We're stepping into the baseball fields, yeshiva halls, and quiet living rooms of 1940s Brooklyn with The Chosen—Chaim Potok's beloved novel about friendship, faith, and the space between fathers and sons. On the surface, it's a story about two brilliant teenage boys—one Hasidic, one Modern Orthodox—who meet after a baseball game gone wrong. But underneath? It's about the struggle between tradition and change, silence and speech, destiny and choice. In this episode, we unpack why The Chosen still resonates decades later, how it captures the beautiful tension of Jewish identity, and why no one forgets the first time they read it. Bring tissues. And maybe a baseball glove.