From the Newsletter | Abe Foxman and Howard Lutnick: One’s Confident, the Other’s Concerned
We can view this as a call to look outside ourselves and open ourselves up to the perspective of the “other” no matter how impossible that may seem.
We can view this as a call to look outside ourselves and open ourselves up to the perspective of the “other” no matter how impossible that may seem.
Join Julie Brill for a conversation about her father’s experience as a child during the Holocaust in Serbia, his family’s secrets, how he survived and the generational trauma passed down to her as a child of a survivor
The latest entry in Dispatches from the Front Lines of Antisemitism with Sharon S. Nazarian.
How secretly watching the 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann helped a 9-year-old girl better understand her parents.
The immediate instinct of many, even before an initial investigation had been completed, was undoubtedly to point to an antisemitic motivation.
If passed, how will the Antisemitism Awareness Act be used to curb harassment of Jewish students?
A conversation with historian Sir Simon Schama about his new film “The Holocaust: 80 Years On.
Rabbi Rachel Isaacs leads her congregation along with the Center for Small Town Jewish Life at Colby College in Waterville, Maine.
I simply cannot thank you enough for the extensive insights into the life, mind and writings of Viktor Frankl.
Remembering Myra Sklarew and her poem “The Poem’s Journey” which was published in Moment half a century ago.