Goldberg has worked for the Intermountain Jewish News since 1966. From 1972-1975 he was its Jerusalem correspondent, then from 1975 to 1983 its Israel correspondent. Throughout, he wrote a weekly column, "The View from Jerusalem", for the Intermountain Jewish News, and reviewed books for the Jerusalem Post.Numerous editions of the Jerusalem Post, including but not limited to July 5, 1985; Oct. 15 1982; Aug. 21, 1981; April 1, 1983.
David K. Shipler, The New York Times correspondent in Israel at the time, later wrote of Goldberg in Arab and Jew: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land: "I sat over these questions about with my friend Hillel Goldberg, a young lecturer at Hebrew University in Jewish ethics and intellectual history. He was a religious man with a graceful, fine precision of compassion in his reasoning, and our long discussion brought a valuable clarity to my own thinking."
Goldberg's book Israel Salanter: Text, Structure, Idea won the Academic Book Award of the Year award from Choice Reviews.
Goldberg is considered an expert on the Musar movement, having published books on Rabbi Israel Salanter and other aspects of the movement. Numerous yeshiva deans and heads of musar organizations describe his book The Fire Within as life-changing, with Dr. Alan Morinis, founder of The Mussar Institute, writing "it was the introduction to my spiritual lineage....it holds a special place (for me)." Rabbi Micha Berger notes it was the book "which inspired me to explore musar," a topic which was to become central to his life as founder of the AishDas Society.
In addition to his books on Musar, Goldberg has authored English-language books on Jewish transition figures from Eastern Europe and Shabbat, as well as a Hebrew-language supercommentary on the Vilna Gaon regarding the Halakha (Jewish laws) of mikveh, the Jewish ritual bath.
Goldberg has served on the editorial board of numerous national Jewish publications as well. In 1987, he became the first person to serve in the role of contributing editor for the Jewish Action, and has remained in that role ever since. Goldberg is also the longest serving editor for Tradition: A Journal of Orthodox Jewish Thought, having served in various editorial capacities since 1976.
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