Tag: franz rosenzweig

  • Episode 17- Recoding the Lehrhaus: Jewish Learning in the Future Tense

    Episode 17- Recoding the Lehrhaus: Jewish Learning in the Future Tense

    The Jewish futurism Lab
    The Jewish futurism Lab
    Episode 17- Recoding the Lehrhaus: Jewish Learning in the Future Tense
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    This episode explores Franz Rosenzweig’s radical vision for Jewish education through the Frankfurt Lehrhaus (1920) and traces its influence into contemporary experiments in creative, future-oriented learning. Rosenzweig rejected passive transmission of knowledge and instead cultivated dialogical, participatory study rooted in lived experience. His Lehrhaus was not simply a school. It was a reorientation of how Jewish life could be learned, practiced, and renewed in modernity.

    That same impulse appears in emerging frameworks like Jewish futurism and the Hiddur Olam creative learning system, which treat tradition as a living medium rather than a fixed archive. The episode draws a line between Rosenzweig’s early 20th century intervention and present-day efforts to design learning environments that are adaptive, imaginative, and relational.

    The episode also highlights the Lehrhaus in Boston as a contemporary expression of this lineage. On June 24, 2026, an in-person course on Jewish futurism will take place there, offering a practical extension of these ideas. The session invites participants to move beyond preservation toward creative responsibility, asking not only what has been inherited, but what must be built.

    Along the way, the episode examines what might be missed when Rosenzweig is reduced to philosophy alone. His educational project was infrastructural. It reshaped who teaches, how learning happens, and what counts as participation. That shift remains unfinished.