Column
After months of divisiveness, the country immediately united in the face of incessant rocket fire. Will a community unwilling to fight antisemitic progressives learn that lesson?
We should have few illusions about the AfD, and, indeed, its co-thinkers and sister parties elsewhere in Europe, but we should not disdain them automatically.
Behind Western hostility to Israel and indifference towards Iran lies a baleful explanation.
The community relations umbrella group has broken from the Federations, and has now chosen a veteran of J Street and progressive Democratic politics.
Israel’s pushback against rocket fire generated the usual condemnations. But the fighting with a rogue terror group based in Gaza is just the latest chapter of a century-old war against the Jews.
With rules they called “cruel” about to expire, arguing that the surge of illegal immigrants posing as asylum seekers is analogous to Jews fleeing the Nazis has to stop.
In 1972, the year of the Olympics massacre, Yasser Arafat headed the Fatah terrorist organization, and Mahmoud Abbas—the current head of both Fatah and the Palestinian Authority—was his right-hand man.
Former Public Security Minister Omer Barlev is a private citizen with the rights that entails. But he’s also the chairman of a commercial enterprise who ought to take his position into account while bashing a community of consumers.
New report details how Muslim hate groups have rebranded themselves as intersectional allies to Jewish left-wingers.
There it was again: the classic Jewish infiltrator in the form of a man with a fleshy face, hooked nose and scheming expression, carrying a box labeled “Goldman Sachs.”