Rabbi Zamir Cohen founded Hidabroot, the Israeli outreach television channel and media network, and he serves as its public face. His whole manner follows from that role. He talks to the unconvinced. His audience is the secular or lapsed Israeli Jew who carries no obligation to listen, who can switch the channel at any second, and who arrives suspicious of rabbis. Everything in his voice answers that situation.
He speaks softly. Interviewers describe him as soft spoken and affable, and the calm is a chosen instrument, not an accident of temperament. He has written about anger as a trait to flee, citing the Ramban’s letter to his son on speaking calmly to every man at every moment. The gentle register disarms. A man braced for a fire-and-brimstone rabbi meets instead a quiet teacher, and the guard drops. Cohen knows the secular Israeli stereotype of the haredi preacher and works against it on purpose.
His core move is the synthesis of Torah and science. This made his name. The Revolution and its sequels argue that the Sages knew things modern science only later confirmed, that Torah anticipates discoveries in physics, biology, embryology, astronomy. The rhetorical engine here matters. He does not ask the listener to abandon the scientific worldview he already trusts. He tells him the Torah agrees with it, even precedes it. The listener keeps his respect for science and gains a reason to respect the Sages. Cohen flatters the audience’s existing commitments and then redirects them. The Hidabroot television technique extends this: lectures cut with footage of astronauts, volcanoes, the cosmos, so the spoken argument carries a visual charge of wonder.
His language stays simple. One interviewer praised his characteristic simple, appealing register, the way he explains the wonders of Judaism to anyone thirsty for them. He avoids the dense lomdus of the yeshiva. He builds from concrete examples a layman can hold: honey, the rabbit, the human eye, the name hidden in a verse. He moves from the small striking fact to the large claim. The structure is inductive and friendly. Here is a curiosity, he says, now look what stands behind it.
The appeal runs through wonder and through hunger. He returns again and again to thirst, to the generation that wants the secret of true happiness, to people hungry for Torah. He frames the secular Israeli not as a sinner but as a man missing something, a man with an appetite he has not yet learned to name. This reframes outreach as gift rather than rebuke. He offers rather than condemns.
The certainty underneath should not be missed. The soft voice carries hard claims. He writes that Torah brings proof, that the codes in the letters convey real messages, that mixing forbidden materials blows a fuse in the upper worlds and causes physical damage. He presents contested apologetics as settled demonstration. The eschatology runs the same way, vivid and literal, swords and plague and hailstones at the End of Days. The manner is gentle. The content is absolute. That combination is the whole rhetorical signature: a warm, unthreatening surface over claims that admit no doubt.
He also leans on authority when he needs cover. He recounts seeking the blessing of Rav Ovadia Yosef (1920-2013), of his rosh yeshiva Rav Shalom Cohen (1931-2022), of the Belzer Rebbe, before broadcasting on television. To the haredi world that distrusts the medium, he answers with the names of gedolim. To the secular world, he answers with science. He fits his warrant to his audience.
The Kiruv Voices
Start with the shared problem. All three (Cohen, Aish HaTorah, R. Amnon Yitzchak) sell the same product to the same buyer, the secular Jew who owes them nothing. They differ on how they make the sale, and the difference reveals what each man believes moves a soul.
Cohen takes the sun’s approach. He warms the listener until the coat comes off on its own. Amnon Yitzchak (b. 1953) takes the wind. Ami Magazine drew exactly this contrast, the old fable of sun and wind, and placed most kiruv professionals with the sun and Yitzchak with the blustery wind that makes the man clutch his coat tighter. At his mass rallies, hundreds and sometimes thousands of non-Orthodox Israelis would publicly pledge to cut their hair, throw away their televisions, and follow halacha. The pledge is public, made in a crowd, under pressure, in a single charged night. Cohen would find that scene foreign. His conversions happen slowly, in a man’s living room, in front of a screen, over a book read at his own pace.
Yitzchak performs. A study of his rallies catalogs the toolkit: raising his voice, distorting names, mimicry, singing, telling entertaining anecdotes. The same study calls long stretches of his sermons the rhetoric of a stand-up artist. He mocks the secular life from the stage. He does impressions. He insults the irreligious world and the crowd laughs and the laughter is part of the machine, because a man who laughs at his old life has already begun to leave it. Cohen never mocks. Mockery would break the soft register he depends on. Where Yitzchak shames the secular world, Cohen tells the secular man he was right to trust science, then folds Torah inside that trust. Academia.edu
The two are not abstract opposites. They are rivals who collided. In the kiruv wars among Sephardi outreach figures, Yitzchak and Cohen traded public criticism, and the quarrel turned physical when supporters of Yitzchak attacked Cohen. The two traded criticisms, culminating in a physical attack on Cohen by supporters of Yitzchak. The contrast in manner sat on top of a real fight over the same audience and the same donations.
Now the Aish HaTorah style, which is a third thing again. Yitzchak is a man on a stage. Cohen is a man with a camera and a book. Aish built a system. The Discovery Seminar runs as a packaged curriculum, developed in the mid-1980s, delivered by trained lecturers to a hundred thousand people and more. It was developed in 1985 by a team of scholars to present scientific rational evidence for the divine authorship of the Bible. The presenters carry secular degrees and rabbinic ordination both, a man who studied biology, a man from Loyola, and the credentials are the point. Aish argues. It builds a case the way a prosecutor builds one, brick by brick, and asks the educated diaspora Jew to weigh the evidence and convict. TORCH
Here Cohen and Aish overlap, and the overlap is the deepest in the comparison. Both reach for the proof from science. Both lean hardest on the Torah codes, the equidistant letter sequences that supposedly hide names and events inside the text. This method has long been used by kiruv organizations like Aish HaTorah to prove the authenticity of the Torah. Aish dressed the codes in the language of mathematics and security, citing mathematicians who signed letters and noting that code-cracking is the domain of the NSA. A number of contemporary gedolim and Torah sages repeatedly gave strong support for the use of Codes as a kiruv tool. The strategy was named plainly by one critic: since the secular come from a world where science holds a central place, one can create the first and often the determining persuasive meeting through scientific proofs of the divine origin of the Torah. Cohen runs the same play in The Revolution and its sequels. The codes, the kosher signs the ancients could not have known, the convergence of Torah and physics.
The difference between Cohen and Aish is register and reach, not argument. Aish is institutional and English-first, built for the American campus and the diaspora professional, a seminar with a syllabus and a brand. Cohen is one man’s voice on Israeli television, in Hebrew, for the Israeli who already half-knows the tradition he abandoned. Aish hands you a logical case and a weekend. Cohen hands you wonder and a soft voice and a series of books you read alone at night. Aish wants to win the argument. Cohen wants you to feel that you never really had one.
So the three sort cleanly by the faculty each man trusts. Yitzchak works on the emotions and the crowd, fear and shame and laughter, the body in the room. Aish works on the reasoning mind, evidence and inference, the prosecutor’s case. Cohen works on something between, the appetite for awe, the relief of a man told his two worlds were never at war. Yitzchak frightens you out of the old life. Aish reasons you into the new one. Cohen makes the new one look like what you wanted all along.
The Rabbi Zamir Cohen Social Set
Zamich (Zamchir) Cohen sits at the head of Hidabroot, the outreach network and television channel he founded around 2002. Around him stands a small command group. Rabbi Isaac Fried runs the executive side. Rabbi David Tufik serves as CEO. Rabbi Yeshaya Wind holds the post of spiritual director. Above all of them, in the world they answer to, sit the gedolim whose blessing Cohen sought before he ever broadcast: Rav Ovadia Yosef (1920-2013), the towering Sephardi posek and founder of Shas; Cohen’s own rosh yeshiva Rav Shalom Cohen (1931-2022); and the Belzer Rebbe, Yissachar Dov Rokeach (b. 1948), the chasidic master who, by Hidabroot’s own account, guides the organization at every step. That last alliance matters. A Sephardi outreach man builds his channel under the wing of a Belzer chasidic court, and the Sephardi-chasidic pairing gives the operation cover across two worlds at once.
What this set values, first, is the returning Jew. The baal teshuva is the prize and the proof. Cohen frames the secular Israeli not as an enemy but as a man hungry, thirsting, slumbering, a son who has wandered from his Father in heaven and waits to be woken. The whole enterprise turns on numbers of souls reclaimed. They value media as the tool of the age. Cohen will tell you that books, conferences, discs, a television channel, all means are kosher if they bring a Jew home. They value the synthesis of Torah and science, the flagship argument, the claim that the tradition holds knowledge the modern world only later found. And they value the approval of the sages. Nothing moves without a blessing from above. The letter of support from the Councils of Torah Sages is itself a trophy.
The hero of this world is the man who pulls Jews back from the brink of assimilation, and he is a hero precisely because he does it inside the lines drawn by the gedolim. This is the set’s particular form of heroism, and it separates Cohen from the wilder men in his field. Amnon Yitzchak (b. 1953) is a hero of the stage, the lone voice who shames a crowd into teshuva. Yosef Mizrachi, the Monsey-based preacher whose lectures reach tens of thousands online, plays the hero of harsh truth, the man who says what others will not. Cohen’s heroism is quieter and more institutional. He wins by building something the Rebbe blesses and the channel sustains. The hero here founds an apparatus, not a following. He answers upward to authority even as he reaches downward to the lost.
The status games run on two axes at once. Outward, toward the secular Israeli, status comes from reach and from polish. Whose lectures get the views, whose books sell and translate into Farsi and Italian and French, whose channel the Communications Ministry licenses. Hidabroot competes for the same secular audience that Yitzchak’s Shofar organization and Mizrachi’s Divine Information chase, and the competition turns bitter. Supporters of Yitzchak once attacked Cohen physically. Mizrachi’s circle produced a video naming rabbis as heretics. Inward, toward the haredi world, the status game inverts. There a man gains standing by proximity to the gedolim and by staying within their sanction. Cohen’s repeated recitation of which sages blessed him is a status move aimed at the religious world, an answer to the yeshiva men who hold that television can never be kosher. He banks the gedolim’s names the way another man banks view counts. He plays both boards.
The normative claims sit close to the surface. A Jew owes obedience to halacha. The secular life is exile, a man cut off from his source. Assimilation is the plague, the great threat, the thing the channel exists to fight, and the word recurs whenever the set explains itself. Marriage, Shabbat, kashrut, the mikveh, these carry obligation, not preference. The duty to bring other Jews back outranks nearly everything, since one of the set’s working beliefs holds that helping a fellow Jew learn Torah ranks among the best acts a man can perform.
The essentialist claims run underneath the normative ones and give them their force. The Jew has a soul that belongs to God whatever he believes, so the secular man is never a stranger, only a son who forgot. The Torah is divine in its very letters, which is why the codes can hold hidden truth and why mixing forbidden things damages the upper worlds. The sages possessed real knowledge, not myth, so their words on science and medicine and genetics bind. And the threat is essential too. Assimilation does not merely shrink a community; it severs a soul from what it is. Mizrachi pushes this essentialism to its ugly edge with claims about disability as punishment for past sins, and the harsher edge shows what the gentler version of the same belief carries inside it. Cohen keeps the soft surface. The essentialism underneath is the same family.
The moral grammar binds it all. The frame is the prodigal son and the waiting Father, the wandering and the return. Good is return. Evil is the forces that keep the Jew wandering, the secular schooling, the assimilation, the world that taught him to forget. Mercy means reaching the lost before it is too late, and urgency runs through everything, the sleeper who must wake, the plague that spreads while you wait. The rabbi is a watchman and a rescuer. The donor who funds him shares in the rescue. The returning Jew completes the story and proves the grammar true. Within this grammar a harsh word can count as the highest kindness, which is how Mizrachi justifies his cruelty and how the whole field defends rebuke. Cohen chooses the gentle register inside the same moral world. He woos rather than rebukes, but he is playing the same story, working the same map of wandering and return, aiming at the same homecoming.
The wider set, named in full, runs like this. At the core, Cohen with Fried, Tufik, and Wind. Above them, the patrons Ovadia Yosef, Shalom Cohen, and the Belzer Rebbe, with the Councils of Torah Sages standing as collective sanction and Agudath Israel as an American partner in the expansion. Alongside and against him, the rival Sephardi outreach men, Amnon Yitzchak and Yosef Mizrachi and, in the older Sephardi teshuva movement, Reuven Elbaz (b. 1948). And in the background, the men whose work supplies the science argument Cohen leans on, the Torah-codes researchers Eliyahu Rips (1948-2019) and Doron Witztum, and the Aish HaTorah machine that the late Noah Weinberg (1930-2009) built around the same proofs. Cohen draws from that pool of arguments while running his own operation, under his own patrons, for his own slice of the same hungry audience.
In 1994 the journal Statistical Science published a paper by Eliyahu Rips, Doron Witztum, and Yoav Rosenberg titled “Equidistant Letter Sequences in the Book of Genesis.” The claim was precise and, on its face, testable. Take the Hebrew text of Genesis as one long string of letters, strip the spaces, and read off sequences at fixed skips, every fourth letter, every fiftieth, any interval. Search for the names and appellations of famous medieval rabbis and for their dates of birth and death. The authors reported that the names landed near the dates far more tightly than chance allows. They ran a Monte Carlo simulation, shuffling the pairings, and found the odds of so close a fit at well under sixteen in a million. The text, they concluded, knows things its human authors could not have known.
This is why the codes became the crown jewel of the whole apologetic. The other Torah-and-science arguments are soft. The kosher signs the ancients supposedly could not have known, the embryology, the cosmology folded into a verse, all of these depend on generous reading and on the reader’s goodwill. The codes looked different. They went through peer review in a real statistics journal. They produced a number. They appeared to be the one place where the claim stood as math rather than as metaphor, falsifiable, checkable, hard. Aish HaTorah built the Discovery Seminar around them and called the result evidence. Zamich Cohen folded them into The Revolution and made them the spine of Codes in the Bible. Michael Drosnin took the cheap version to the bestseller list with The Bible Code and its claims of hidden prophecy. The respectable men distanced themselves from Drosnin, but they kept the underlying paper, because the paper was the thing that looked like science.
Then four mathematicians took it apart. Brendan McKay, Dror Bar-Natan, Maya Bar-Hillel, and Gil Kalai published “Solving the Bible Code Puzzle” in the same journal in 1999, after review by four senior statisticians the editors chose. Their attack did not argue that hidden patterns are impossible in principle. It went at the soft joint of the original study, the list of appellations. A medieval rabbi has many names. Full name, honorific, acronym, with the title and without, this spelling and that spelling. Hebrew permits several forms of the same word. Witztum and Rips had chosen which forms to feed the search. McKay and his colleagues showed that the choice carried the result. They built a different list, by standards no looser than the original, and ran it against the Hebrew text of Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace. The novel performed as well as Genesis. A small change in the choice of appellations could make War and Peace perform just as well. If a Russian novel encodes the rabbis as neatly as the Torah does, the effect lives in the experimenter’s hand, not in the text.
The defenders answered that the original list followed strict rules, that the choices were not free. Here the timing damns them. The rules came late. Most of these rules were only laid out nine or ten years after the two lists were composed, in a long letter from Shlomo Zalman Havlin written in response to questions the critics raised, and they were far from being rules, fraught with inconsistency. A rule invented after the fact to defend a result is not a rule. It is a description of the result. The critics gave the bias a name. They called the quiet adjustment of choices toward a positive outcome tuning. There is significant circumstantial evidence that the data is selectively biased toward a positive result, a process we call tuning. Witztum produced a long rebuttal. The critics answered it at length and considered the matter closed. The wider statistics community did not return to the codes as live science. The 1994 paper stands as the single peer-reviewed instance, and the 1999 paper stands as its refutation in the same pages.
Now the part that bears on Cohen and Aish and the rest. The codes were supposed to be the strong proof, the one that did not lean on the reader’s willingness to be persuaded. They turned out to lean on exactly that, on the quiet freedom of the man preparing the lists. Once the strong proof falls, the strategy behind it falls with it. The strategy was named plainly by one critic of the kiruv method: reach the secular Jew through his respect for science by handing him scientific proofs of the Torah’s origin. The codes were the flagship of that method because they wore the costume of statistics. Strip the costume and the method has nothing left but the soft arguments it started with, the honey and the hare, the verse that sounds like physics if you want it to.
The men in this world kept using the codes anyway. The Discovery Seminar still teaches the hidden letter sequences as evidence. Cohen still presents them. This is the revealing thing, and it is the thing your wider project can use. The apologetic does not retire a refuted argument, because the argument’s job was never to survive expert scrutiny. Its job is the first meeting with the secular man, the determining encounter, the moment he feels the floor of his skepticism give way. For that purpose a refuted proof works as well as a sound one, since the audience never reads Statistical Science. The collapse happened in a journal almost none of the target audience will open. The argument lives on the screen and at the weekend seminar, where the math that killed it cannot follow.
So the codes are a clean test of what the whole enterprise is for. As science the claim is dead, killed in 1999 in the journal that birthed it, killed by a Russian novel. As outreach the claim is alive, because outreach asks the argument to open a door, not to hold up in peer review. Cohen, Aish, and the apologetic literature keep the codes for the same reason a salesman keeps a line that closes deals after the engineers have shown the product does not work. The line still closes deals.
Here is the pattern the codes belong to. The movement does not have a position on science. It has a use for science. When a finding can be made to confirm the Torah, the movement adopts it and calls it proof. When a finding threatens the Torah, the movement rejects it and calls it theory, or bends it until the threat is gone. The sorting runs on usefulness, not on evidence. Cosmology and evolution are the two clean cases, and they sit on opposite sides of the same line.
Take cosmology first, because the movement embraces it with open arms. The Big Bang hands the apologist exactly what he wants, a beginning. The universe started. There was a first moment, a creation from almost nothing, and Genesis opens with a creation from nothing. Aish runs this hard. It reads Nachmanides (1194-1270) on the opening verses, on the words tohu and bohu and on the verb bara, and finds in his thirteenth-century commentary a tiny primordial speck that held the power to bring forth everything else. Aish presents this as something known from Torah literature for thousands of years, later matched by what Stephen Hawking (1942-2018) called the singularity. The physicist arrives late and confirms the Ramban. That is the shape the movement loves. Modern science catches up to the Sages.
Their house physicist is Gerald Schroeder, an MIT-trained man who moved to Israel, worked at the Weizmann Institute, and now teaches the science portions of the Aish Discovery and Essentials programs. His books, Genesis and the Big Bang, The Science of God, and The Hidden Face of God, supply the technical reconciliation the movement needs. He takes the hardest collision, the six days against the fifteen billion years, and dissolves it with relativity. Time runs differently for different observers. Measured from the opening expansion of space, he argues, six days and roughly fifteen billion years are one stretch seen from two vantage points. Schroeder studied Nachmanides and concluded there is no discrepancy between six days of creation and fourteen billion years. Cohen runs the same cosmology in The Revolution. The age of the universe stops being a problem and becomes a trophy.
Now watch the other side of the line. Evolution gets no such welcome. Darwinian descent by random mutation removes the designer, removes the special creation of man, removes the soul placed in him from above, and the movement will not have it. Schroeder himself, who bends relativity to save the six days, draws the line at random mutation. He allows that life developed from the simple to the complex, but he objects to modern evolutionary theory built on random mutations, which he considers flawed. A guided unfolding toward man, yes. Blind variation and selection, no. The part of evolution that can be read as a slow creation by God survives. The part that makes man an accident dies. The cut runs exactly along the doctrine.
The asymmetry is the whole tell. The Big Bang and Darwinian evolution carry comparable standing in mainstream science. Both rest on decades of converging evidence. One the movement crowns and one the movement fights. The reason is not that the cosmology is better established than the biology. The reason is that the cosmology gives them a beginning and a creator while the biology gives them a man descended from animals by chance. Useful science is true. Threatening science is theory. The criterion sits outside science altogether.
The codes fit here without strain. The movement adopted them while they looked like confirmation and kept them after the confirmation collapsed, because the test was never whether the claim survives scrutiny. The test was whether the claim serves. Cosmology serves and stays. Evolution threatens and gets bent or barred. The codes served, were refuted, and stay anyway. One criterion runs all three.
And the boundary is policed from above, which is the part that touches Cohen’s own world. Reconcile too much and the gedolim strike you down. Natan Slifkin (b. 1975), an Orthodox writer, argued in his books that the universe is old, that evolution might be God’s method, and that the Sages could err on matters of science. Around 2004 and 2005 a body of haredi authorities banned his books and condemned the views as heresy. Slifkin had granted too much. To say the Sages erred on science is to surrender the very claim the whole apologetic rests on, that the Sages knew. So the same world that celebrates the Big Bang as ancient Jewish knowledge will ban a man for saying the rabbis got the natural world wrong. The line is not drawn at science. It is drawn at the authority and the inerrancy of the tradition. Embrace the physics that flatters the Sages. Ban the man who says the Sages could be mistaken.
This sets the real boundary condition on Cohen and his set. They look like men engaging science, weighing evidence, following the data toward God. They are doing something narrower. They hold a fixed conclusion and audition each piece of science for a supporting role. The Big Bang gets the part. Relativity gets the part. The codes got the part and kept it past the point of embarrassment. Evolution auditions and is turned away, and anyone who insists on casting it, like Slifkin, gets removed from the production. The synthesis of Torah and science that Cohen sells is a synthesis on one condition. The science serves the Torah, or it does not appear.
Start with what the apologetic delivers, which is not reconciliation but the feeling of it. The secular Jew the movement wants does not need the codes to hold up. He needs to not feel like a fool. He carries a secular self-image built on the prestige of science, and he will not trade it for the self-image of a man who thinks the world is six thousand years old and the dinosaurs a trick. The synthesis hands him a third option. He keeps the prestige and changes the practice. He returns to Shabbat and kashrut while telling himself he has joined the side of Nachmanides and Einstein, not the side of the rubes. The argument is a permission slip. It lets him walk through the door without surrendering the picture he holds of his own mind.
This is why the soft pitch suits the work. Cohen offers wonder, the relief of a man told his two worlds were never at war. He does not ask the returnee to examine the codes paper. He asks him to feel the awe and step inside. The pitch lands on the man who wants to be moved, who wants meaning and belonging and a Father waiting at the end of the wandering, and who reaches for science as reassurance rather than as method. For that man the existence of Schroeder is enough. A physicist from MIT says the six days and the billions of years agree, and the returnee never needs the relativity to be sound. He needs the credential to exist. The white coat does the work the math cannot. This repeats the move the movement makes toward its own world, where the blessing of the gedolim settles the question. Toward the secular man the blessing comes from a scientist instead of a sage, but it functions the same way. Authority stands in for evidence, and the man who wanted permission accepts it.
Now the man the filter turns away. Some secular Jews did more than respect science. They absorbed its discipline. They treat falsifiability as a value and feel the pull to follow evidence against their own wishes. For that man the one-way filter is the disqualifying tell, and he often spots it fast. He notices that the Big Bang gets crowned while evolution gets barred, and he sees that the sorting runs on usefulness, not on strength of proof, because the two findings stand on comparable ground. Once he sees the conclusion fixed in advance and the evidence auditioned for a supporting part, the whole performance reads as motivated, and the wonder curdles. If he ever finds the 1999 refutation, it only confirms what the asymmetry already told him. The apologetic asks him to do the single act his training forbids, to pre-commit to the answer and then go shopping for support. He cannot, and so the movement cannot hold him.
Slifkin is the type-case of what happens when the scientific mind takes the synthesis at its word and keeps reasoning past the safe line. He stayed inside. He kept thinking. He concluded the universe is old, that evolution might be God’s method, and that the Sages erred on points of nature. For this the authorities expelled his books. He is the warning the system posts to its own inquirers. Follow the reconciliation to its honest end and you become a heretic, because the honest end concedes that the Sages could be wrong, and that concession dissolves the claim the whole structure rests on, that the Sages knew. The community would rather lose a sincere believer than loosen the inerrancy.
So the filter is self-confirming, and the selection it performs is the point of it, not a flaw in it. By offering pseudo-reconciliation, the movement gathers the men who wanted permission and repels the men who wanted truth. The room fills with people who experience themselves as having squared science with Torah, and each one’s presence reassures the next. The convert’s own testimony becomes the evidence for the next convert. Look, even a man who loved science came home. The argument too weak to convince a statistician turns out to be exactly strong enough to recruit the man who will never read the statistician, and that man is the target. The design works because it does not aim at the skeptic. It aims at the marginal returnee and lets the skeptic go.
The cost sits in the same place as the benefit. A community built this way is robust at recruiting and brittle under honest inquiry. It depends on its members not looking too hard, and it cannot tolerate its most rigorous ones. It must issue bans to hold the line, and every ban tells the watching skeptic exactly what he suspected. The movement trades intellectual durability for reach. It buys the many who wanted to feel reconciled at the price of the few who wanted to be right, and the few it cannot buy it must sometimes expel. Cohen’s gentleness fits this trade. The soft voice gathers the seekers of awe and never provokes the audit that the hard voice might. He builds wide and shallow on purpose, because wide and shallow is where the returnees are.
The audience changes, and the job changes with it. The returnee was a secular adult you had to win, a defended position you had to take. His child is born inside the walls. He never held a secular self-image, never resisted, never needed a permission slip, because he never stood at the door deciding whether to enter. So the apologetic stops being a weapon of conquest and becomes a tool of retention. The same arguments get redeployed, the codes, the Big Bang and Nachmanides, the kosher signs, but their work reverses. They no longer open a closed mind. They seal an open one. The child receives them before he has ever doubted, so that when doubt comes, it arrives already labeled as the thing his teachers answered years ago.
This is inoculation, not persuasion, and inoculation has a different failure mode. For the parent, a refuted argument still did its job, because the parent never checked and never wished to. He wanted in. For the child the incentives run the other way. Doubt for him is not a threshold he crosses into a richer life. It is a crack in the only life he owns. And the refutation sits one search away. Worse, he has reason to go looking, because the stakes of his doubt are higher than his father’s ever were. When he finds that the codes were demolished in the same journal that published them, the wound cuts deeper than it might for any adult, since he was raised on the claim as settled fact and not offered it as enticement. The argument that recruited the father can radicalize the son. The vaccine can carry the disease.
Here the selection that built the first generation breaks down. The recruitment filter gathered men who wanted permission and turned away men who followed evidence against their wishes. The truth-trackers filtered themselves out at the door. The second generation passes through no filter at all. They are born in, and the temperament the recruitment screen used to reject comes with them, the rigorous mind, the boy who feels the pull of falsifiability in his bones. The community now houses, against its will, the very inquirers it never had to face before. These are the children who go off the derech. The apologetic has no grip on them, because it was built to recruit people who wished to believe, not to hold people who were born believing and began to doubt. The tool fits the wrong hand.
And the parent’s conversion story, which served as evidence for the next convert, turns into a liability at home. The father says he came to observance through reason, through the proofs, through the physicist with the MIT degree. The son, more native to the open internet and to the texture of real scientific culture, can audit the father’s reasons and find them thin. Then the father’s authority gives way, the authority that rested on having chosen with open eyes. The son sees that the eyes were half closed, that the father wanted the conclusion and went out and found supports for it. The narrative that recruited outward fails to transmit downward.
So the community shifts its weight, and the shift tells you what held it up all along. To keep the children it leans less on argument and more on the thickness of the world it has built around them. The schooling. The Hebrew. The shidduch system and the marriages arranged young. The cost of leaving, counted in family rupture and lost livelihood and a man set adrift with no secular education and no network outside. None of that is an argument. It is enclosure. The Slifkin ban reads better as a fence around the second generation than as a blow against one writer. It marks the questions that lie out of bounds and warns the young what happens to a man inside who keeps reasoning past the line. Retention runs on the boundary and the price of crossing it, not on the codes.
This places Cohen exactly. His enterprise is a frontier operation. Hidabroot exists to win the secular adult, and its whole product, the wonder, the soft voice, the television synthesis, the books read alone at night, is calibrated for the defended grown man at the open border. It is not built for the closed interior, where the work falls to the school and the home and the community’s power to make exit expensive. As the baal teshuva movement matures and throws off a second generation, the center of gravity of the religious world’s self-maintenance slides away from the kind of thing Cohen does and toward the educators and the enforcers. The apologetic does not vanish. Its role narrows to inoculation, and on that narrower ground its old weakness, the refuted proof kept past its expiry, stands exposed in a way it never was while the same proof was only opening doors. Cohen sells reconciliation to men who want to feel reconciled. His own grandchildren, raised never having wanted it, are a harder audience, and they are not really his audience at all. They belong to the school and the fence.
Follow the money and the shape of the whole thing snaps into focus. A donor funds what he can see and count. The newly observant Jew is a photograph. The secular professional now in tefillin, the man who threw out his television and kept his first Shabbat, the crowd at the rally pledging to return, these are countable, displayable, fundable. The donor writes his check against that image and reads the number at the annual dinner. So many brought back this year. The return on his gift arrives as a figure he can hold.
Retention has no photograph. The slow integration of the returnee who struggles, the marriage that strains under two families with nothing in common, the second-generation child pulled back from the edge, none of this yields a number a donor can celebrate. Its measures run the other way. A man counts retention by its failures, by divorce and by children who leave, and you cannot raise money on a disaster averted. The work is generational, quiet, and unglamorous, and it asks for skills the frontier does not, the psychology of the returnee and the sociology of the community he is trying to enter. The field knows this. A veteran of it laid the asymmetry out plainly in the haredi press. Funders are drawn by the instant gratification of the first steps and the quantifiable measures of success, the number who become shomer Shabbos, while integration is a generational process with no clear calipers and its measures are commonly measures of failure. The money pours onto the frontier and trickles into the interior.
This breeds the numbers game, and the men in the field hate it even as they play it. The attention donors pay to numbers, to how many a worker has swayed toward practice, is openly tolerated yet privately despised by most kiruv workers, and talented professionals have left the field rather than play it. The honest man who wants to do the patient, low-yield work of holding people finds the funding flows past him to the man who can report a bigger count. The structure does not reward durable observance. It rewards the fundable figure, the first step, the dramatic return, the testimony at the banquet.
Now place Cohen in that structure and his prominence stops looking like the product of his gifts alone. A television channel is the ideal instrument for the funding model. It converts souls into footage, footage into reach, reach into numbers, and numbers into donations. It produces testimony at scale, the returnee on camera explaining how the rabbi woke him, and that testimony does double work. It recruits the next returnee, and it justifies the donor’s gift. The donor is not only buying conversions. He is buying participation in the saving of Jewish souls, a legacy, a mitzvah he can point to, and Cohen’s media hands him exactly the visible, countable, moving product he pays for. The gedolim’s blessing that Cohen banks toward the religious world serves the donor too. It assures him his money goes to a cause the sages have stamped kosher. The same approval that answers the yeshiva skeptic reassures the check-writer.
So Cohen rises because the money rises toward men like him. The funding selects for the broadcaster and the charismatic front-line mekarev, the men who generate the visible return, and selects against the integrator and the educator who do the costly interior work. The branch model underneath confirms it. Each outpost lives on one or a few local wealthy donors who want Jewish programming in their city, and the worker himself runs on a modest salary plus overhead, dependent on the man who funds him and on the numbers that keep the man funding. The incentive runs all the way down. Produce the fundable figure.
Here the economics meets the fragility the earlier layers exposed, and aggravates it. The interior work, retention and the second generation, is where the movement is most exposed, and it is the work the money starves. The frontier work, conversion as spectacle, is where the movement is strong, and it is the work the money feeds. The funding pours resources into the open border at the moment the harder challenge slides inward, toward the children who never needed the permission slip and the returnees who need help staying. The structure overbuilds the cannon and underbuilds the fort.
And the measure the whole edifice rests on floats free of the outcome that decides the movement’s future. The figure reported at the dinner counts first steps, not staying power. Whether the man who lit candles this year still lights them in ten, whether his children remain, the donor’s number does not track, and might not survive contact with honest retention data, which the field itself admits it can barely gather. The men rewarded are rewarded for the appearance of return. They produce what is countable. What lasts is someone else’s problem, and that someone else is underpaid, unphotographed, and rarely on the channel.
The apparatus runs best when the man at its head believes. The doctrine needs a true believer, because the warmth that makes Cohen effective resists faking across decades and across a thousand broadcasts. The funding needs him sincere, because donors and returnees both read conviction and both flee from a man visibly auditing his own claims. The authority needs him obedient and certain, because the gedolim sanction faith, not independent inquiry, and Slifkin stands as the posted warning of what the structure does to a man inside who keeps reasoning. Every lever rewards sincerity and punishes the cold audit. So the first thing to say is that the audit we just ran is the one operation the man in Cohen’s seat is least free to perform.
This produces a selection effect at the summit, and the selection comes before any question of character. The men who reach Cohen’s position are disproportionately the ones who cannot or will not run the audit, because the auditors are removed at every earlier stage. The rigorous secular Jew filters himself out at the door and never enters. The honest worker who tires of the numbers game leaves the field. The believer who reasons too far, like Slifkin, gets expelled. By the time you reach the top of a soul-saving machine, the men around you are the ones who never turned the cold eye on the foundation, and you are likely one of them, or you would not have risen. The seat is reserved for the sincere.
What that does to a man’s interior I can only describe as a tendency, not read from his private mind, and I hold it loosely. A man in this seat might simply never run the audit at all. He lives inside the frame, and from inside the frame has no vantage outside it. This is not stupidity. Cohen’s books show real ingenuity, a quick and inventive mind. The point is that the frame offers him no exterior to stand on, and every relationship and habit and incentive points his attention inward, toward the next lecture and the next returnee and the next blessing, never toward the wall behind him.
Or he might half-know and decline to look. A man can hear that mathematicians disputed the codes, can feel the soft spot in an argument, and route around it without ever walking up to it, because walking up to it threatens everything at once, his life’s work, his livelihood, his standing with the sages, and his picture of himself as a man who rescues souls. The cost of knowing is total, and a mind under that pressure tends to protect itself. This is not special to Cohen. It is the ordinary condition of any man whose identity and bread rest on a belief. The not-looking is not a decision he makes each morning. Over years it hardens into a habit, and the habit into a kind of incapacity, the skeptical muscle gone slack from never being asked to lift.
Cynicism that deep, sustained that long, under a warm public manner, is rare, and it tends to leak through the warmth. The warmth reads as real. A true cynic would also likely pick a con less ruinous to himself, since this one demands he spend his whole life and reputation on it. Sincerity is the simpler explanation and the more humane one, and nothing on the record argues against it. The honest verdict is that he probably believes, and that his believing is the source of both his power and his blindness, drawn from the same well.
There is a price. The man in this seat cannot fully meet his most honest interlocutors. The returnee trained in real scientific reasoning, the doubting child raised inside, the Slifkin who followed the synthesis to its honest end, these are the people he cannot engage on the merits, because engaging on the merits is the one move the structure forbids him. So his warmth has an invisible boundary. He can love the seeker and cannot follow the seeker’s hardest question, and the people on the far side of that wall experience him as evasive or shallow even when his feeling for them is real. He gives everything except the one thing the rigorous mind wants, which is a man willing to lose the argument. That limit sits inside every relationship he has with a doubter, felt by both, named by neither.
The man who never runs the audit, who lives wholly inside the frame, gets to experience his life as coherent and good, a life spent waking sleepers and bringing sons home to their Father. The buffered position is also the protected one. Whether that peace is something to envy or a kind of poverty depends entirely on what you think a man owes to truth, and I will leave that question where it belongs, open, because I do not think the cold audit settles it. The auditor pays his own price, in serenity, and cannot prove his bargain is the better one.
So the shape of the whole thing, at the last turn, is this. The leader of an enterprise that depends on a belief is the man least able to examine the belief. His intelligence runs everywhere but the foundation, because the foundation is the single place where inquiry would cost him the enterprise, the income, the authority, and the self all at once. Cohen is bright, and his brightness lights every room in the house except the one that holds the house up. That is not a flaw in him so much as the condition of the seat. To see the apparatus from outside is to step outside it, and a man cannot run it from there. The cold eye we have been using on him is the eye he is structurally forbidden to turn on himself, and his strength and his un-freedom are the same fact seen from two sides.
The End of Days
Cohen’s End of Days material runs on a different engine from his Torah-and-science work, and you decode it by watching what he does with the verses rather than what he says about them. He does not argue. He assembles. The method is the catena, the chain. He lays prophetic passages end to end, Ezekiel beside Daniel beside Zechariah beside the Psalms, and lets the accumulation do the persuading. No single verse carries the weight. The pile carries it. The reader feels the mass of scripture pressing toward one conclusion and mistakes the volume of citation for the force of proof. The Bible speaks. Cohen only arranges. That posture, the man who merely gathers what the prophets already said, hides the choosing hand, which is where all the work happens.
Watch the parenthetical gloss, because that is the move that matters most. He drops the present tense inside the ancient text. The prophecy says every man’s sword will turn against his brother, and Cohen inserts, in parentheses, that this means they will be destroyed by their own weapons. The prophecy says pestilence, and the parenthesis says the plague. The gloss looks like clarification. It is translation across three thousand years, performed in real time, fused to the verse so the reader cannot find the seam. Their own weapons becomes modern arms, the nuclear age folded into Ezekiel without announcement. The ancient word and the modern referent arrive welded, and the welding is presented as reading.
The payload underneath is a map. The proper nouns of the prophecies become a key to the morning headlines. Edom is the Christian West. Ishmael is the Arab and Muslim world. Persia is Iran. Gog and the land of Magog, Meshech and Tubal, the toes of Daniel’s statue, all of it gets pinned to present states. From the vision of the idol he builds a periodization, the metals and the toes laid out as a fixed sequence of empires ending in ten kingdoms, ten Christian and Muslim powers, the Christians stronger, standing off while the Muslim nations come to make war. The schema tells the listener exactly where he stands on a predetermined timeline. You are here, near the toes, near the end. The thrill of the material is the thrill of locating yourself at the climax of history.
He reaches for number too, the same instinct that drew him to the codes. Gog and Magog carry the gematria of seventy, and seventy is the number of the nations of the world, so the final war becomes all the nations against Israel, confirmed by arithmetic. The hidden count surfaces and ratifies the reading. This is the codes move transposed into prophecy. A number nobody can argue with appears to settle a claim that argument never touched.
The authorities get stacked the way the verses do. He pulls from the heavyweights of the mystical tradition, from the ARI, Isaac Luria (1534-1572), through his disciple Rabbi Chaim Vital (1543-1620), from Pirkei D’Rabbi Eliezer and the Midrash, from the prophet Obadiah on Edom. The names are massive and old, and their mass transfers to the reading. A modern geopolitical map borrows the weight of Luria and the Zohar and wears it as authority.
Now the part that decides everything, the emotional double action. The content is pure horror. Mountains thrown down, walls falling, blood and floods and hailstones, brother killing brother, the war the likes of which the world has never seen. A man should be terrified. The frame converts the terror into hope, and this conversion is the whole rhetorical achievement. The worse the news, the nearer the redemption. Catastrophe stops being catastrophe and becomes a sign. The old teaching that a Persian horse tied to the graves of Israel means the footsteps of the Messiah turns an Iranian missile into evidence of deliverance. Death reads as a birth pang. The fear is not relieved. It is harnessed and pointed at faith. The listener leaves more frightened of the world and more certain of the rescue, and the two feelings reinforce each other rather than cancel.
The End of Days frame is built so that no event can disconfirm it. Good news fits. The desolate land now bears fruit, exactly as Ezekiel said it would before the end, the exiles return and unite. Bad news fits better. War, plague, social collapse, the contempt for the old and the godless governments, all of it is the turmoil the tradition placed before the Messiah. There is no possible headline that counts against the reading. Peace is a lull. War is the war of Gog. A disaster is a sign and so is a blessing. The claim explains everything, which means it predicts nothing, and a frame that cannot fail also cannot be tested. That unfalsifiability is its strength as rhetoric and its emptiness as a claim, the same shape we found in the codes and in the one-way filter on science. The thing is engineered so the audience never has to check it, and so nothing they live through can shake it.
The tradition itself supplies the alibi that keeps the genre safe. The Sages forbade calculating the End, and a chief rabbi of the last generation, Mordechai Eliyahu (1929-2010), repeated it plainly, that all who reckon the End merely guess and the time stays sealed and hidden. Cohen’s material lives in the gap that warning opens. He never names a date. He only points at signs and lets the listener feel the now. So he keeps the urgency of imminence and the deniability of the man who calculated nothing. The signs are everywhere, he implies, and if pressed he has predicted no day and can be caught in no error. The hedge is built into the form.
And the moral grammar inside the eschatology is binary and sharp, sharper than anything in his gentle outreach voice. The final war is good against evil, evil obliterated whole, and the sides are named. Ishmael comes as aggressor. Edom stands by. Israel is the target and the vindicated remnant. This sacralizes a present alignment. Today’s enemies of the Jewish state become the cosmic enemy, and a regional conflict acquires the meaning of the last battle. That is a powerful thing to hand a frightened audience, and it carries a politics inside the theology that the soft voice never quite admits to carrying.
So the rhetoric works on a faculty the science material leaves untouched. The codes flatter the rational mind. The End of Days seizes the dread and the hunger to live in a significant hour. The man who hears it feels the news of the world light up with hidden meaning, feels himself standing near the end of the story, feels his fear turned into expectation. He does not reason his way in. He recognizes. He sees the headlines inside the ancient words, and recognition feels like proof though it proves nothing. That is the decoding. Assemble the verses, gloss the present into them, map the nations, confirm by number, borrow the old authorities, terrify and then convert the terror to hope, predict nothing checkable, and let the frightened man feel he is reading the secret of his own moment.
