and the nature of modern life. And they often overlapped with questions about other groups: women, enslaved people, colonial subjects, and so on. According to some historians, liberal citizenship answered the Jewish question; it proved that Jews as individuals could seamlessly fit into national political systems. Theodor Herzl, on the other hand, proposed a "modern solution to the Jewish question:" Zionism.

And the Nazis produced a horrific Final Solution to their own interpretation of the Jewish question: complete and total annihilation. Nearly 80 years after World War II and the creation of the  state of Israel, and almost 250 years after the American Revolution, it would seem we are no closer to answering the Jewish Question than we were at the beginning of the modern period. Despite attempts to answer it, the Jewish Question may persist in ongoing preoccupations about the nature of Jewish difference and the prospect of freedom and equality for Jews and other people.  

SUBMIT A Question

Have a Jewish Question?

Submit your question or antisemitism/Jewish studies topic for Avi and Lila to review on the podcast. Please note, not all questions may be answered or may be answered via email instead of on the podcast.

About the Podcast

Meet the Hosts

Man with glasses and gray sweater smiling at camera with bookshelves in background.

Avinoam Patt, PhD

CSA Rennert Director, Maurice Greenberg Professor of Holocaust Studies at New York University
Portrait of a woman with wavy brown hair wearing a dark blue sweater.

Lila Berman, PhD

Professor of American Jewish History and Director of the Goldstein-Goren Center for American Jewish History
Connect

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podcast@nyucsa.org

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