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TitreDateDurée
Coming soon: Pragmatic Judaism04 May 202600:01:04

Pragmatic Judaism is a podcast about one question most people never stop to ask: how did the Jewish people survive? How did a small, scattered people—with no consistent land, power, or protection—outlast empires that once seemed indestructible?

Most people answer that question with belief or theology. This podcast takes a different approach. Not belief—but function. What did Jewish life actually do? What problems did it solve? And why did those solutions endure?

Each episode breaks down a core piece of Jewish life and reframes it as part of a larger system designed for continuity. From Shabbat and Shiva to minyan and the mezuzah, Pragmatic Judaism explores how Jewish rituals, traditions, and institutions sustained Jewish peoplehood across time.

This is not a podcast about what Jews say or argue. It’s about what Jews built—often without realizing it. A system where identity is not declared, but practiced. Where continuity is not assumed, but designed.

Pragmatic Judaism doesn’t ask, “What does this mean?”
It asks, “What does this do?”

If these ideas resonate, subscribe so you don’t miss an episode. Follow along on Instagram @pragmaticjudaism to keep the conversation going. And if this made you think, share it with a friend.

Glad you’re here.
Shai

Synagogues: A habit of gathering 21 May 202600:07:24

What happens when a people loses its center? In this episode, host Shai Davidai explores how the synagogue became one of Judaism’s most resilient survival technologies—not simply as a house of prayer, but as a decentralized system of belonging. A story about community, memory, safety, and the simple but powerful habit of Jews continuing to show up for one another.

Shabbat: A homeland in time14 May 202600:08:38

What if Shabbat isn’t primarily about religious belief—but about solving a human problem? In this episode, host Shai Davidai explores how Judaism’s weekly day of rest became one of the most powerful survival technologies in Jewish history: creating rhythm, protecting rest, strengthening families, synchronizing communities, and turning time itself into a portable homeland for a scattered people.

The Seven Pillars of Pragmatic Judaism 14 May 202600:10:01

How did the Jewish people survive the collapse of their world when so many ancient civilizations disappeared? In this episode, host Shai Davidai introduces the COMPASS framework—the seven mechanisms that helped transform Judaism into a portable system of continuity: Continuity, Obligation, Memory, Portability, Alignment, Separation, and Sacrifice. A big-picture look at the survival architecture of Jewish peoplehood—and the question of whether we still know how to use it.

Pragmatic Judaism: (not) another Jewish podcast 14 May 202600:07:24

In the debut episode of Pragmatic Judaism, atheist and deeply Jewish host Shai Davidai introduces a provocative idea: what if Judaism is not only a religion, but a three-thousand-year blueprint for Jewish survival? Exploring Judaism through the lens of continuity, peoplehood, and practical function, this episode asks why Jewish traditions endured—and what they were designed to do.

Torah: A portable homeland 28 May 202600:07:17

What do you do when a people loses its land, its center, and its sovereignty? In this episode, host Shai Davidai explores how the Torah became Judaism’s ultimate portable homeland—a shared text that preserved memory, organized disagreement, and kept a scattered people in conversation across continents and generations. A story about text, argument, and the survival power of shared ideas.

Minyan: A community by design 04 Jun 202600:07:05

Why would a tradition insist that nine people aren’t enough? In this episode, host Shai Davidai explores how the minyan transformed community from something optional into something structured. More than a prayer quorum, the minyan is a social technology that makes people show up, makes absence visible, and reminds Jews that community is something we sustain—not something we simply consume.

Mezuzah: A hidden network in plain sight 11 Jun 202600:07:01

What if the mezuzah is more than a symbol of faith? In this episode, host Shai Davidai explores how this small object became a powerful piece of Jewish survival architecture—marking identity, creating boundaries, signaling safety, and helping scattered Jews find one another across centuries and continents. A story about thresholds, visibility, and the hidden networks that keep a people connected.

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