Jason Lustig,
Waltham, Massachusetts

A senior at Brandeis University studying Near Eastern and Judaic Studies as well as Computer Science, I am the CTO for MavenHaven. I also founded a semi-academic journal at Brandeis called Chalav U'Dvash, Brandeis' Journal of Zionist Thought.


About Jason Lustig

A senior at Brandeis University studying Near Eastern and Judaic Studies as well as Computer Science, I am the CTO for MavenHaven. I also founded a semi-academic journal at Brandeis called Chalav U'Dvash, which strives to create an open forum for serious research and discussion related to Israel, Zionism and the Jewish people.

Jason's Publications

In The End of Days

Chalav U'Dvash, Brandeis' Journal of Zionist Thought (Winter 2005)

In the past few centuries, Jews have significantly changed the way in which they treat Messianism. The Emancipation set the Jews loose upon modern ideologies and movements that can be considered quasi-Messianic in their style and the ways that Jews perceived them. Although Zionism is a quasi-Messianic movement, it is distinct both from traditional Messianic movements and secular quasi-Messianic movements.