News

The move by Adath Jeshurun’s leadership marks a deliberate departure from the stricter standards long upheld by the ...
Instead of sending students to kibbutzim and small villages for volunteer work, the four-decade-old Nativ track now sends them to the White City's trendy Florentin neighborhood ...
Q&A with Harvard alum Dubowski, whose film follows Rabbi Amichai Lau-Lavie, a descendant of 38 generations of Orthodox rabbis ...
The Conservative movement is relaunching its Israel gap-year program in 2026, after shuttering operations completely over a ...
Conservative Judaism is a form of traditional Judaism that falls halfway between Orthodox Judaism and Reform Judaism. It is sometimes described as traditional Judaism without fundamentalism.
Conservative Judaism, by contrast, has a central body responsible for deciding what the halacha is – the Rabbinical Assembly.
For every person who has joined Conservative Judaism, nearly three people who were raised in the Conservative movement have left it. By contrast, Reform Judaism – now the largest American Jewish ...
A small, vocal group of Conservative rabbis is pushing the movement to accept marriages between Jews and non-Jews. The fight is really about the future of the religion.
Conservative Judaism prohibits officiating at, attending or otherwise celebrating an intermarriage, but a number of Conservative rabbis want some or all of those rules to change.
(RNS) As Conservative Judaism approaches its 100th birthday, it confronts a set of statistics that bode poorly for its future as the anchor in the center of American Jewish life.