Turning antisemitic terror into a feel-good story about non-Jewish heroes is dangerous - opinion
When antisemitic incidents occur, the world prefers to talk about the feel-good narrative rather than Jewish victims of terror.
When antisemitic incidents occur, the world prefers to talk about the feel-good narrative rather than Jewish victims of terror.
While there are several important and certainly worrisome parallels that make the comparison between Hitler’s world and our world valid, as a whole, the parallel does not hold up.
The US must send a clear and immediate message to Ankara and Damascus that attempts to militarily reshape northern Syria are unacceptable.
Unlike previous administrations, Donald Trump is willing – even eager – to reduce Israel’s dependence on the United States.
Hanukkah is not sentimental spirituality: It is political theology. It proclaims that Jewish existence is not justified by how pleasing it is to others, nor how dissolves into general humanity.
Hope is the belief that the world can be made whole and that Jews have a role in doing just that.
If foreign governments want more people to leave safely, they must do the unglamorous work: issue visas, arrange onward travel, accept evacuees, and fund logistics.
Mayors came to New Orleans to study antisemitism, and pro-Palestinian protesters ensured they felt its reality firsthand.
Ratified by the UN, Trump’s Gaza peace plan leaves no pathway for the creation of a Palestinian state.
Albanese claimed that Australia’s recognizing of a fictitious Palestinian state didn’t encourage the Jew-slaughter.
When Jewish and Arab facilitators sit together, something subtle but essential happens.