Fighting Antisemitism…with Antisemitism?
“I haven’t been treated right, and you haven’t been treated right,” the presidential nominee told a gathering of Jewish donors.
“I haven’t been treated right, and you haven’t been treated right,” the presidential nominee told a gathering of Jewish donors.
Protests on college campuses last year had myriad effects on Jewish students. Some are hesitant to go back to school, while maintaining hope for a return to normalcy.
We’ve gotten a crash course on the former teacher, coach and congressman, including his innovative pedagogy.
The “essentialist” antisemitism argument is oddly comforting—It’s not us, it’s them!—but also dangerous.
Political scientist Ayal Feinberg’s research shows a correlation between Israeli military activity and U.S. antisemitism.
A NYC rabbi argues for a brazen type of ahavas Yisroel, love of one’s fellow Jew, during these times of terror.
Some Israeli academics have faced doxxing, harassment and administrative indifference on American college campuses.
Has some anti-Israel activism at Harvard crossed the red line into antisemitic? The answer is an emphatic yes.
Students at Columbia, UCLA, and Tufts offer first-hand accounts of pro-Palestinian protests, campus encampments and antisemitism.
Passing the Antisemitism Awareness Act in response to students protesting the war in Gaza is a cynical, or at best naïve move says Professor Omer Bartov.
“I realized I needed to dig in and understand exactly what’s happening in the country.“