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Guest Voices

Three Days Of Terror

The three days of terror in Paris are over. The gunmen who murdered 12 people at the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, the brothers Cherif and Said Kouachi, French citizens of Algerian Muslim descent, have been killed by the French police. The victims, mostly journalists, included the Jewish caricaturist Georges Wolinski and two police officers. A second suspect, Amedy […]

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Arts

Memories Of Absence

Aomar Boum, a Moroccan ethnographer, has written a rigorous, refreshingly candid account of one of the oldest Jewish communities in the Arab world. Memories of Absence: How Muslims Remember Jews in Morocco, published by Stanford University Press, is something of a rarity in this field. As he writes in the introduction,“Although a few scholars have […]

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Arts

Minsk Jews Erased From History

Bolshevik troops seized the Belorussian city of Minsk — a historic Jewish center — in July 1920, ending successive Polish and German occupations and liberating its Jewish population from czarist oppression. By the same token, the new Soviet order banned Jewish political and cultural organizations outside the Communist party, including Zionist groups, and began closing […]

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Arts

Two Days, One Night

As Two Days, One Night gets under way, Sandra (Marion Cotillard), a mother of two young children, is resting peacefully, her eyes shut. It will be one of her last moments of tranquility for a while. Minutes later, as she removes a hot tart from the oven, she takes a telephone call that will upend her […]

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Travel

Mississippi’s Antebellum Mansions

  Natchez, which overlooks the mighty Mississippi River and the flatlands of Louisiana, had more millionaires per capita than any other town in the United States before the Civil War. Prosperous due to its network of cotton plantations, worked by the descendants of African slaves, Natchez showed off its wealth through stunning architecture. Landowners who […]

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Arts

Klansville, U.S.A.

The rise and fall of a major American racist is the subject of Klansville, U.S.A, a searing documentary to be broadcast by the PBS television network on Tuesday, Jan. 13 at 9 p.m as part of its American Experience series. It’s the story of Bob Jones, the grand dragon, or leader, of the United Klans of America, […]

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Guest Voices

Afghanistan War Ends With A Whimper

The Western-led war against the Taliban in Afghanistan has, we are told, come to an end. It began on Oct 7, 2001, a month after the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington, and was initially aimed at degrading Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda organization, which had found a home in the country, then ruled largely […]

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Arts

Woody Allen Revealed

Woody Allen will be 80 next December and is still going strong. Indeed, he’s probably finishing his latest film script or movie as I write these words. For about the past four decades, he’s turned out one movie per year, and like the old-school craftsmen he is, Allen composes his scripts on a yellow pad […]

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Arts

Winter Sleep

Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s 196-minute-long film, Winter Sleep, which opens in Toronto on January 9, focuses on fraying and broken personal relationships. Amid the lunar landscape of Cappodoccia, a rugged region in Anatolia replete with eerie caves and strange rock formations, a wealthy, good-looking man in his fifties struggles to understand the two most important women in his […]

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Guest Voices

Palestinians Roil The Waters

In an article I published in the Calgary Herald in November 1999, I wrote that “it is conceivable that some international tribunal may someday indict an Israeli leader for war crimes.” Might this soon come to pass? On Dec. 30, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas signed the Rome Statute, paving the way for membership in the International Criminal Court […]