Adolf Eichmann
Israel's new death penalty law marks moral break, sparks discrimination fears, expert says
For Prof. Yoram Rabin, a criminal and constitutional law scholar and president of the College of Management Academic Studies, the law is both a moral rupture and a legally vulnerable one.
Grapevine: Ringing hollow
On this day: Adolf Eichmann captured in Argentina by Mossad
Argentina declassifies 1,850 documents about Nazi activities in the country
The architect of mass murder
Dec 15 marks the day in which Eichmann was sentenced to death in a landmark case that changed int’l law.
This Week In History: Eichmann sentenced to death
In December 1961, Jerusalem court handed down first and only death sentence in Israel's history.
50 years on, Eichmann on display at the UN
Prominently displayed in the UN’s visitor’s lobby, photographs, news clippings and works of art document the story of the Nazi leader
How we captured Adolf Eichmann
50 years after the Nazi was hanged, Beit Hatfutsot is offering an insider’s look at how the operation was planned and conducted.
To the victor belong the spoils?
Losing the wars hasn’t stopped the Palestinians from calling the shots.
Eichmann’s glass booth installed in Knesset exhibit
Parliament opens new exhibit commemorating 50 years since Adolf Eichmann’s trial.
May 9: Remembering them
Over the years, Rabbi Weiss has touched my heart many times with his thoughts and musings on the ways of our world and of Israel.
Moshe Landau, judge at Eichmann trial, dies at 99
German-born Israel Prize laureate served on Agranat Commission that probed failures of Yom Kippur War.
Out of Europe: The six torch lighters
Eichmann, Revisited
50 years after his trial in Jerusalem, here are thoughts on the man in the glass booth, as witnessed by one of Israel's rare TV personnel at the time.