Education
“We were pleasantly surprised,” said Rabbi Shlomo Soroka, director of government affairs for Agudath Israel of Illinois who has also led the Jewish organization’s efforts in Missouri.
Sure to ruffle a few feathers, “Islam, Jews and the Temple Mount” lays out how the Muslim narrative about the Jewish connection to the Temple Mount has been distorted.
According to Rabbi A. D. Motzen, Agudath Israel of America’s national director of state relations, “Indiana is just one of many states advancing educational choice during this legislative session.”
Multimedia exhibits illustrate how Jewish immigrants and succeeding generations adapted to life in the American South.
Mona Khoury-Kassabri is the Hebrew University’s new vice president of diversity. It’s a major milestone for the university, and she has a great deal planned.
Craig Heimbichner said his writings about conspiracy theories were written from “a scholarly standpoint.”
More than 40 percent of Jewish day-school students receive financial aid from state scholarships.
The reports, which sent shockwaves of anger and embarrassment throughout Duxbury, a small Massachusetts community of 16,000, have drawn national press and is the latest anti-Semitic instance involving paid municipal leaders.
Public health chief Dr. Sharon Alroy-Preis: “Masks will have to stay in our bags at all times since it is still mandatory to wear them indoors.”
“It is critical that we stand together to demand systemic reform to educational materials ... before one more child is taught from textbooks riddled with hateful lessons,” states a letter to U.S. legislators.
It went through with 95 percent voting “yes,” with a representative to be in place by the fall semester.
Street names in Israel’s capital city honor biblical, medieval and modern personalities who played significant roles in local and Jewish history.