“It is critical that we do not continue to rely on failed systems that have further entrenched the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” the legislators wrote.
“The city has been overrun with people openly calling for ‘intifada,’ which is Jew-hate,” a participant told JNS. “The city should be safe for everyone.”
The question is no longer merely about Israeli policy. It’s about whether Zionist Jews are regarded as legitimate participants in American public life.
This story, among others, highlights how these pieces aren’t an aberration. It’s part of a deeply ingrained editorial culture that eschews journalistic judgment and common sense.
Accusations once directed primarily at Israeli policy too frequently spill outward onto Jews more generally, collapsing distinctions between state, identity, politics, religion and ethnicity.
“It is critical that we do not continue to rely on failed systems that have further entrenched the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” the legislators wrote.
“The city has been overrun with people openly calling for ‘intifada,’ which is Jew-hate,” a participant told JNS. “The city should be safe for everyone.”
The question is no longer merely about Israeli policy. It’s about whether Zionist Jews are regarded as legitimate participants in American public life.
This story, among others, highlights how these pieces aren’t an aberration. It’s part of a deeply ingrained editorial culture that eschews journalistic judgment and common sense.
Accusations once directed primarily at Israeli policy too frequently spill outward onto Jews more generally, collapsing distinctions between state, identity, politics, religion and ethnicity.
Jewish News Syndicate (JNS) is the fastest-growing news agency covering Israel and the Jewish world. We provide news briefs features opinions and analysis to 100 print newspapers and digital publications on a daily basis.
The incident would mark the first time the terrorist group has actively interfered in an activity coordinated by the Civil Military Coordination Center and the Board of Peace.
The group wedding at a Chabad shul included elderly couples who had been civilly married for years, alongside younger pairs whose wedding plans were delayed by the war.