04/29/2026
Can a tent hold everything and still be a safe haven?
In our effort to be inclusive, have we forgotten that Jewish identity requires boundaries?
When we talk about the “Jewish tent,” we often emphasize its warmth, openness, and moral imperative to welcome difference. That impulse matters. But it is not the whole story.
Judaism is not just a feeling of belonging. It is a structure, held up by core anchors such as collective memory, peoplehood, land, text, tradition, and ritual.
When those anchors are untethered or gradually chipped away in the name of inclusion, especially by ideologies that ultimately undermine the tent itself, such as anti‑Zionism, a hard question emerges:
Can those who reject the foundational premises of Jewish peoplehood still claim refuge inside the tent?
My latest piece explores why anti‑Zionism is not merely critique, but rather a departure from the shared foundations that hold the Jewish people together.
Read the full perspective here:
👉 https://jewishgps.online/2026/04/24/when-the-storm-comes/