My great Aunt-Jennie was Jewish.As a child, I recall my parents teasing her, when a Jew became the focus of media attention: Aunt Jennie, is this good for the Jews?
Bewigged in a Manger
Hidden in "plain" sight
Radically humble, oriented towards group consensus rather than individual choice, the Amish are a challenge for the reporters who write about them.
Tony Blair, double agent?
Reawakening blue zip codes?
My high school, started by an Anglican canon and a Jewish atheist, started life blocks from Plymouth Congregational Church, former church of the 19th-century rock star abolitionist preacher Henry Ward Beecher. The same neighborhood houses the Watchtower, ground zero for Jehovah’s Witnesses, and, more recently is home to the roughly 10,000-member Brooklyn Tabernacle.
Beneath the big picture
What happens if you vehemently disagree with your denomination and decide to stay — at least for now?
Finding God in the margins
Lost in translation?
Sometimes an artist appals believers by presenting a public work they construe as libelous or offensive. Those showings normally garner a fair amount of publicity.
Crashing the Party?
In the aftermath of the election, there’s been a lot of coverage of Obama’s compelling Internet strategy, and how he might leverage online links with his millions of supporters while in the White House.