Deeper Look At The Parsha

In the late 1990s Rabbi Dunner presented his own daily 2-hour radio show on London’s multiethnic station, Spectrum Radio. Tens of thousands of listeners – Jews and non-Jews alike – tuned in every day to hear Rabbi Dunner’s take on current events. In 2011 Rabbi Dunner relocated to the US and became the senior Rabbi at Beverly Hills Synagogue. Weekly the Rabbi holds a parsha shiur that delves deeper into the Parsha of the week.

THE GIFT OF MANY VOICES

Rabbi Dunner unpacks the Tower of Babel: Why did God scatter nations and diversify language? Not to punish—but to protect. Unity is holy, yet enforced unanimity is perilous. Discover how Babel warns against groupthink, how Torah sanctifies principled disagreement, and why many voices, under one God, make a symphony rather than a siren.

10-23
39:54

REAL MESSAGE OF THE OLIVE LEAF

In this moving reflection, Rabbi Dunner explores the true meaning of the olive leaf brought to Noah by the dove after the Flood. Far from being a symbol of closure, it marked the beginning of humanity’s long journey toward renewal. Drawing parallels to post-Holocaust recovery and Israel’s resilience after October 7th, he reveals how divine light emerges through brokenness.

10-22
08:02

WHEN EVIL SPEAKS OF JUSTICE

Throughout history, evil has cloaked itself in virtue — from the serpent in Eden to today’s moral crusaders like Greta Thunberg. Drawing on Niebuhr, Midrash, and classic Torah commentaries, Rabbi Dunner reveals how the language of compassion and justice can become a weapon of destruction when it is stripped of truth, humility, and moral clarity.

10-16
08:46

THE NEVER-ENDING BEGINNING

Exactly two years after October 7, Israel stands at a turning point: a sweeping hostage deal agreed, Hamas broken, and the horrors since that day nearing an end. From vulnerability and isolation to resolve and renewal, Rabbi Dunner connects this moment to Vezot Habracha—Moshe’s final blessing. How does it all connect, and what are the lessons of Simchat Torah?

10-09
08:35

"I FORGIVE YOU!"

When forgiveness is offered without truth or accountability, it may feel noble but it can also ring hollow. From Erika Kirk’s public absolution of her husband’s murderer to the Nuremberg Trials and South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, history and Judaism teach a harder truth: real reconciliation demands confession, justice, and a reckoning with God. Rabbi Dunner shares the eternal message of Yom Kippur.

09-30
07:14

WE ARE NEVER ALONE

Can Israel truly go it alone? Drawing on Chaim Weizmann’s pragmatism, Ben-Gurion’s faith in miracles, and Rav Kook’s timeless insight, Rabbi Dunner explores the balance between alliances and divine providence. As Vayeilech and the High Holy Days remind us, the Jewish people's survival rests not on geopolitics but on our unbreakable covenant with God.

09-30
08:29

WHEN HATE PROVES THE PROMISE

From the latest bizarre conspiracy linking Charlie Kirk’s murder to Mossad, to the viral spread of pro-Nazi propaganda online, antisemitism is mutating yet again. Far-right agitators, far-left activists, and Islamist extremists find common ground in their hatred of Jews. But as Rabbi Dunner explains, Parshat Nitzavim teaches us that every curse only sharpens Jewish identity, resilience, and return.

09-18
09:20

TRUTH KILLED BY A BULLET

In a world where truth has become dangerous and reason is met with rage, the assassination of Charlie Kirk is more than a tragedy — it’s a sign of collective madness. Rabbi Dunner explores how Moses foresaw this descent in Parshat Ki Tavo, and what Kirk’s death reveals about the fragile state of truth in our time.

09-11
09:00

BEYOND THE NEST

Why does the Torah command us to send away a mother bird before taking her eggs or chicks? From the Mishnah and Rambam to Ramban, Maharal, the Hasidic masters, Rav Dessler, and Rav Kook, Rabbi Dunner shows how this mitzvah is far more than a law about bird nests — it’s a journey into compassion, exile and redemption, spiritual growth, and God’s infinite mercy.

09-03
36:20

MORE POWERFUL THAN HATE

Rabbi Dunner reflects on the remarkable journey of Nikos Sotirakopoulos, who transformed from a virulent antisemite into one of Israel’s fiercest defenders. Connecting Nikos’s story to Parshat Ki Teitzei, Rabbi Dunner highlights the Torah’s lessons about our potential to change, the need to uproot hatred, and why—even though evil exists—it doesn’t have to remain.

09-03
09:05

ASK THE RABBI

Rabbi Dunner explores the Torah’s command in Parshat Shoftim to follow the guidance of our sages — even when they disagree, and even when they might be wrong. Drawing on sources from Chazal to the Rambam, and more recent commentaries, Rabbi Dunner shows how and why emunat chachamim remains the cornerstone of Jewish survival.

08-29
31:46

WHAT HITLER KNEW - AND WE FORGOT

Adolf Hitler learned that ballots can be more powerful than bullets — and used that lesson to dismantle German democracy from within. Today, Islamist movements are following the same playbook, exploiting demographics and the ballot box to advance their agenda. Rabbi Dunner presents a lesson from Parshat Shoftim, which reminds us: unless we guard our gates, freedom itself is at risk.

08-28
09:46

THE ILLUSION CALLED PALESTINE

Western governments are rushing to recognize a Palestinian state — but what they are really recognizing is an illusion. Like Voltaire’s famous quip about the Holy Roman Empire, “Palestine” is neither real nor a state. Parshat Re’eh warns against false prophets. Rabbi Dunner shows how rewarding terror with statehood is a false prophecy that imperils truth, justice, and stability.

08-21
09:33

THE PERILS OF PROGRESSIVE MERCY

We live in an age where “compassion” and “tolerance” are paraded as the highest virtues. But when mercy is divorced from truth, it becomes cruelty in disguise. Rabbi Dunner takes us on a journey from Rousseau to Parshas Re’eh, and from woke politics to Rambam, to discover why the Torah warns us: “lo tachmol velo techaseh alav” — that false compassion destroys.

08-21
30:59

SMALL STEPS, BIG GOALS

After a dreadful sports accident left James Clear relearning how to walk, he discovered a life-changing truth: greatness comes from tiny, repeated actions. Rabbi Dunner draws on Clear’s story, Britain’s love of a “cuppa” tea, and Japan’s precision culture to show how Moses, in Parshat Eikev, makes the same point—small mitzvot done regularly matter most.

08-14
07:00

ALWAYS READY TO DECLUTTER

From eighteenth-century Shakers to contemporary celebrity closets, the secret of clarity has always been the same: less is more. In Va’etchanan, Moshe gives us God’s ultimate decluttering rule—“do not add and do not subtract.” Forget spiritual bloat. When we edit down to the essentials, what’s left is powerful, timeless, and exactly as it was meant to be.

08-07
08:06

THE KEY TO SUCCESS

Why does Moshe repeat the Ten Commandments in Va’etchanan? Rabbi Dunner explores the hidden power of repetition—from the Sfas Emes to Rav Dessler, from Rambam’s Mishneh Torah to neuroscience and Michael Jordan’s relentless practice—revealing how review transforms knowledge into identity. Discover why repetition isn’t redundant - it’s the secret to becoming the Torah you learn and the mitzvos you observe.

08-07
29:44

THE ART OF GENTLE REBUKE

Moshe’s first words in Devarim aren’t fiery accusations — they’re quiet, coded reminders. Out of love and respect, he rebukes without shaming, uniting the nation instead of dividing it. From Rashi to the Toldos Yaakov Yosef, we learn that true rebuke heals, builds trust, and binds us together. Sometimes, the gentlest words have the greatest power.

08-01
28:08

NOTHING PERMANENT EXCEPT CHANGE

Heraclitus taught that change is life's only constant—yet many leaders refuse to change when disaster looms. But not all. From Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai, to William of Orange, to Moses in Parshat Devarim, history's great leaders understood when to "recalculate" their approach. As we read Devarim and approach Tisha B'Av, Rabbi Dunner explores how embracing necessary change, rather than clinging to failed strategies, offers the best path forward.

07-31
08:15

IT'S NOT ABOUT THE DESTINATION

Three travelers, three eras, countless miles—and not one of them racing to a finish line. From Marco Polo’s China, Benjamin of Tudela’s regal Baghdad, to the Chida’s street debates in Livorno and rejected snacks in Amsterdam, none sought fame or fortune. They gathered meaning, moment by moment. Because sometimes, the journey _is_ the destination.

07-24
09:04

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