
There’s No Cure for Antisemitism, But There is a Vaccine
A vaccine doesn’t pretend to cure anything. Instead, it inoculates us, so when the disease shows up, our bodies are better prepared to fight it.

A vaccine doesn’t pretend to cure anything. Instead, it inoculates us, so when the disease shows up, our bodies are better prepared to fight it.

Whose job is it to define who I am? Is it an institution’s job or is it mine? In all the brouhaha over Critical Race Theory (CRT), this question is rarely asked.”;td_smart_list_h”;h1

Why does it feel as if this great Jewish brand is suddenly getting tarnished?”;td_smart_list_h”;h1

Since he will now be a leader of the whole community, Rabbi Farkas will have to wrestle with a new category of challenges.”;td_smart_list_h”;h1

The thought of what happened to the 156 missing people was just unbearable.”;td_smart_list_h”;h1

If we want to make an impact, we need to enlist not Jews but Arab Israelis. They have the credibility to turn the success idea into a progressive Israeli ideal.”;td_smart_list_h”;h1

This coalition would never have happened without the decent human beings who persevered to make it happen.”;td_smart_list_h”;h1

Here in the United States, the latest tactic of the anti-Israel movement is to connect the Jewish state to the racist sins of white supremacy.”;td_smart_list_h”;h1

More than 700 terror rockets have been fired at Israel since Monday.

We will webcast on the Jewish Journal website a virtual ceremony where 45 people will take turns honoring one of the worshipers who lost their lives in Meron.




