Jews cannot confront antisemitism by themselves - opinion
From Joseph and Pharaoh to today’s classrooms, it is clear that antisemitism cannot be fought by Jews alone.
From Joseph and Pharaoh to today’s classrooms, it is clear that antisemitism cannot be fought by Jews alone.
Ma’oz Tzur insists that Jewish memory is not linear progress but recurring danger. That insistence matters after Bondi.
Sydney is yet another wake-up call for Jerusalem: antisemitism is not only a threat to innocent Jews in the major Australian city, but also an existential threat to the State of Israel.
Hanukkah’s miracle was not the oil alone, but the courage to light it. Today, a new generation keeps that flame alive.
A divided opposition risks repeating past failures; uniting the parties is the only path to replacing the current government.
A Hanukkah candlelighting in Australia became the scene of a terror attack, showing how appeasement of global antisemitism now spills into deadly violence.
Movers and shakers in Israeli society.
Now, as you stare at 15 bodies in your own living room, it’s not too late for you to change course, and tell your people six words – Australia is at war, with jihadism.
For Australia, this attack was a turning point, a collision with the progression of "This doesn't happen here" to "What do we do now?"
In a weekly sermon delivered at Mecca two days before the Bondi Beach terror attack the preacher called on God to punish the Jews and portrayed Israel as a cruel “Zionist enemy."
Despite Israel’s remarkable military victory a year ago, questions regarding the jihadist narrative in Syria and Hezbollah's military capabilities remain.