(JNS) — Television rarely gets Jewish life right. Too often, Jewish characters are comic foils, political symbols or walking memorials of tragedy.
That’s what makes Dr. Michael Robinavitch (played by Noah Wyle, who had a lead role in the TV series “ER” that aired on NBC from 1994 to 2009, and whose father, original name Weil, is Jewish)—in HBO’s medical drama “The Pitt”—quietly remarkable. He is not defined by neurosis or by slogans. He is defined by how he treats people.
This lead physician goes by “Dr. Robby,” sparing patients the need to pronounce his surname. He does not hide his Jewishness, but neither does he wear it as a badge. It surfaces naturally, the way faith often does in real life: in moments of fear, vulnerability and moral decisions.
Another moment comes earlier in the series, when Robby speaks openly about faith—not as dogma, but as a source of steadiness in a profession defined by chaos. Again, there is no sermon. Just a man acknowledging that medicine is not only about skill, but about meaning.
That restraint is precisely what gives the character moral weight.
In Jewish terms, Robby embodies pikuach nefesh—the principle that saving a life overrides almost every other commandment.
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In the emergency room, that is not a theory; it is daily practice. He treats everyone who comes through the door: rich or poor, native or immigrant, believer or skeptic. His authority comes not from ideology, but rather, from competence, compassion and responsibility.
He also carries something else that modern television often avoids: family. In the first season, we learn that he has a son. That detail matters. It anchors him in continuity. He is not just a professional; he is a father. His work in the ER is not abstract heroism but part of a larger moral chain—what he owes his patients and what he owes the next generation.
Yes, he is just a fictional character. But it is the character behind the character that is on display.
This matters because of the world the show places him in. “The Pitt” is deliberately multicultural: Indian doctors, a Muslim nurse, Asian colleagues, black and white patients in constant rotation. It is a microcosm of America’s hospital system and, by extension, of America itself. Robby is not the minority; he is a minority. His Jewishness exists alongside others’ identities, without rivalry or erasure.
And yet, he is clearly a moral center of gravit