Prosecuting the Holocaust: A personal and legal history
It is not often that a book comes along so vital to our understanding of human rights law that it becomes recommended reading for American presidents.
It is not often that a book comes along so vital to our understanding of human rights law that it becomes recommended reading for American presidents.
Three weeks ahead of the California primary, I was ambling through a crowded tent at the Museum of Contemporary Art’s (MOCA) annual gala when I spotted the Egyptian-born media mogul Haim Saban holding court at the front of the room.
“Feminist firebrand” Merav Michaeli first came to the attention of the Israeli public as a journalist, radio broadcaster and TV anchor.
On a recent afternoon at Citarella market on New York’s Upper West Side, the young Israeli cook Dan Pelles was leaning over the fish counter, breathing in the perfect bass.
The theme of this year’s Milken Institute Global Conference was “The Future of Humankind,” but beginning at 8 a.m. on Monday, all I could think about was the past.
“The one thing that is very clear in my mind is that day in 1942, when the French police knocked on our door to come and take us,” Henri Dauman, 83, said, moments after taking his seat at a Beverly Hills café.