The leaders of the University of California sought to thread a needle by distinguishing between harsh criticism of Israel and the anti-Semitism that often goes with it. Jane Eisner asks: How can long can this distinction hold?
Nominations are open for the 2016 Most Inspiring Rabbis project!
Donald Trump aroused the audience at AIPAC with the same tactics he uses to galvanize voters in his march across the scorched earth of today’s Republican party. And it worked, much to Jane Eisner’s embarrassment and shame.
If conference attendees can’t stay away — Trump’s the entertainment, after all — they should be very, very quiet. Like, sit-on-your-hands quiet. And then…
Donald Trump is on pace to destroy the Republican Party as we know it. His demagogic rise has sparked equal parts anger and glee among some of his opponents, but Jane Eisner writes it’s terrible news for the Jews — and a big blow to Israel.
When I first heard the number, I cringed. Could it really be that nearly half of Israeli Jews support the expulsion or transfer of the Arab population, as a new study by the Pew Research Center reported?
Holocaust survivors say the rise of Donald Trump is reason to be nervous. Holocaust scholars say such fears are exaggerated. Which group should we believe?
From time to time, the incidents flare up, like open wounds on the Jewish body politic. And it’s important to follow what happened in Canada to the Israeli singer Noa, and stand up to the bullies, Jane Eisner writes.
Noa has made it crystal clear that she doesn’t support BDS. But that hasn’t stopped a few vociferous critics from claiming she does — to her detriment and, ultimately, to theirs, Jane Eisner writes.
If Bernie Sanders were to win the election, he’d make history as the first Jewish president. But Jane Eisner questions whether his Jewishness will make any difference in how he leads.