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Guest Voices

Israel And The Palestinians Revisited

On Feb. 5, 1969, almost 47 years ago, my friend Sheldon Kirshner and I published an opinion piece in the now-defunct Montreal Star, entitled “Grave Impasse: Israel and the Palestinians.” We were both university students at the time. (He went on to a career in journalism on the Canadian Jewish News in Toronto.) This was […]

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Arts

The Man Who Shot Hollywood

He amassed the greatest known personal collection of Hollywood celebrity prints and negatives. From the 193os to the 1950s, Russian Jewish immigrant Jack (Yasha) Pashkovsky photographed movie stars like Gary Cooper, Clark Gable, Peter Lorre, Judy Garland, Shirley Temple, Merle Oberon and Gloria Swanson. And he stored these photographs under his bed. Pashkovsky, who died […]

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Arts

Walt Disney — A Celebrity At 30

At the age of 30, Walt Disney (1901-1966) was an international celebrity, hailed as a brilliant cartoonist by his peers. Walt Disney on the ascent Disney’s rise from obscurity to fame is chronicled in a two-part PBS television biopic, American Experience: Walt Disney, which will be broadcast on September 14 at 9 p.m. Sarah Colt’s […]

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Middle East

The Refugee Crisis

The refugee crisis presently convulsing Europe owes its origins, in part, to the ongoing civil war in Syria, which has claimed the lives of some 250,000 Syrians since 2011 and may go on for years. The war itself is the fault of the dictatorial Syrian regime, which opened fire on peaceful demonstrators demanding long overdue […]

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Jewish Affairs

White Supremacists Are Violent-Prone

American white supremacist Frazier Glenn Miller Jr. was recently convicted of capital murder, reinforcing the thesis that the overwhelming majority of extremist-related murders in the United States in the last decade have been committed by racists of his ilk. Miller, a former Ku Klux Klan leader, attacked two Jewish institutions in Kansas on April 13, […]

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Arts

Guantanamo’s Child

Terrorist or child soldier? That’s the question Patrick Reed and Michelle Shepard implicitly pose with respect to Omar Khadr in their 80-minute documentary, Guantanamo’s Child, which will have its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival later this month. Khadr, the first juvenile ever tried for war crimes, is an Arab Canadian of Egyptian […]

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Middle East

Israel Seeks Cooperation With Saudi Arabia

In the early 1980s, Israel lodged vigorous protests with West Germany over its plan to sell state-of-the-art Leopard tanks to Saudi Arabia, claiming the sale would threaten its security. But in 2011, when unified Germany announced its intention to sell the Saudis 200 Leopards in a deal worth $2.5 billion, Israel did not object, calling […]

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Arts

Joseph Goebbels: Nazi Radical

Joseph Goebbels, the minister of enlightenment and propaganda during the 12-year Nazi era, was probably Adolf Hitler’s most loyal deputy. Completely dedicated to him and his vision of a fascist, antisemitic order in Germany, Goebbels looked upon Hitler as his idol. According to Goebbel’s latest biographer, Peter Longerich, a professor of modern German history at the […]

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Guest Voices

Migration Crisis Hits Europe

It’s a human tidal wave — tens of thousands of people fleeing war-torn regions of the Middle East, and crossing the Mediterranean to Italy, or else landing on Greek islands and making their way through the Balkans into central Europe. Migrants continue to board overcrowded, rickety boats, risking their lives, and horror stories are legion. […]

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Arts

Althea Gibson — Trailblazer For Equal Rights

Althea Gibson, one of America’s legendary tennis players, broke racial barriers in an era when racism was rampant and African Americans were second-class citizens. Gibson’s rise to stardom, and her abject tumble into penury, are charted in Althea, an illuminating documentary scheduled to be broadcast by PBS’ American Masters series on September 4 at 9 p.m. […]