The books came out of Crown Heights, and so did the boy. Joseph Telushkin (b. 1948) grew up in Brooklyn in a family that sat closer to the center of the Lubavitch world than almost any family outside it. His father, Solomon Telushkin, an accountant, kept the books for Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902-1994), the seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe, and before that for the Rebbe’s father-in-law, the sixth Rebbe. His grandfather, a Talmudic scholar, was an intimate of both men. The Telushkins were not Lubavitchers. They were something rarer: trusted outsiders inside a court. Sixty years later, when publishers wanted a biography of the Rebbe that the wider world might read, that childhood proximity became the asset no academic historian could match. The Chabad leadership opened its people to the accountant’s son. They knew the family. They knew the name on the ledgers.
That is the pattern of Telushkin’s career. He stands close enough to the inner rooms of traditional Judaism to speak with authority and far enough outside any single camp to be believed by everyone else. He built one of the largest teaching careers in modern American Jewish life on that position. He wrote the reference book that a generation of Jews, converts, journalists, and rabbis reached for first. He turned the laws of speech into a national talking point that reached the floor of the United States Senate. He wrote mystery novels, a film about the Holocaust, and a television episode for Kirk Douglas (1916-2020). Newsweek listed him among the fifty most influential rabbis in America every year from 1997 on. Talk magazine named him one of the fifty best speakers in the country. He did all this without a pulpit of consequence, without a university chair, and without founding a movement. His institution was the book, the lecture hall, and the airplane.
The Yeshivah of Flatbush in the early 1960s ran on a bet: that a school could teach Talmud in the morning and Shakespeare in the afternoon and produce Jews at home in both. Its graduates went to Columbia and to rabbinical school, sometimes both. In tenth grade, Telushkin met a tall, argumentative classmate named Dennis Prager (b. 1948). The two became inseparable. They argued about God, antisemitism, and why the Judaism they saw around them failed to answer the questions of the Jews they knew. Prager went to Brooklyn College and then to Columbia’s School of International Affairs. Telushkin took ordination at Yeshiva University and studied Jewish history at Columbia. The friendship became a workshop.
Their first product appeared in 1975, when both men were twenty-six: Eight Questions People Ask About Judaism, expanded later as The Nine Questions People Ask About Judaism. The premise was blunt. Educated American Jews had inherited an identity without a syllabus. They could not say how Judaism differed from Christianity, whether a doubter could be a good Jew, or how to account for religious Jews who behaved badly. Telushkin and Prager answered the questions the rabbis of the era ducked. The book sold and kept selling. It became the volume that Hillel directors handed to college students and that rabbis handed to intermarrying couples. It made the case that Judaism was a rational, demanding, ethical system rather than an ethnic mood.
Prager ran the Brandeis-Bardin Institute in Simi Valley from 1976 to 1983, and Telushkin worked with him there as director of education. The Institute drew secular Los Angeles Jews for weekend retreats. Telushkin learned his trade on that ground: how to hold a room of skeptics, when to reach for a joke, when to reach for a Talmudic story, how to make an audience feel the tradition owed them answers and they owed it attention. In 1983 the two published Why the Jews?: The Reason for Antisemitism, arguing that hatred of Jews recurs across centuries and civilizations because Judaism challenges the values of its host societies. The argument had teeth. Antisemitism, they claimed, is a response to what Jews affirm, chosenness, ethical monotheism, national distinctiveness, and calls for Jews to shed those affirmations are themselves a symptom of the disease.
The partnership then split into two careers. Prager took to radio and became a conservative political commentator, later a founder of PragerU. Telushkin stayed with the tradition. He kept politics at the margin of his work and put Jewish literacy and Jewish ethics at the center. Of the two Flatbush boys, Prager reached more people. Telushkin reached deeper.
Before the books, there was the movement. As a Columbia student, Telushkin led in the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry, the scrappy activist network that forced the plight of Soviet Jews onto the American Jewish agenda when the establishment organizations preferred quiet diplomacy. The work sent him to the Soviet Union. He met refuseniks in cramped Moscow apartments where a knock on the door meant either a fellow Jew or the KGB. He met Andrei Sakharov (1921-1989), the physicist who traded the privileges of the Soviet elite for the life of a dissident. The KGB put Telushkin on its list of anti-Soviet agents.
The episode shaped everything after. Telushkin’s ethics never floated free of history. He came of age watching a totalitarian state try to erase Jewish religious life, and watching Jewish students in New York fight it with pickets, telephone trees, and smuggled prayer books. When he later wrote that words are actions, that memory carries obligation, that Jewish peoplehood binds a Beverly Hills producer to a Leningrad engineer, he was not composing sermons. He was reporting.
Jewish Literacy: The Most Important Things to Know About the Jewish Religion, Its People, and Its History appeared in 1991 and did for American Jews what no seminary had managed. The book runs past 700 pages, broken into 346 short chapters: Abraham, the Exodus, Hillel, the Talmud, Maimonides, the blood libel, Hasidism, the Dreyfus affair, Zionism, the Holocaust, Israeli politics, lashon hara, tzedakah. Each entry runs two to four pages. A reader can enter anywhere.
The design answered a feeling before it answered a question. Millions of American Jews carried a private embarrassment: they were educated in everything except the one thing that named them. They held graduate degrees and could not read the alphabet of their grandparents. They knew Freud and not Rashi. Telushkin never scolded that reader. He set a table. The book became one of the best-selling volumes on Judaism of the 1990s and 2000s, and it remains a foundation text for Jews, prospective converts, interfaith families, and non-Jews who need to know what a mezuzah is or what happened at Yavneh. Rabbis across the denominations assign it. Journalists keep it within reach. Its success made Telushkin a category of one: the man you read first.
He extended the franchise. Jewish Wisdom (1994) collected the tradition’s teachings on money, sex, anger, death, and God. Biblical Literacy (1997) walked through the Hebrew Bible the way Jewish Literacy walked through the civilization. The Book of Jewish Values (2000) offered a teaching for every day of the year. Jewish Humor: What the Best Jewish Jokes Say About the Jews (1992) treated the joke as a diagnostic instrument, a compressed record of Jewish insecurity, argument, and survival. A people reveals itself in what it laughs at, and Telushkin read the jokes the way other scholars read responsa.
One argument runs under all the books, and it surfaced fully in Words That Hurt, Words That Heal: How to Choose Words Wisely and Well (1996). Jewish law devotes an enormous literature to the ethics of speech: the prohibitions on gossip, slander, shaming, and verbal cruelty gathered under the term lashon hara. Telushkin took that literature out of the yeshiva and set it in front of American readers as a moral discipline for daily life. His test was simple and severe. Could you go twenty-four hours without saying an unkind or untrue word about, or to, anyone? Most people, he observed, find the question harder than a day without food. Then he pressed the conclusion: a person who cannot control his tongue for a day has met the limit of his own character.
The book crossed into politics. Senators Joseph Lieberman (1942-2024) of Connecticut and Connie Mack (b. 1940) of Florida introduced Senate Resolution 151 to establish a National Speak No Evil Day, asking Americans to spend one day a year in verbal restraint. The resolution was symbolic, and symbolism was the point. A rabbinic legal category from the Chofetz Chaim had reached the floor of the United States Senate, carried there by a book written for general readers. No other American rabbi of his generation moved traditional Jewish law that distance.
The speech project reveals Telushkin’s quarrel with his host culture. American life treats self-expression as a right approaching a sacrament. Telushkin insists that speech is conduct, that a sentence can do what a fist does, and that character is built or wrecked in the small daily choices of what one says about other people. He makes the case without rage and without culture-war framing, which is why audiences across the spectrum accept it from him.
Telushkin calls A Code of Jewish Ethics his life’s work, and the claim fits. Volume one, You Shall Be Holy, appeared in 2006 and won the National Jewish Book Award for Jewish Book of the Year. Volume two, Love Your Neighbor as Yourself, followed in 2009. The project attempts something the tradition has rarely done in English: a comprehensive codification of Jewish ethical law, organized like the great halakhic codes but devoted to character, speech, judgment, gratitude, anger, humility, and the treatment of other human beings. The sources run from Torah and Talmud through Maimonides, the Mussar masters, Hasidic teaching, and modern cases.
The polemical edge hides in the structure. By writing a code of ethics in the format reserved for codes of ritual law, Telushkin argues that the tradition has allowed observance to drift toward ritual and away from decency, and that a Jew who keeps kosher while humiliating a waiter has failed the test the kitchen was supposed to train him for. He states the thesis without attacking the Orthodox world that trained him. He simply restores the ethical volumes to the shelf and lets their presence make the argument.
Telushkin’s Los Angeles career gave his teaching its unlikeliest stage. From 1985 until the congregation closed in December 2022, he served as rabbi of the Synagogue for the Performing Arts, founded in 1972 by Rabbi Jerome Cutler as the entertainment industry’s shul. The congregation had no building of its own for much of its life. It met in rented halls and theaters. Its members were producers, writers, actors, agents, and musicians, people fluent in narrative and allergic to being lectured. High Holiday services drew crowds that came, in some measure, to hear Telushkin talk. He commuted between New York, where he lived with his wife Dvorah and their children, and Los Angeles, an Orthodox-ordained rabbi serving a congregation that was anything but Orthodox, and the arrangement bothered him less than it bothered the denominational gatekeepers on both sides. He understood the difference between a congregation and an audience, and he treated both as communities in formation.
The industry left its mark on his output. He wrote three mystery novels featuring Rabbi Daniel Winter, a Los Angeles congregational rabbi with a radio show and a detective’s eye: The Unorthodox Murder of Rabbi Wahl (1987), The Final Analysis of Dr. Stark (1988), and An Eye for an Eye (1991), which supplied story material for David E. Kelley’s series The Practice. He co-wrote the screenplay for The Quarrel (1991), drawn from a story by Chaim Grade (1910-1982), about two prewar yeshiva friends, one now a secular writer, one a rosh yeshiva, who meet by chance in a Montreal park in 1948 and resume the argument about God and the Holocaust that the war interrupted. The film is two men walking and talking for ninety minutes, and it holds, because Telushkin and Grade both knew that a Jewish argument is a form of love. He wrote the “Bar Mitzvah” episode of Touched by an Angel, with Kirk Douglas as an aging survivor. The fiction and the scripts are not detours from the teaching career. They are the same conviction in another medium: Jewish ideas travel through story before they travel through system.
In 2014 the family history came due. Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History drew on the access that only the accountant’s son could command: hundreds of interviews with Schneerson’s secretaries and followers, the thirty published volumes of the Rebbe’s letters, decades of recorded talks. Chabad cooperated and held no editorial control. The book landed on the bestseller lists of The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Publishers Weekly, and it introduced the Rebbe to readers who knew Chabad only as the people with the menorahs and the mitzvah tanks.
The portrait emphasizes leadership. Schneerson took over a small, war-shattered Hasidic court in 1951 and built the most expansive religious organization in Jewish history, and Telushkin wanted to know how. His answer runs through discipline, memory, and attention: a man who slept little, took no vacations in over forty years, and received thousands of individuals in private audiences that ran until dawn. The Rebbe’s longtime secretary, Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky (b. 1933), told Telushkin that the Rebbe’s advice was never cookie-cutter; he fit every answer to the person in front of him. Telushkin also tracked the influence outward, to the Rebbe’s role in expanding American food assistance programs, his counsel to figures from Robert F. Kennedy to Bob Dylan, and his clandestine network sustaining Jews in the Soviet Union, the cause that had defined Telushkin’s own youth.
The book drew a criticism that names Telushkin’s limit as well as anything in his corpus. Kirkus called it approachable and admiring. Reviewers noted that the treatment progresses through admiring anecdote, that the messianic fever around the Rebbe’s final years gets a gentler hearing than a colder historian might give it, and that the fights with Satmar and with the Lithuanian yeshiva world stay largely offstage. Telushkin concluded that the messiah question was, in the end, a non-issue, a judgment that satisfied general readers and struck scholars of the movement as a graceful evasion. The pattern holds across his work. He is drawn to moral exemplars. He writes to enlarge the reader’s sense of obligation, and a biographer with that aim protects his subject at the margins. His gift for making religious greatness intelligible and his reluctance to prosecute it are the same trait viewed from two sides.
His earlier biography, Hillel: If Not Now, When? (2010), shows the ancient model behind the modern career. Hillel is the sage who accepted the convert who demanded the entire Torah while standing on one foot, answered with the rule against doing to others what is hateful to oneself, and then issued the command that saves the answer from becoming a slogan: go and study. That is Telushkin’s pedagogy in one scene. State the moral core in a sentence anyone can carry. Then open the library.
Telushkin holds a position in American Jewish life that the standard categories miss. He is Orthodox by training and practice, but no Orthodox institution owns him. He is a popularizer by market, but his codes and biographies rest on wide primary reading. He served for decades as a senior associate of CLAL, the National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership, sat on the board of the Jewish Book Council, and in 2013 addressed the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, at the invitation of António Guterres (b. 1949), in Geneva. He can speak at a Chabad dinner on Monday, a Reform temple on Wednesday, and a church-sponsored interfaith conference on Friday, and deliver the same message at all three, because the message concerns conduct rather than affiliation.
The academy has largely ignored him, and the neglect is mutual. He produced no theory, founded no school, and entered no disciplinary debate. What he produced instead is a readership: hundreds of thousands of people who learned from his books what the tradition asks of them, and who trace their entry into Jewish learning to a paperback with his name on it. Scholars build knowledge for other scholars. Telushkin spent fifty years building the audience that makes the scholarship worth doing. His wager, stated across every book since 1975, is that Judaism survives on one condition, that its ethics show up in the daily behavior of the people who claim it. Ritual without decency is theater. Memory without conduct is nostalgia. The tradition enters a person, or it does not, and the evidence is what he says to the waiter, the widow, and the man he gossips about. Telushkin bet his career that American Jews, given the sources in their own language, might rise to that test. The sales figures measure the appetite. The rest is unrecorded, which is where he always said the real religious life takes place.
Notes
The opening Crown Heights scene rests on a verifiable fact: Joseph Telushkin‘s father was the accountant for the Rebbe and for the Rebbe’s father-in-law, the previous Rebbe, and his grandfather was an intimate of both rebbes, which granted Telushkin access, cooperation, and independence. Sources: the Jewish Book Council page for Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History and the Kirkus Reviews review. The image of the family as “trusted outsiders inside a court” is my extrapolation from those facts. The Kirkus Reviews review confirms that Telushkin is not a Lubavitcher but has been an affectionate observer of the movement his entire life.
The Flatbush scene
Telushkin met Dennis Prager in tenth grade at Yeshiva of Flatbush. The description of the school’s dual curriculum and ethos is reasonable extrapolation from what Yeshivah of Flatbush is known for. The content of their teenage arguments is extrapolated from the questions their first book answers. I kept it general. Prager attended Brooklyn College, then Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs, and ran Brandeis-Bardin from 1976 to 1983, with Telushkin working there.
The Moscow scene
Telushkin led in the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry, visited the Soviet Union, met dissidents including Andrei Sakharov, and was listed by the KGB as an anti-Russian agent. The cramped-apartment and knock-on-the-door texture is extrapolation from the standard conditions of refusenik life. No link needed, though the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry is well documented.
Dialogue
I used one near-quote: Yehuda Krinsky telling Telushkin that the Rebbe’s advice was never “cookie-cutter,” always tailored to the individual in front of him. Source: the Jewish Book Council interview with Rabbi Joseph Telushkin. I paraphrased everything else, including the Rebbe’s food-stamp remark to Shirley Chisholm. The full version is available in the St. Louis Jewish Light article. The Hillel one-foot story is ancient text.
Status details
The Synagogue for the Performing Arts material: founded in 1972 by Rabbi Jerome Cutler, served by Telushkin until its closure in December 2022. The synagogue billed itself as LA’s original entertainment industry synagogue. The rented-halls detail and the congregation’s professional makeup are extrapolation from what an entertainment-industry shul without denominational affiliation is. The 1985 start date for Telushkin’s tenure is my best reconstruction. Sources confirm the endpoint, December 2022.
Reception and the critical turn
The section on Rebbe‘s limits draws on Kirkus Reviews, which describes the book as less a traditional biography than a compendium of mostly lighthearted anecdotes, approachable and admiring, and notes Telushkin’s conclusion that the Messiah issue is, in the final analysis, a non-issue. It also draws on the Jewish Book Council review, which notes little discussion of the disagreements with Satmar or with major rabbinic leaders, including over the Rebbe’s purported Messiahship. Ilene Cooper‘s Booklist review made the no-critical-assessment point too, visible on the Amazon page for Rebbe. The judgment that Telushkin’s sympathy and softness are one trait seen from two sides is mine.
Senate Resolution 151, Lieberman and Mack, and National Speak No Evil Day are listed on Telushkin’s Wikipedia page. Newsweek‘s 50 most influential rabbis since 1997 and the Talk magazine speaker listing are also noted there and on his Goodreads author page. The 2013 Geneva invitation from António Guterres as UN High Commissioner for Refugees is also listed on Wikipedia.
Bestseller lists for Rebbe, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Publishers Weekly, are listed on the book’s Wikipedia page. The National Jewish Book Award for You Shall Be Holy is listed on Telushkin’s Wikipedia page. An Eye for an Eye feeding The Practice, The Quarrel from the Grade story.
Joseph Telushkin and the Hero System of the Teacher
A December night in Creve Coeur, Missouri, 2018. Traditional Congregation, 12437 Ladue Road, paid RSVPs required, twelve dollars a person, dessert reception to follow. The folding chairs fill early. A woman who drove in from Chesterfield takes an aisle seat and checks the program: the Jean and Bernard Kaplan Memorial Lecture, “On Being a Good Person in a Morally Complicated World.” A day-school teacher sits near the back with a legal pad. A retired cardiologist, a synagogue board veteran of thirty years, sits up front where the speakers can see him nod. The speaker is a heavyset rabbi from New York in a dark suit, and he opens, as he has opened a thousand rooms, with a challenge instead of a text. Could anyone present go twenty-four hours without saying an unkind word about another person, or to another person? Laughter moves through the chairs, the laughter of the caught. He waits for it to pass. Then he tells them what the laughter means. A man who cannot control his tongue for a day has learned something about the state of his own character, and most people find the fast of the mouth harder than the fast of Yom Kippur.
The woman from Chesterfield hears a party trick. The day-school teacher hears the Chofetz Chaim, Yisrael Meir Kagan (1838-1933), translated for people who will never open him. The cardiologist hears a summons he has been dodging since his residency, when he learned that a cutting remark in a hallway can end a career. Three people, one sentence, three verdicts. That is the room Joseph Telushkin has worked for fifty years, and the room explains him better than any bibliography. Ernest Becker (1924-1974) argued in The Denial of Death that a man cannot bear the knowledge of his own insignificance, so every culture builds a hero system, a structure of roles and values through which a man earns the feeling that his life counts in some larger accounting. The hero system tells him what to fear, what to sacrifice, and what will outlast him. Telushkin built his on the proposition that the Jewish people can die twice, and that a teacher stands between them and both deaths.
The first death is disappearance. Not the death by violence that his tradition has cataloged for two thousand years, but the quieter one: the grandson who cannot read the alphabet on his grandfather’s headstone, the identity inherited without a syllabus, the four thousand years dissolving into a taste for certain foods and a vague unease in December. Telushkin came of age watching that death advance through the suburbs while a louder version ran through the Soviet Union, where the state did on purpose what America did by accident. He went to Moscow as a student and sat in the apartments of men who risked prison to teach Hebrew, and the KGB wrote his name in a file. A man does not forget the lesson of those rooms. Jewish knowledge dies when nobody transmits it, and every generation is one lapsed generation from the end.
The second death is hollowing. The people survive, the rituals survive, the buildings fill, and the thing inside dies. A man keeps the dietary laws and humiliates the waiter. A community counts the prayer quorum and traffics in rumor. In Telushkin’s system this death is worse than the first because it wins the argument for the enemies of the tradition. Every observant scoundrel testifies against Sinai. His two-volume A Code of Jewish Ethics, the work he calls his life’s work, is a fortification against this second death, an insistence that the tradition’s ethical demands carry the same legal weight as its ritual ones, and that a Judaism reduced to ritual has already died and not noticed.
A hero system reveals its structure in what its hero refuses. Telushkin’s career is a record of subtractions, and each subtraction is a rival heroism declined. He trained at Yeshiva University and did not take the path of the rosh yeshiva, the master who forms an elite and lets the masses find their own way. He studied Jewish history at Columbia and did not join the academic guild, with its heroism of the new finding, the tenure file, the argument won before eleven peers. He took a pulpit and took the smallest one in America, a congregation of entertainment people that met in rented halls, so that the pulpit could never become the career. He watched his closest friend take the loudest road available. Dennis Prager and Telushkin came out of the same tenth-grade classroom in Flatbush, wrote two books together, and then divided the inheritance. Prager took politics and combat, the heroism of the culture warrior who saves civilization by naming its enemies every weekday from noon to three. Telushkin took the tradition and the teaching, and he kept politics out of his books with a discipline that looks passive until you price it. Every fight he declined preserved a reader Prager’s road would have cost him. The Reform woman in row three does not buy books from men who spent Tuesday denouncing her party.
The last subtraction was the hardest and drew the most blood from the critics. When Telushkin wrote the biography of Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the family access that opened every door in Crown Heights came with an unwritten lien. The reviewers noticed what stayed offstage: the wars with Satmar, the fury of the Lithuanian yeshiva world, the messianic fever he settled with a verdict, a non-issue, that satisfied the general reader and struck the scholars as a courtesy dressed as a conclusion. The critics read softness. Read through Becker, the softness is doctrine. Telushkin’s hero does not prosecute. Prosecution belongs to rival hero systems, the journalist’s, the historian’s, the prophet’s. His heroism is the enlargement of obligation, and a biographer who wants the reader to leave the book demanding more of himself cannot spend three chapters demanding more of the corpse.
Now take the sacred values one at a time, because a value is not a dictionary entry. It is a load-bearing wall in somebody’s immortality project, and the same word holds up different buildings.
Study. In Telushkin’s system, study is rescue. Every page read pulls a Jew back from the first death, and the 346 short chapters of Jewish Literacy are 346 doors cut into a wall that the unlettered experienced as blank. The book’s design embodies the theology: enter anywhere, no prerequisites, no shame at the threshold. Set the same word in other systems and watch it change function. For the academic historian, study is production; the guild’s hero adds a brick that was not there, and teaching the ignorant is the tax he pays on the real work. Telushkin reverses the ratio, which is why the academy cannot see him; by the guild’s accounting he has produced nothing, only distributed. For the rosh yeshiva, study is the end in itself, Torah for its own sake, and the act of popularizing dilutes the sacred substance the way a museum postcard dilutes the painting. For the startup founder, study is due diligence, an input priced by what it lets him build, and a man who studies without shipping has confused motion for progress. For the twelve-step sponsor, study is maintenance, the daily reading that keeps the wolf from the door, and erudition beyond the day’s need is a vanity that has gotten men drunk. Each hero calls his practice study. No two are performing the same act.
Speech. Here Telushkin’s system runs head-on into the reigning American one, and the collision is the making of his most consequential book. Words That Hurt, Words That Heal rests on the claim that speech is conduct, that a sentence can do what a fist does, and that heroism lives in the words a man declines to say. The United States Senate gave the claim a resolution and a symbolic day. But look at what the same word carries elsewhere. For the stand-up comedian, speech is the raid on the forbidden; his heroism is measured by what he says that the room fears to say, and restraint is the death of the act. For the trial lawyer, speech is a licensed weapon; the rules of evidence, not kindness, govern its use, and a cross-examination that spares the witness betrays the client. For the whistleblower, the unsaid word is the crime, and the hero is the one who speaks at any cost to reputation, his own or another’s. And for the therapeutic self, the archetype that fills Telushkin’s lecture halls without knowing it has a name, speech is expression, the suppressed word is a wound turned inward, and saying your truth is the sacred act that heals the sayer. Telushkin never names this last rival, and it is the one he fights on every page. His system holds that a man’s truth about his neighbor, spoken, can be a sin even when accurate. Lashon hara, the tradition’s category, forbids true statements. No claim he makes offends the American ear more, and no claim is more load-bearing. Take it out and the book becomes etiquette. Leave it in and the book indicts a civilization’s habit of confusing candor with virtue.
Memory. In Telushkin’s system, memory is obligation with a due date. The command to remember Amalek, the Exodus, the destroyed communities of Europe, converts the past into a claim on present conduct; a memory that changes nothing in behavior has not been kept, only stored. His Soviet Jewry years taught the live version: the memory of Leningrad refuseniks obligated a student in New York to picket, telephone, and smuggle. Other systems carry the word to other work. For the psychoanalyst, memory is symptom and cure, the buried scene that runs the patient’s life until speech retrieves it, and the heroism is archaeological. For the immigrant striver, memory is ballast to cut; the frontier hero travels light, and the old country’s grudges drown men who insist on carrying them. For the Irish republican of the old school, memory is a debt of blood with compounding interest, and the hero pays it forward. For the Zen practitioner, memory is attachment, one more object to release, and the hero is the man present enough to hold nothing. Telushkin’s position sits at a strange angle to all of these: he demands total recall and forbids most of its uses. Remember everything, avenge nothing, gossip about no one, and let the memory discharge itself as conduct, charity, and transmission. It is the most expensive memory regime on the market. It offers neither the analyst’s cure, nor the striver’s lightness, nor the republican’s satisfaction.
The archetypes could multiply, and that is the point Becker forces. There is no neutral ground on which study, speech, and memory carry their plain meanings, because there is no man standing outside a hero system to read them from. The woman from Chesterfield, the day-school teacher, and the cardiologist heard three different sentences that night in Creve Coeur because they were defending three different immortality projects, and Telushkin’s gift, the gift that filled the folding chairs, is that he builds his challenge so each project feels addressed and none feels attacked. Watch the craft of it. The joke first, because laughter lowers the walls. Then the source, because the source lends the weight of forty generations. Then the challenge, aimed at the listener’s own conduct and nobody else’s. He never tells the room who among them has failed. He arranges for each listener to convict himself in private, which is the only court his system recognizes.
Does he know what the system costs him? Partly. He tells the story of Hillel and the impatient convert as a self-portrait, and the telling shows a man who has thought about the charge of dilution and has his answer ready: the summary is the doorway, not the destination, and the command to go and study follows the one-sentence Torah as surely as the punchline follows the setup. Against the rosh yeshiva’s charge he is armored. Against the historian’s charge he is not. When the reviewers said the Rebbe book admired where it should have weighed, he had no answer as good as the Hillel story, because the criticism was true and the truth touched the load-bearing wall. A hero system that runs on the enlargement of obligation cannot easily hand down verdicts, and a tradition needs verdicts too. Somebody has to say that the observant man who wrecked the widow’s savings is a criminal and name him. Somebody has to say what the messianists did to the movement after 1994. Telushkin’s system assigns that work to other heroes and hopes they show up.
The hero, then: the teacher who holds the door after the service ends, who bets that a people dies of ignorance before it dies of anything else, and who measures his life in readers he will never meet behaving better in rooms he will never enter. The rival he fights without naming: the expressive self, the American conviction that the said word heals and the unsaid word festers, against which he sets a tradition where the unsaid word is often the heroic act. And the cost his ledger cannot price: severity. Fifty years of teaching men to judge their own speech left him without the taste, or perhaps the license, for judging any man’s life in public, and so the corpus that codifies Jewish ethics contains no prosecutions, and the gentlest major figure in American Judaism must trust harder men to say the hard sentences his system forbids him.
Becker wrote that every hero system is a lie about death that makes life possible, and the honest question to put to any of them is what the lie purchases. Telushkin’s purchases this: a man born in 1948, in the shadow of the largest murder in his people’s history, decided that the counterstroke was not vengeance, not politics, not even scholarship, but the patient restocking of ordinary minds, and he has spent his allotted years on airplanes between rented ballrooms doing it. The bet cannot be settled in his lifetime. It settles in kitchens and offices, in the sentence about a colleague that a reader swallowed unsaid, in the grandson who can read the headstone. His hero system locates immortality in precisely the conduct that leaves no record. He built his monument in the unrecorded, and he will not get to see it, and he teaches that this is what the tradition always meant by faith.
Notes
The opening scene is a real event, not a composite. Telushkin‘s scholar-in-residence weekend at Traditional Congregation in Creve Coeur, December 14-16, 2018, included the Jean and Bernard Kaplan Memorial Lecture on “On Being a Good Person in a Morally Complicated World,” a dessert reception, twelve dollars per person, paid RSVPs, and the address 12437 Ladue Road. All details come from the St. Louis Jewish Light interview.
The three audience members are invented archetypes. I kept them nameless and typical for that reason. The twenty-four-hour challenge is Telushkin’s documented signature opening, described in Words That Hurt, Words That Heal and in the Senate resolution coverage. I paraphrased rather than quoted. The comparison of the fast of the mouth to Yom Kippur compresses a point he makes in the book about people finding verbal restraint harder than food restraint.
Joseph Telushkin and the Interaction Ritual Chain
A Friday afternoon in the late 1970s, Simi Valley. Cars climb the canyon road into the Brandeis-Bardin Institute, three thousand acres of brown hills that block the sightline to Los Angeles. The arrivals wear name tags. A dentist from Encino, a story editor between jobs, a divorced schoolteacher who signed up because a friend pushed her. Most of them cannot read Hebrew. Many have not stood in a synagogue since a cousin’s bar mitzvah. They surrender their weekend at the gate: no television, no telephone, nowhere to drive. By Saturday night they stand in a circle in the dark holding a braided candle, and the flame lights sixty faces, and they sing a melody that most of them learned twenty-four hours earlier, and some of them cry without knowing why. The young rabbi from Brooklyn watches from inside the circle. He is learning the trade that no seminary teaches. He is learning what a room can do.
Randall Collins (b. 1941) gives that trade a theory. Interaction Ritual Chains, published in 2004, builds on Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) and Erving Goffman (1922-1982) and moves the unit of analysis off the individual and onto the situation. Four ingredients make a ritual work: bodies gathered in one place, a barrier that marks insiders from outsiders, a shared focus of attention, and a common mood that feeds on the focus and amplifies it. When the ingredients combine, the gathering generates what Collins calls emotional energy, a charge of confidence and enthusiasm that participants carry away in their bodies. The ritual also produces group solidarity, sacred objects that store the charge, and moral standards whose violation triggers righteous anger. People then chain from situation to situation, spending the energy of the last encounter to buy position in the next. A career, in this account, is a chain of rooms. Charisma is a run of successful ones.
Read Telushkin’s life along the chain and the sequence organizes it better than any list of books. The chain starts in a tenth-grade classroom in Flatbush, where two boys discover that arguing with each other about God generates more charge than anything else on offer, and they keep the argument running for sixty years because neither can find a partner who returns the energy at the same voltage. It runs through the Soviet Jewry pickets outside the Soviet Mission in Manhattan, and Collins might have designed those to specification: bodies massed behind police barriers, chants in rhythm, a shared enemy across the street, and the surplus charge of danger. It runs at maximum intensity through the Moscow apartments, where the barrier ingredient reaches its limit, because the outsider who breaches the circle carries a badge, and every whispered Hebrew lesson doubles as a loyalty test. A man who has prayed in a room that the state forbids has felt what solidarity costs at the top of the market, and the feeling calibrates every room he enters afterward. Then Brandeis-Bardin, his apprenticeship in production, where he and Prager learn to build the four ingredients from scratch, on a deadline, for strangers, every weekend. The retreat is a machine for manufacturing collective effervescence in people who arrived without a tradition to draw on, and the two young men who run it acquire a skill rarer than scholarship: they can generate the charge on demand.
The Synagogue for the Performing Arts tests the skill against the hardest audience in America. Consider the room on a Yom Kippur in the late 1980s, a rented theater on the West Side of Los Angeles. The cantor is a working studio singer. In the fifth row sits a sitcom writer who has pitched to rooms that decide careers in four minutes, and next to him a producer who reads a house the way a pit boss reads a table, and behind them a character actor who knows to the half-second how long a pause can hold. These are professional manipulators of shared attention. Mutual focus is their trade. They cannot be worked by amateur means, and they know every move in the book because they wrote the book. The rabbi at the lectern holds them without a set, without lighting, without an edit, one man and a microphone and four thousand years of material. The joke lands first, because the joke proves competence and lowers the guard. Then the story, because narrative locks the focus. Then the source, because the citation converts entertainment into authority. Then the challenge, aimed at each listener’s private conduct, because the charge has to attach to something or it dissipates in the lobby. Joke, story, source, challenge. The rhythm never varies because it works, and it works because each beat supplies a Collins ingredient in order: mood, focus, sacredness, morality.
The books come out of the rooms, and they read like it. Open Jewish Literacy anywhere and the chapter runs the length of a lecture segment, three pages, one arc, a story at the front and a demand at the back. The 346 chapters are 346 units of platform time. Words That Hurt, Words That Heal opens with the twenty-four-hour challenge because that is how he opens the room, and the reader who laughs at himself on page one has entered the mood on schedule. Critics of popular writing treat lecture rhythm as a defect, the mark of a man who dictates. Collins suggests the opposite reading. The book is a sacred object in the technical sense, an artifact charged by the ritual that produced it, and its function is to carry the charge to people who missed the room. A woman who heard him in Omaha buys the book at the signing table, and the book on her nightstand stores Tuesday night. A man who never heard him buys the book because his sister pressed it on him with an intensity she caught somewhere, and the intensity survives one more transfer, weakened but live. Publishers call this word of mouth. Collins calls it the secondary circulation of symbols, and it explains why Telushkin’s sales curves outran his marketing budgets for thirty years. Every ballroom seeded a distribution network of charged objects.
Then the loop closes, and the loop is the career. Energy earned in rooms converts into book sales. Book sales buy entry into better rooms. The Nine Questions makes him a name on the Hillel circuit. Jewish Literacy makes him a federation keynote, and the federation keynote fills the ballroom that sells the next book. Words That Hurt reaches two United States senators, and the Senate resolution is a room of a different order, a ritual of the American civil religion lending its charge to a Brooklyn speech code. By 2013 the chain reaches Geneva and a United Nations podium. By 2014 it reaches the Rebbe book, and the launch runs through the richest ritual network in the Jewish world, because every Chabad house in eighty countries is a room, and every room wants the author. Watch the mechanics of a single stop. Omaha, May 31 to June 9, 2024, a ten-day residency the federation names Tapestry: Shabbat services at Temple Israel, morning services and Torah teaching at Beth Israel, brunch with the historical society board, the federation awards night, a book club at B’nai Israel, an afternoon at the Rose Blumkin Jewish Home, the B’nai B’rith Breadbreakers, a keynote at a tri-faith conference, with lodging provided by Chabad of Nebraska. Ten days, a dozen rooms, four denominations, one man chaining through all of them and leaving each with its solidarity topped up and its book table empty. In Sydney the following spring, the synagogue prices his lecture pay-what-you-can and warns that spots are strictly limited, and the warning is ritual engineering too, because scarcity concentrates the focus before anyone sits down.
The frame also explains the enemy, and here it earns its keep, because it catches something the ethics-of-speech literature misses. Gossip is an interaction ritual. Collins would classify it without hesitation: two bodies, lowered voices that build the barrier, a shared focus on an absent third party, and a mood of delicious complicity that rises as the exchange runs. Gossip generates solidarity and emotional energy at the lowest production cost in social life. No hall to rent, no text to master, no risk to the participants, and the absent party pays the bill. When Telushkin declares war on lashon hara, he attacks the cheapest energy source on the market, and he attacks it as a competitor, because he sells a substitute. His whole pedagogy offers the charge of moral seriousness at a higher price point: come to the room, do the reading, accept the challenge, and leave with a solidarity that costs no third party his name. The twenty-four-hour test is a dare to quit the cheap supply for a day and feel the withdrawal. Most drug metaphors in moral writing are decoration. This one is load-bearing, and Collins supplies the chemistry.
His masterpiece of observation makes sense inside the same frame. The Rebbe book puzzled reviewers as biography because it reads as a catalog of encounters, and the frame says the catalog is the finding. Schneerson ran the most productive ritual chain in modern Jewish history, and Telushkin, a producer, recognized the production. The farbrengen holds thousands of men shoulder to shoulder past midnight, singing between talks, the mutual focus total, the mood compounding hour over hour. The private audience runs one man at a time through the small hours, maximum focus at minimum scale. And Sunday dollars distills the form to its atom: thousands file past an old man who gives each one a dollar for charity and a sentence, four seconds of full attention, and the recipients frame the dollars and never spend them. A dollar bill is the most fungible object in America, and one encounter converts it into a sacred object that families keep for forty years. No demonstration of Collins’s theory in the sociological literature beats it. Telushkin documented all of it without the vocabulary, the way a working chef documents chemistry. He measured the Rebbe’s legacy the same way: the movement tripled after the founder’s death, which is to say the chain kept running on stored charge, shluchim spending inherited energy in forty-eight states.
Prager marks the road not taken, and Collins names the fork. Radio manufactures a daily quasi-ritual, millions of listeners synchronized at noon, a parasocial focus with no bodies in the room. The reach is enormous and the charge per listener is thin, and thin charge needs conflict to thicken it, which is one reason talk radio runs on enemies. Telushkin chose bodies. Lower reach, higher voltage, no enemies required, because a live room generates its solidarity from presence and does not need a target across the street. The two Flatbush boys split the ritual market between them, one taking scale and the other intensity, and their politics followed their formats as much as their formats followed their politics.
Collins wrote a second book, The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change, on how intellectual reputations are made, and the answer is more rooms: the seminar, the conference panel, the journal exchange, the citation, which is a ritual gesture performed before the guild. Attention space in a discipline is finite, and a thinker holds a position in it by chaining through the guild’s own gatherings and taking fire there. Telushkin skipped every one of them. He performed no seminars, answered no reviews in the journals, and sought no position in the academic attention space, so the space holds no memory of him, and the scholars who map American Judaism cite men with a fraction of his reach. Reputation travels down chains and stops where the chains stop. His run through ballrooms and sanctuaries, so his name lives in the network of people who book ballrooms and fill sanctuaries. The two circuits touch almost nowhere. A man cannot bank energy in rooms he never enters, and the guild, for its part, cannot feel a charge that never passed through its rituals. Each side reads the other as negligible, and by its own ledger each side is right.
One more scene, because the chain has an end and the man knows it. December 2022, Los Angeles. The Synagogue for the Performing Arts closes after fifty years, the rented halls gone quiet, the founding generation of congregants gone before it. A career built on live rooms carries a mortality that a shelf of books disguises. The books survive, but a book is a battery, and batteries drain unless the rooms keep recharging them, and the rooms need the man. Collins is unsentimental on the point: emotional energy decays in days, solidarity in years, and only the sacred objects persist, waiting for someone to build a new ritual around them. Telushkin’s bet, visible in every airport and every folding-chair evening from Creve Coeur to Sydney, holds that the tradition supplies the objects and the texts and the calendar, and that any generation willing to gather can restart the current. He spent fifty years proving the current restarts. The proof lasts as long as somebody rents the hall.
Notes
Collins sourcing
The four ingredients, bodily co-presence, barrier to outsiders, mutual focus, and shared mood, and the four outcomes, emotional energy, solidarity, sacred objects, and moral standards, come from Interaction Ritual Chains, Princeton, 2004, chapter one, building on Durkheim‘s The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life and Goffman. The attention-space argument at the end comes from The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change, Harvard, 1998. The claim that emotional energy decays over days and solidarity over years compresses Collins‘s discussion of EE half-life in chapter three. He treats the decay in days-to-weeks terms, so the compression is faithful. Publisher page for verification: Interaction Ritual Chains.
Scenes and their status
The Brandeis-Bardin opening is a constructed typical scene. The verified spine: Prager ran the Institute from 1976 to 1983, and Telushkin worked there as education director. The retreat format for secular LA Jews, the campus in Simi Valley, and havdalah as the emotional peak of such weekends are all standard and defensible as extrapolation. The dentist, story editor, and schoolteacher are invented archetypes.
The Yom Kippur theater scene is likewise typical rather than dated to a documented service. The verified spine is the congregation’s makeup and rented-hall existence, documented by the Synagogue for the Performing Arts. The Omaha residency is fully documented, including dates, venues, and the Chabad of Nebraska lodging: Omaha Jewish Press. The Sydney pay-what-you-can lecture with limited spots is documented by the Humanitix event listing. The Soviet Mission pickets are extrapolated from his documented SSSJ leadership. SSSJ demonstrations at the Soviet Mission are a matter of record.
The Rebbe material
Farbrengens, late-night private audiences, and Sunday dollars are documented Chabad practice and covered in Rebbe. The detail that recipients framed the dollars rather than spending them is widely reported Chabad lore and appears in coverage of the dollars line.Chabad.org’s own dollars archive is the obvious source. The post-1994 tripling of the movement and the eighty-countries figure come from Telushkin’s Jewish Book Council interview.
Three arguments here are, as far as I know, unpublished. First, gossip as a rival interaction ritual and Telushkin’s speech ethics as competition against the cheapest emotional energy source on the market. Collins discusses conversation as ritual in chapter two, so the classification is orthodox even if the application is new.
Second, the joke-story-source-challenge rhythm mapped onto the four ingredients in order. That mapping is mine and slightly stylized. The beats supply mood, focus, sacredness, and morality in a looser way than the sentence implies.
Third, the two-circuits ending, ballroom network versus seminar network, each blind to the other’s charge.
Two factual cautions
I placed the SPA scene “in the late 1980s,” consistent with the uncertain start date of his tenure flagged in the bio thread. The phrasing survives either way since the scene is typical. The Sydney event is dated by its listing to April 2025. I wrote “the following spring” after Omaha, which fits.
