The Hanukkah Miracle Versus the Gaza Miracle that Extinguished Light
The only miracles we should settle for are the sober, humble ones; the miracles where we must slowly and deliberately light one lonely candle at a time.
The only miracles we should settle for are the sober, humble ones; the miracles where we must slowly and deliberately light one lonely candle at a time.
But I’ve found three ways to fight back against that feeling and take back the sense that I can make a difference to the world around me.
The following is a work of satire.
I want you to think about the connections you can cultivate with others outside of our community. Extend your hand to them and welcome them in.
While history suggests that some will always use Jews as scapegoats, I know how blessed I am to be a Jew.
“Round and Round” is a time-loop movie a la “Groundhog Day,” where the main character, Rachel, lives the seventh night of Hanukkah over and over again.
Antisemitic double standards are pervasive, much more than we would have wanted to believe back on Oct. 6. The fight to confront and eliminate these practices will be long and difficult — but doable.
It is this quintessential Jewish idea—refusing to settle for easy victimhood—that most threatens the anti-America, victim-worshipping DEI movement that is poisoning American culture.
This Jewish trait drives Jew haters nuts because it’s not land-related, it has nothing to do with race or skin color, and it goes directly against the leftist narrative of Jews as the ultimate white oppressors.
In the past few weeks, a crack has opened in American academia, exposing a poison that undermines the very ideals of higher education: political ideology.