Categories
Arts

Man In Profile

Joseph Mitchell spent the greater part of his career at the intersection between journalism and creative writing. A reporter on the staff of The New Yorker for 58 years, he brought to his craft a boundless melange of curiosity, energy, observational powers and an understated, elegant prose style. Born and bred in North Carolina, the […]

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Middle East

Iran Nuclear Agreement Forged By Compromise

The landmark nuclear agreement signed by the six major powers and Iran on July 14 in Vienna was forged on the anvil of compromise in incredibly complex negotiations extending over 20 months. Nonetheless, it’s replete with glaring uncertainties and nagging question marks. Designed to contain rather than to dismantle the Iranian nuclear program, it’s aimed […]

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Middle East

Provocative Words Undermine Mutual Trust

If there is ever to be real peace between Israel and the Palestinians, both sides will be obliged to make painful concessions and compromises with respect to a whole host of prickly issues. But to reach that point, the Israeli government and its Palestinian interlocutor will have to establish a measure of mutual trust, of […]

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Jewish Affairs

Orthodox Monopoly Must End

Israel, in many respects, is a shining beacon of openness and tolerance. Judging by its multiplicity of political parties, its transparent governing institutions and its splendid arts scene, Israel is far and away the most vibrant democratic society in the Middle East. Yet Israel’s body politic is sullied by an unsightly stain. Since the advent […]

Categories
Arts

The Fall Of The Ottomans

The current map of the Middle East is an artificial construct, having been conceived and drawn up by European colonial powers during a period of tumult, dissolution and intrigue. As a result of the upheavals unleashed by the outbreak of World War I, the Ottoman Empire lost its territorial foothold in the Arab world. This […]

Categories
Jewish Affairs

The Ukrainian-Jewish Encounter

Ukraine has loomed large in Jewish history, a point that comes across clearly enough in A Journey Through The Ukrainian-Jewish Encounter: From Antiquity to 1914, a cross-Canada travelling exhibition which runs in Toronto until July 19. First shown in Vaughan, a suburb north of Toronto, and then in Winnipeg, a major center of the Ukrainian […]

Categories
Arts

Amy — A Cinematic Profile Of A Great Singer

What a waste of talent. This epitaph immediately comes to mind when Amy Winehouse’s name is mentioned. One of the greatest jazz vocalists of our times, she was probably as gifted as Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday. But being self-destructive, she was bound to fall, as Asif Kapadia’s biopic, Amy, strongly suggests. Dead at 27, […]

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Arts

The Outrageous Sophie Tucker

She was the original red hot mama. Bold, bawdy and brassy, and invariably attired in feathers, sequins and jewels, Sophie Tucker was a huge star in her day, enjoying a 60-year career in vaudeville, Broadway, radio, film and television. William Gazecki’s documentary, The Outrageous Sophie Tucker, distributed by Menemsha Films, draws a rounded portrait of […]

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Arts

Arranged Breaks Jewish/Muslim Barriers

In Arranged, a feel-good feature film now available on the Netflix streaming service, the barriers that normally prevent social interactions between Jews and Muslims crumble. It would be nice if this amity and fellowship could be conveniently transferred to the Middle East. But since this scenario is unlikely to transpire any time soon, you can […]

Categories
Arts

Welcome To Kutsher’s

Kutsher’s Country Club was the last of the Jewish-style resorts in New York’s Catskills Mountains. With its closing and demolition, an era in American Jewish history ended on a sad and inglorious note. Welcome to Kutsher’s, an informative documentary directed by Caroline Laskow and Ian Rosenberg that has made the rounds of Jewish film festivals, […]