Sydney showed what the West really thinks Jewish lives are worth - opinion
Yesterday, I found myself thinking about Matilda, a ten-year-old girl who was murdered in Sydney. What does she have to do with the conflict in the Middle East?
Yesterday, I found myself thinking about Matilda, a ten-year-old girl who was murdered in Sydney. What does she have to do with the conflict in the Middle East?
The Bondi Beach mass shooting was not unforeseeable; it was the product of years of denial and tolerance for hate.
Ahmed al-Ahmed, a local fruit vendor, rushed toward a terrorist during a Hanukkah celebration and risked his own life to save others.
The Bondi attack did not come out of nowhere – and its consequences reach far beyond Australia.
Standing with Australia’s Jewish community is not symbolic—it tests whether the state can protect minorities and uphold democracy for everyone.
Hanukkah is no longer just a memory of survival. It is a test of Israel’s responsibility to Jews facing fear abroad.
The roots of Israel’s pension crisis lie in education, employment, and income, not in retirement age.
After the October 7 massacre, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz now rejects the idea of a two-state solution.
Israel’s democracy is mature enough for another woman prime minister, and leaders are already emerging.
As Israel’s economy and defense mature, US military aid may cost more politically than it delivers strategically.
Survivors of captivity, grieving mothers, and quiet heroes show that Israel’s true strength lies in its people.