An Activist Remembers Her Civil Rights Journey
“I wanted readers to see and feel what it was like to be a child subjected to intensive bombing,” writes Marione Ingram, who as a child survived the Allied bombing of Hamburg, Germany, in 1943.
“I wanted readers to see and feel what it was like to be a child subjected to intensive bombing,” writes Marione Ingram, who as a child survived the Allied bombing of Hamburg, Germany, in 1943.
We talk to some of the “rock stars” of First Amendment scholarship: Marci Hamilton, Charles Haynes, Douglas Laycock, David Saperstein, Marc Stern, Jeffrey Toobin, Asma Uddin and others to explore contested issues—from contraception to sharia—and shed light on what they think will happen next.
While teaching modern Hebrew in England and the United States, Norman Berdichevsky got a shock. Many of his students, he
In 1997, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) was deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. But today the federal law is seeing an unlikely reincarnation. Moment asks six preeminent scholars: Can we find common ground between gay rights and religious freedom?
Brian Epstein, the man who discovered the Beatles and shaped them into the biggest music sensation of the 20th century,
Americans are tired of politicians who wear their religion on their sleeves.
Tunisia is one of the success stories of the Arab spring. But can its Jews—who have lived in relative peace
By Alan A. Stone DucClaude Lanzmann is known on this side of the Atlantic as the Frenchman who created the
These ancient laws, long central to our way of life, have become a divisive symbol. Do they still matter? Or is it time for an upgrade? A range of American thinkers speak up, and be warned—they don’t agree on much. (See related stories on pages 21 and 24.)