At the behest of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, 1,600 scientists from Germany were brought to the United States in a secret operation from 1945 to 1952. With the Cold War heating up, their expertise in such fields as rocketry, biological and chemical weapons, aviation and space medicine was highly valued by the American […]
Category: Arts
The Taste Of War
Thousands of books have been published about World War II, but Lizzie Collingham’s book, The Taste of War: World War II and the Battle for Food (Penguin), is unique. As far as I know, it’s the first that examines the role food played in that protracted conflict. Collingham’s topic, often overlooked by historians, is extremely […]
Merchant Of Death
Viktor Bout claimed he was a “legitimate businessman,” but in reality, he brazenly violated United Nations arms embargoes and grew wealthy as a merchant of death in Africa. Some even claimed that Bout, a Russian, was an Al Qaeda and Taliban arms supplier. The Notorious Mr. Bout, which will be screened at the Canadian International […]
Toronto Jewish Film Festival (4)
This year’s edition of the Toronto Jewish Film Festival runs from May 1-11 and has a roster of eclectic movies from different countries. A sampler: Yoav Halevy, in Bureau 06, profiles the Israeli organization that gathered the evidence and the witnesses in preparation for the trial of Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann, who supervized the […]
Red Lines Takes You Inside Syria’s Civil War
Syria has crumbled into the maelstrom of civil war, but its descent into violence, anarchy and despair doesn’t deter two young Syrian activists from striving to create a secular democratic republic out of the smouldering rubble. Mouaz Moustafa, the executive director of the Syrian Emergency Task Force, and Razan Shalab al-Sham, his assistant, are consumed […]
Toronto Jewish Film Festival (3)
This year’s edition of the Toronto Jewish Film Festival runs from May 1-11 and features a wide assortment of feature-length movies, shorts and documentaries from around the world. A sampler: Lucia Puenzo’s Argentinian feature film, The German Doctor, focuses on Josef Mengele, the Nazi war criminal who found a haven in South America after the […]
Last of the Unjust Probes A Terrible Dilemma
Long after his nine-hour documentary on the Holocaust, Shoah, was released in 1985, the French filmmaker, Claude Lanzmann, reviewed footage he had been forced to cut. He was probably flabbergasted by what he had left out, particularly an intriguing interview with Rabbi Benjamin Murmelstein, the last living “elder” of a Nazi ghetto. Murmelstein, who died […]
Portrait Of A Palestinian National Poet
Mahmoud Darwish (1941-2008) was the national poet of the Palestinians, a man whose lyrical poetry distilled the essence of loss and exemplified the dream of statehood. Ibtisam Mara’ana Menuhin’s empathetic biopic, Write Down, I Am An Arab, will be screened at the Canadian International Documentary Festival (Hot Docs) in Toronto on April 27, April 29 […]
Toronto Jewish Film Festival (2)
This year’s edition of the Toronto Jewish Film Festival, a major event in the city’s cultural agenda, runs from May 1-11 and lives up to expectations, judging by the roster and quality of the movies. A sampler: If you’ve ever visited the Lower East Side in New York City, you may have come upon a […]
Nikolai Gogol’s Influence On Sholem Aleichem
A portrait of the Russian novelist Nikolai Gogol (1809-1852) adorned the office of Sholem Aleichem (1859-1916), the renowned Yiddish writer. According to Amelia Glaser, a professor of Russian and comparative literature at the University of California in San Diego, Sholem Aleichem’s attachment to Gogol was anything but surprising. Sholem Aleichem, whose real name was Sholem […]