Print Issue: Miracle in Maui | Aug 25, 2023
A four-day family trip to Maui brought us to a nightmare inferno and then to a little miracle, thanks to a Chabad couple at Maui Kosher Farm.
A four-day family trip to Maui brought us to a nightmare inferno and then to a little miracle, thanks to a Chabad couple at Maui Kosher Farm.
In their zeal to keep our eye off the ball, defenders have scrupulously avoided telling us a few things they know can demolish their case.
Marty Peretz’s new memoir, “The Controversialist: Arguments with Everyone, Left Right and Center,” takes us back to a time when intellectual rigor, civil discourse and vigorous debate ruled the day.
“Happy enough” tends to bring out our humanity. We respect the reality that other people and groups have different views and agendas.
Founded by Yossi and Chaya Segelman, Our Big Kitchen Los Angeles (OBKLA) does more than provide homemade meals to Angelenos in need. It has become a communal gathering place for volunteers.
Seconds before he was stabbed, Rushdie was set to speak about the safety and freedom that the United States offered exiled writers.
Now that the Knesset has shut down for the summer, there is a new anxiety in the air, an apprehension about what will happen next. Will the prophets of doom triumph over the prophets of optimism?
In less than a month, I will be packing up and returning to Israel, after concluding a mission of four years in Los Angeles.
Two new books shed light on iconic financier, philanthropist and social entrepreneur Michael Milken, whose latest venture is a D.C. complex that promotes his lifelong passion: Advancing the American Dream.
The term “judicial overhaul” was always misleading. What this extremist coalition is after is an Israel overhaul. Neutering the Supreme Court is simply the instrument to get there.