Reflections on Habonim
By Carolyn Amacher It is said that we live in either our memories or our imagination. For most adults of “my generation,” listening to the
By Carolyn Amacher It is said that we live in either our memories or our imagination. For most adults of “my generation,” listening to the
Democracy seems to be the foreign-policy catchword of this generation. For more than a decade, American grand strategy has largely revolved around a desire to
Thank you very much for joining me. I want to start by saying something about myself?not to describe what I did in the Israeli Navy
NEW YORK, April 11, 2005? American Jews, by a nearly three to one margin (62% to 23%) support Israel?s disengagement plan to leave Gaza and
In 1984, my teacher announced that our grade-six class at Winnipeg’s Talmud Torah would be marking February 14 as Friendship Day, a more religiously-palatable holiday
By Colette Avital Thank you to those who have joined us despite the cold weather. I should say two things as an introduction. I just
The re-invention of LZA as Ameinu should give us pause to re-consider the meaning and goals regarding “labor,” the organization “formerly known as Labor Zionist
Last month, David Horovitz, editor of the liberal-leaning Jerusalem Report magazine, challenged politically notorious filmmaker Michael Moore to train his lens on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,