Interview: The “New Jews” of Latin America
Journalist Graciela Mochkofsky discusses her account of unlikely faith in a drug violence-riddled Colombian city.
Journalist Graciela Mochkofsky discusses her account of unlikely faith in a drug violence-riddled Colombian city.
Maya Benton was a high school senior living in Los Angeles when the Russian-American photographer Roman Vishniac’s first posthumous book, To Give Them Light, came out in 1993. Renowned for his iconic images of Eastern European Jews taken between the two World Wars, Vishniac had died three years earlier at age 92.
The new rabbi of Athens discusses the future of Greek Jewry.
Over the past few months, a series of student protests has erupted across the United States on campuses such as Amherst, Dartmouth, Ithaca, the University of Missouri and Yale. While the specific spark of each protest has differed, their substance has been of like mind: Students are contending that their administrations have neglected an obligation to address bigotry, discrimination and intolerance, and specifically racism.
The United States of America and Israel are currently looking for a qualified professional to fill the job opening of “President of the United States” in January 2017.
An experienced negotiator (not Trump) is the key to good relations with Israel.
American Jews shouldn’t be disappointed that Israel’s not a liberal wonderland.
The Israeli soldier who “neutralized” a terrorist is not the true villain.
On occasion, tectonic shifts occur that break apart continents of political thought and reshape them into new ones