A Hanukkah Gift: Argue, Don’t Fight

As much as the Jewish tradition values reasoned argument, in the hard reality of communal life that tradition often succumbs to the thrill of the fight.
We Live and Grieve Together

On Sunday morning, a terrorist attack took place in Jerusalem leaving one Israeli dead and three injured.
Egypt: Past, Present, Future

The quickly planned visit of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, the first Arab leader to visit Israel publicly, was incredibly exciting, and scary at the same time.
A Holocaust Survivor’s Visit to Her Childhood Home Transports Her to the Past

Ahead of the 83rd anniversary of Kristallnacht, Eve Kugler, 90, visited her hometown of Halle, Germany, and recalls the horrifying period that led to her family fleeing for their lives.
The Crucial But Underrated Gift of Being ‘A People Apart’

Many liberal Jews don’t want to know about Jewish exceptionalism because it runs smack into the cardinal precepts of liberal dogma—universalism, the rejection of cultural singularity and the eradication of difference as “discrimination.”
A Mezuzah on Every Door

My friend got married this year, a year of many challenges. It’s been a special journey for her, so I got her a special gift: a mezuzah.
California Needs to Pick Holocaust Education or Anti-Semitism

Gov. Gavin Newsom cannot simultaneously push for a curriculum that teaches about the perils of the Shoah and give voice to the latest trends in Jew-hatred.
Hidden Heroes

I’ve read many great books, but it’s rare that I have the urge to thank the author. In the case of “Hidden Heroes,” I wanted to do so on two levels
The Systemic Failure of Israel’s Civil Administration in Judea and Samaria

While I would like to believe that those who who serve in the body established in 1981 are good people, the entire mechanism is rotten to its core.
The Latest Target of Anti-Israel Academics? The Negev

The same leftist activists who demand that Israel expel “illegal” Jewish settlers simultaneously insist that Israel not expel Bedouin squatters.