What If Israel Is the Most-Loved Country on Earth?
Something tells me that prayers of love are answered more than prayers of hate, and Israel is loved where it counts.
Something tells me that prayers of love are answered more than prayers of hate, and Israel is loved where it counts.
I never doubted my decision to live in Israel.
Even before Oct. 7, Benjamin Netanyahu’s legacy as Israel’s longest-serving leader was highly complicated.
Israel’s war against Hamas following the Oct. 7 attacks has brought politically charged anti-Zionist buzzwords to a head.
Laphonza Butler was sworn into the United States Senate to succeed Dianne Feinstein on Oct. 1, only days before the Simchat Torah massacre in Israel.
If we feel guilty 24/7 for living our lives, we won’t be able to support our Jewish brothers and sisters in Israel, who need us to be strong now more than ever.
I wonder how, as a Jewish American writer, I can possibly return to capturing the kinds of human interest stories, general musings and personality profiles that have nothing to do with Israel, antisemitism and other urgent issues.
It’s not a coincidence that I am so enthralled by the pleasures of our culture. These pleasures remind me that our cultural heroes bring out the best in our country.
Most of us will end up with a cold or two, if not something worse, this winter. The good news is that you can protect yourself.