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Mosaic is an online magazine of Jewish ideas, religion, politics, and culture which was established in June 2013. [ 1 ] An online subscription magazine, it offers full-length monthly essays "on an issue or theme of pressing significance for Jews, Judaism, or the Jewish state". [ 2 ]
The San Diego Jewish Journal is a Jewish magazine headquartered in Sorrento Valley in San Diego, California. It was founded in October 2001 by Dr. Mark Moss and Mark Edelstein, and first published in December 2001. [1] Their intent was to create a magazine that spoke to all Jewish movements and traditions.
The Tikvah Fund has funded several publications, including Commentary, Mosaic and its predecessor Jewish Ideas Daily, the Jewish Review of Books, [4] and Mida. [ 7 ] The Fund also organizes the Jewish Leadership Conference, a politically conservative Jewish conference. [ 8 ]
Its main competitor is the San Diego Jewish Journal. In November 2021, Jacob Kamaras bought the publication and began to serve as its editor and publisher. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] On January 1, 2024 Harrison resumed the post of publisher and editor, wanting to make sure Kamaras made a profit, Harrison paid him twice what Kamaras paid for the original transfer.
In 1999, the Jewish Federation of San Diego County adopted Sha’ar HaNegev as its partner community in Israel. This relationship resulted in the building of the Sha'ar HaNegev Educational Village Arts Center, as part of a fortified educational campus, in 2012. [ 10 ]
The Messianic Jewish Theological Institute (MJTI) [1] is an online graduate school based out of San Diego, California established by the Union of Messianic Jewish Congregations (UMJC) in 2002. It seeks to train rabbis, leaders, and laity by providing them with a unique Messianic Jewish education.
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Louis Rose is known as one of the first Jewish citizens in San Diego, arriving in 1850. The first Jewish religious service in San Diego was held in 1851. The first congregation called, Adat Yeshurun, later changing to Beth Israel, was founded in 1861. [2] [3] [4]