The world is understandably alarmed over reports of Gazan children being injured and unsubstantiated claims of mass starvation. Hamas data claiming 42,000 Gazan deaths without distinguishing between combatants and noncombatants stirs emotions and is endlessly repeated by the international press.
Read MoreIt might be surprising to some, but the notion of Palestine as an ancient Arab nation is a misconception. A distinct Palestinian identity is relatively recent, gaining prominence post-1967 due to the PLO led by Yasser Arafat.
Read MoreThe notion of Palestine as an ancient Arab nation is a misconception. The concept of a distinct Palestinian identity is relatively recent, gaining prominence post-1967 due to the PLO led by Yasser Arafat.
Read MoreWhile other persecuted minorities define the injustice against them and rage against anyone who mislabels it, we Jews are still debating the definition of the word antisemitism both among ourselves and with third parties.
Read MoreIn 2020, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) created a “Representation and Inclusion Standards” for eligibility in the Best Picture category effective for the 2024 Oscars. It is meant to “encourage equitable representation” both on and off screen.
Read MoreIn January 2023, I was well into the tour for my book, Artists Under Fire: The War against Celebrities, Jews, and Israel, which explains how the demonization of Israel sets the stage for widespread antisemitism. By the end of 2023, many people awakened to this dangerous truth.
I spent most of January in Florida, where I made the rounds from the conservative Villages in the north to progressive audiences in the south. I began each engagement with the same question. Who here is concerned about rising Jew-hatred? Inevitably, everyone raised their hands.
Read MoreMonsters descended on Israel’s southern border on October 7.
While Israeli and international families mourn the horrifying torture and murder of their loved ones, university students blame Israelis for the atrocities committed against them and university presidents have lost their moral compass.
The thin line between Israel bashing and Jew hatred continues to dissolve before our eyes. Participants in massive anti-Israel rallies worldwide shout, "Gas the Jews" and "We are Hamas."
Read MoreEach Rosh Hashanah, we celebrate the new year with the blast of the shofar, a ram’s horn. It awakens our senses to the coming days of self-reflection.
On Yom Kippur, we think about our deeds and words in the past year and how we could have done better. As Jews, we understand the power of choice given by the soul, and commit to return to our best selves (teshuvah) in the coming year.
Read More“The landscape of the American Jewish community and of the American rabbinate is changing, and the changes are coming rapidly.
“Who would have ever imagined during any of Israel’s previous wars that would-be rabbis would have the chutzpah to publicly circulate a letter condemning Israel for taking actions to defend its citizens!?”
Read MoreAlthough I have always had a strong Jewish identity, I did not grow up in a religious household or attend Sunday school as a child.
My father was a proud Jew but an atheist. My mother was very spiritual and would have liked my brother and me to get a formal Jewish education but didn’t press it. I was agnostic, uncertain if God existed. Becoming a bat mitzvah was not on the table, and I didn’t feel like I was missing much.
Read MoreThroughout history, many different societies have attempted to get rid of their Jews.
Every year at Passover we recite the story of a jealous Egyptian Pharaoh who ordered the death of Jewish baby boys. Three thousand years later, Hitler exterminated over 70% of Europe’s Jewry. Jews were expelled from England in 1290, from France in 1306, and from Portugal and Spain in 1492. Millions of Jews were killed during Spanish Inquisition, in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution, and by the pogroms throughout Europe.
Read MoreJew to Christian to Jew again? Such was the journey of folk-rock poet Bob Dylan.
Born Robert Zimmerman in Duluth, Minn., Dylan attended Hebrew school at an Orthodox synagogue and enjoyed summers at the Zionist-oriented Herzl Camp. Although Dylan became a bar mitzvah, he did not identify strongly as a Jew as a young man. Later, he changed his name to Bob Dylan and remade himself as the voice of the typical mid-Western American folk singer.
Read MoreDuring my trip to London this past March, British MP Bob Blackman graciously invited me to speak to members of the British-Israel All-Party Parliamentary Group about the cultural boycott campaign against Israel.
The campaign demonizes the Jewish homeland and creates an environment that makes Jew-hatred more acceptable. It falsely accuses Israel of crimes against humanity and calls for its destruction.
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