Categories
Arts

A History Of Gaza

Jean-Pierre Filiu, a professor of Middle East Studies at Sciences Po in Paris, is absolutely right. “The word ‘Gaza,”‘ he writes in Gaza: A History (Oxford University Press), “arouses passions and emotions whenever it is uttered.” Last July and August, when Israel and Hamas clashed in a 50-day war, their third in six years, Gaza […]

Categories
Middle East

Rebuilding Gaza/Making Peace

The international donors conference held in Cairo on Oct. 12 sent out an unmistakable message: Rebuilding the Gaza Strip after last summer’s 50-day war between Israel and radical Palestinian factions is a necessity, but the Aug. 26 ceasefire that ended the fighting may not endure unless Israel and the Palestinians reach a broader political agreement to […]

Categories
Arts

The Birth Of Israel’s Air Force

Several days before five Arab armies attacked the new-born state of Israel on May 15, 1948, David Ben-Gurion, Israel’s future prime minister, asked his generals if Israel could win the war. Fifty/fifty, he was told. One of the reasons for the uncertainty was that Israel lacked one of the basics of a modern fighting machine […]

Categories
Travel

Culture Shock In Varanasi

The soul of Varanasi, a holy Hindu city in northern India, is defined by its ghats, the stone stairways marching down to the water’s edge of the mighty Ganges River. There are about 100 ghats in Varanasi, and all of them are connected to a warren of dirt lanes, crumbling buildings and hole-in-the-wall shops of […]

Categories
Arts

Odessa — City Of Sin

Odessa, the Ukrainian port on the northwestern shore of the Black Sea, lives on its reputation as an infamous city. A den of iniquity in the 19th and early 20th centuries, it attracted adventurers seeking wealth and pleasures. Much like storied Shanghai and New Orleans, it was a haven for criminals, smugglers, pimps and prostitutes. […]

Categories
Arts

The Green Prince

Mosab Hassan Yousef may be the most hated Palestinian in the world. From 1997 to 2007, he worked undercover for Israel’s internal security agency, Shin Bet, exposing suicide bombing plots before they could explode into fruition. He was a prize catch, being the son of Sheikh Hassan Yousef, one of the founders of Hamas, Israel’s […]

Categories
Middle East

Canada Goes To War

Canada is now officially at war with Islamic State, the Sunni jihadist organization that has left a bloody trail of death and destruction in Syria and Iraq. By a margin of 157-134, the Canadian parliament on Oct. 7 passed a motion authorizing air strikes against Islamic State in Iraq for a period of up to […]

Categories
Arts

Historian Looks Back

Bernard Lewis, 98, is one of the greatest historians of the Middle East. Formerly a professor of Middle Eastern history at the School of Oriental and African Studies and Princeton University, he has produced a torrent of well-regarded books, from The Arabs in History and The Emergence of Modern Turkey to What Went Wrong? and […]

Categories
Arts

Picaresque Swedish Comedy

As comedies go, Felix Herngren’s The 100-Year-Old-Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared is fantastical and original. Set mainly in Sweden, but also playing out against the backdrop of foreign locales like Djibouti, Spain and Bali, this is a quirky film of  imagination and verve adapted from Jonas Jonasson’s best-selling novel, which has been published […]

Categories
Jewish Affairs

Lapse Of Judgment

Dr. Richard Horton, editor of the British medical journal The Lancet, flew to Israel a few days ago to make amends for an egregious lapse of judgment. In July, he published An Open Letter for the People of Gaza, a shamefully biased piece about the recent war in the Gaza Strip accusing Israel of committing […]