This Day, May 17, In Jewish History by Mitchell A. Levin - Cleveland Jewish News (blog)

This Day, May 17, In Jewish History by Mitchell A. Levin
Cleveland Jewish News (blog)
1814: The Constitution of Norway is signed and the Danish Crown Prince Christian Frederik is elected King of Norway by the Constitutional assembly. The first Jews arrived in what is now Norway in the last decade of the 15th century.

and more »

continue reading

Anti-Zionist academics make Jew-hating fashionable - Jweekly.com


Jweekly.com
Anti-Zionist academics make Jew-hating fashionable
Jweekly.com
by asaf romirowsky In a recent lecture at the University of Oslo, Norwegian sociologist and professor Johan Galtung claimed there was a possible connection between the terrorist responsible for the massacre of youths in Norway last summer and the ...

and more »

continue reading

Worldwide migrations correlate with economic opportunity - San Diego Jewish World

Worldwide migrations correlate with economic opportunity
San Diego Jewish World
There may, in fact, be more Irish and Greeks abroad than at home, but nothing approaching the spread of Jews and the meager Judaic population of what they called the homeland from the Roman through the British periods of history.

and more »

continue reading

Plain Truths That Islamophobes Hate - American Muslim

Plain Truths That Islamophobes Hate
American Muslim
This concept developed at America's inception when George Washington made the solemn pledge in 1790 to the fledgling Jewish community, 'To bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance'. Undoubtedly the sustained efforts of many visionaries over ...

and more »

continue reading

This Day in History - May 17 - Jamaica Observer

This Day in History - May 17
Jamaica Observer
1814: Norway's constitution is signed, providing for a limited monarchy. 1934: Military seizes power in Bulgaria from democratic government destabilised by Great Depression. 1983: Israel and Lebanon reach an agreement on the withdrawal of Israeli ...

continue reading

Europe's Dilemma: Immigration And The Arab Spring - Analysis - Eurasia Review


Eurasia Review
Europe's Dilemma: Immigration And The Arab Spring - Analysis
Eurasia Review
Additional hostility toward Muslims was aroused in March, when Mohammad Merah, an extremist, shot three French paratroopers and four Jews before being shot by French forces. Although Merah's actions might have boosted Islamophobic support for both Le ...

continue reading

Why I Am Not a Liberal Zionist: A Response to Liberal Zionists Speak Out - Huffington Post (blog)


Al-Arabiya
Why I Am Not a Liberal Zionist: A Response to Liberal Zionists Speak Out
Huffington Post (blog)
Minority groups in Norway can be Norwegian; minority groups in England can be English; even minority groups in Israel can be Israeli, but they can't be Jewish! And if Jewishness is a matter of peoplehood rather than religion, then we are indeed saddled ...
Why are Anti-Israel Groups in the Israel Day Parade?Arutz Sheva

all 326 news articles »

continue reading

The Relegitimization of Israel and the Battle for the Mainstream Consensus: An ... - San Diego Jewish World

The Relegitimization of Israel and the Battle for the Mainstream Consensus: An ...
San Diego Jewish World
8 Karsh emphasized that “the historic Jewish attachment to the Land of Israel is the real claim to statehood” and asserted that“There is a pressing need to reclaim the historical truth and to rebuild a narrative built on facts, not fiction.

and more »

continue reading

Scary handbook of purity - Calcutta Telegraph


Calcutta Telegraph
Scary handbook of purity
Calcutta Telegraph
Rafael Seligmann, editor of the Jewish Voice From Germany, a newspaper published in Berlin, thinks that there is a great chance of the book becoming a bestseller in the first week of its official release, which is why the Bavarian foundation, ...

and more »

continue reading

Living in brave new Sweden, recalling the 1930s - Pravda

Living in brave new Sweden, recalling the 1930s
Pravda
Of course, history demonstrates too well what may occur when xenophobia enters the official structures of a state, the worst kinds of discriminatory acts finding a seldom questioned legitimacy. FALUN, Sweden - There are no gas chambers or concentration ...

and more »

continue reading