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Jewish Affairs

Sheldon Adelson’s Responsibility

Forty five years ago, the then Israeli prime minister, Golda Meir, myopically dismissed the notion that the Palestinians are a distinct and recognizable people. As she claimed, “It was not as if there was a Palestinian people in Palestine and we came and threw them out and took their country away from them. They did […]

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Guest Voices

The Effects Of Drone Warfare

In an article published last July in the Los Angeles Times, veteran journalist Doyle McManus noted, “The drone has become America’s counter-terrorism weapon of choice.” Controlled by operators from the ground thousands of miles away, or at American bases in places like Djibouti or in the United States itself, drones carry lethal missiles, can hover for […]

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Arts

The Homesman

A period piece set in the last third of 19th century rural America, The Homesman is co-written and directed by Tommy Lee Jones, who stars in this brooding Western alongside Hilary Swank. Stark and austere, like the mid-western landscape in which it unfolds, The Homesman opens in Canada on Nov. 21, and is about a strong-willed woman […]

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Middle East

Prescription For Disaster

A few years ago, while serving as defence minister under Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Ehud Barak unburdened himself of a comment that spoke volumes. Barak, no dove, claimed that the current Israeli government was incapable of making peace with the Palestinians. Regrettably, Barak’s analysis remains as true today as back then.   Netanyahu professes to […]

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Middle East

The Plague Of Racism

A recent comment about racism in Israel by Israel’s president, Reuven Rivlin, transported me back in time. It was 1971, I had just arrived in Israel for an extended visit, and my aunt in Haifa had invited me for dinner. As we feasted on Polish and Israeli delicacies, she gave me some unsolicited advice. More […]

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Arts

The Last Sentence

Torgny Segerstedt was a courageous Swedish newspaper editor as Europe lurched toward the precipice of World War II. A former theologian who had a knack for recognizing the face of evil, he believed that the chancellor of Nazi Germany, Adolf Hitler, was the personification of the devil. Of course, Segerstedt’s assessment of Hitler was not […]

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Travel

Graceland And Beyond

“Welcome to my world,” Elvis Aaron Presley crooned in velvety-soft tones. “Won’t you come on in.” This invitation, emanating from a hidden loudspeaker, could be heard shortly after my bus pulled into Graceland, the gated estate in Memphis, Tennessee, where the legendary rock ‘n’ roll star lived until his untimely death 37 years ago. It […]

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Arts

Mel Brooks Unleashed

Mel Brooks is indubitably a funny guy. A Borscht Belt comedian in an earlier incarnation, he wrote sketches for Sid Caesar’s prime time TV show before realizing he could adapt his material to the big screen. Brooks made his first movie, The Producers, in 1968 and just kept on going, writing and directing and often […]

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Arts

24 Days — Gripping and Suspenseful

The Halimi affair, which gripped France in the winter of 2006, has been brought to the big screen. Alexandre Arcady’s 24 Days will be presented by the Toronto Jewish Film Festival’s Chai Tea & A Movie series  on Sunday, Nov. 16 at 1:30 p.m and 4:30 p.m. Arcady’s fast-moving, suspenseful film is based on a book […]

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Guest Voices

Reflections On Nov. 9

  November 9 is a Schicksalstag, a fateful day, a shameful day, but also a happy day in German history. On November 9, 1918, Philipp Scheidemann proclaimed the first German republic from a window of the Reichstag. This proclamation raised the hope that Germany, after the defeat in World War I and the resignation of […]