In a recent editorial, a former head of Israel’s national intelligence agency proclaimed: “For the first time, I fear for the future of Zionism.” Such. . .
The four rabbis murdered in last week’s terrorist attack on a Jerusalem synagogue came to Israel to devote themselves to the study of sacred texts,. . .
With rising anti-Semitism abroad and growing prosperity at home, is Israel set to experience a new large-scale immigration?
The emigration of highly educated Israelis is not the brain drain feared by Israel’s government; it is a necessary step toward closer international ties and foreign investment.
The growing possibility of large-scale aliyah from Western Europe poses a moral challenge to American Jewry to help.
Zionism is at once the greatest repudiation of the Jewish past and the greatest affirmation of it.
Dear Hillel: Don’t you think that Israel needs American Jews to help it withstand the campaigns of hate it faces?
Faced with rising anti-Semitism and declining economic prosperity, significant numbers of Jews are leaving France for good—and mass emigration to Israel may be on the horizon.
Let’s be honest, writes a Modern Orthodox rabbi and author. Most observant American Jews have no intention or desire to live in Israel, and don’t. . .