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Aish

America's Top Rebbetzins

Rebbetzin Chaya Meyer--How to Build a Loving Jewish Home

By Vera Kessler

Rebbetzin Chaya Meyer discusses the key elements to building a Jewish home. She talks about the physical items found in a home that make it Jewish, along with meaningful Jewish rituals and Jewish core values. She gives a beautiful and uplifting interview about the deep inner beauty of a Jewish home.To contact our sponsor, The […]

America's Top Rebbetzins

Rebbetzin Gevura Davis--Defining True Beauty (It's Not About Hair and Nails)

By Vera Kessler

Rebbetzin Gevura Davis of Aish Philadelphia talks about a Jewish woman's true beauty.

America's Top Rebbetzins

Rebbetzin Mimi David--The Unique Strengths of Jewish Women (Aish St. Louis)

By Vera Kessler

Rebbetzin Mimi David, Director of Women's Education for Aish HaTorah in St. Louis, Missouri, instills in us pride for being a woman.

Emes Ve-Emunah

What Is It Really Like for a Baal Teshuva?

By Harry Maryles

There is probably a lot going on in the mind of a Baal Teshuva that is left unsaid - but ought to be.

A Soldier's Mother

Desperately Craving Normal

By Paula R. Stern

There are so many things that aren't normal about life here. Having a pile of gas masks in a corner of the room, for example, isn't normal.

US / Eye on "Palestine" / News Briefs / Settlements

New 'Judea and Samaria' Passport Stamp Drives Arabs and the AP Nuts

By Lori Lowenthal Marcus

Incredibly, the AP badgered the U.S. State Department spokesperson about the passport stamp change.

Op-Eds

Gaza is Not the Key, Philadelphi Is

By Daniel Pipes

By removing this layer of Israeli protection, an "exponential increase" in the Gaza arsenal predictably followed, culminating in the Fajr-5 missiles that reached Tel Aviv this month.

A Soldier's Mother

A Lie Once Told...

By Paula R. Stern

The picture isn't from Gaza. The blood wasn't from his brother. The Israelis weren't involved.

Goldstein on Gelt

Market Design, Matching, and Me (Podcast)

By Doug Goldstein, CFP®

An interview with Economics professor and Nobel prize winner Alvin Roth.

Fresno Zionism

Who Killed Jihad Masharawi’s Son, Omar?

By Vic Rosenthal

Although it was widely claimed in the press that this child died in an Israeli strike, none appears to have taken place at the time of his death.

Event Listings / Upcoming Events

From Baltimore to Bayswater With Kindness!

By Jewish Press Staff

The Baltimore Jewish Community and The Young Israel of Wavecrest and Bayswater Present a ‘Welcome Home!’ Carnival Extravaganza on Sunday, November 25th.

News Briefs / Israel At War: Operation Amud Anan

Tuesday War Updates: 2 Al-Aqsa TV Journalists Killed in Air Strike

By Jewish Press News Desk

Latest updates for Tuesday, November 20, 2012 8:25 PM A female driver was shot near the Husan bypass near Beitar Ilit in a drive-by shooting. Medical forces are treating her on site, but she is in serious condition. The woman is from Tzur Hadassah. 8:00 PM Permitted for release: Reserve soldier killed by mortar fire in Eshkol […]

News Briefs

EL AL to Let Customers Cancel, Change Flight Departure Date

By Jewish Press News Desk

In light of the present security situation in Israel, EL AL will allow customers to cancel or change their flight departure dates under the following conditions: Passengers departing from Israel and Israeli passengers returning to Israel by November 29, 2012 (inclusive) will be able to move up their flight dates with no cancelation fee or […]

News Briefs / Israel At War: Operation Amud Anan

Monday War Update: IDF Soldier Kills Attempted Kidnapper (UPDATED)

By Jewish Press News Desk

Day 6 of the war with Gaza. Updates for Monday, November 19, 2012 9:12 PM IDF soldier kills Arab in Southern Mt. Hebron area. An Arab near Halhul attacked a soldier,in a kidnapping attempt. The soldier shot the terrorist. Simultaneous to the attack, Palestinian websites reported that an IDF soldier was kidnapped. It appears the […]

Daniel Pipes / The Lion's Den

Daniel Pipes: Reflections on Current Hamas-Israel Hostilities

By Daniel Pipes

If Hamas knows it cannot defeat the Israel Defense Forces and will get a bloody nose for its efforts, it obviously has motives other than victory in mind.

Op-Eds

How Morsi Took Power in Egypt

By Daniel Pipes and Cynthia Farahat

Morsi's power today unquestionably brings major short-term benefits for himself and the Brotherhood.

Israel / Politics / News Briefs / On Campus / Education

UC Irvine Students Vote for 'Israel Divestment' But Have No Investments to Divest

By Lori Lowenthal Marcus

The Resolution was introduced by Sabreen Shalabi, and seconded by Shadi Jafari, with support from Ali Abunimeh and Noam Chomsky.

Op-Eds

The Conservatives’ Obama Delusion

By Jonathan S. Tobin

For most of the past two years, if not the past four, many conservatives and Republicans assumed that Barack Obama could not be reelected. A poor economy, an unpopular liberal agenda shoved down the throat of the country, and a largely uninspiring presidential leadership style combined to create a widespread belief on the right that the 2012 election would be a lay-up for them.

America's Rabbi / Shmuley Boteach

The City that has Problems with Synagogues

By Rabbi Shmuley Boteach

If only my city were to treat me with the same courtesy they accorded Kaddafi.

Op-Eds

On Politicians and Grunt Work

By Meir Indor

The Knesset members who “take care of things” for us deserve to be praised, not insulted: people like Uri Ariel and Zevulun Orlev, whose offices are filled day and night with the representatives of organizations and institutions, religious and secular. And they “take care” of these people. It’s true that Ariel and Orlev received popularity ratings of only three percent in a recent poll of the national-religious community, but this isn’t their problem—it’s the respondents’ problem. Orlev and Ariel are too busy for self-promotion.

Daniel Pipes / The Lion's Den

Daniel Pipes: Why I am Voting Republican

By Daniel Pipes

I vote Republican because I support the party's core message of individualism, patriotism, and respect for tradition, in contrast to the core Democratic message of dependence, self-criticism, and "progress." I am inspired by the original reading of the U.S. Constitution, by ideals of personal freedom and American exceptionalism. I vote for small government, for a return of power to the states, for a strong military, and an assertive pursuit of national interests.

Daniel Pipes / The Lion's Den / US Elections 2012

Daniel Pipes: Superficiality Reigns Before the Election

By Daniel Pipes

It happens every four years, as U.S. presidential elections roll around: I feel like a stranger. That's because news reports blare out what's not of interest: trivial statistics (171,000 jobs added in October; jobless rate up 0.1 percent to 7.9 percent), biographical irrelevancies (claims that Romney outsourced jobs to other countries when at Bain Capital), and forgettable gaffes (Obama saying that "Voting is the best revenge"). This limited discussion misses the main points.

Daniel Pipes / The Lion's Den

The Nation of Islam Discovers Scientology

By Daniel Pipes

The Nation of Islam's historic role as a bridge between American blacks and Islam ended in 1975 when W. Deen Mohammed followed his father, Elijah Muhammad, as leader of the Nation and immediately disavowed his father's folk religion, bringing his followers to normative Islam, the Islam of the Middle East. From then on, despite the theatrics of Louis Farrakhan, the Nation has been in a long downward trajectory. Now comes evidence, thanks to Tony Ortega in the Village Voice and Eliza Gray in The New Republic, of a jaw-dropping turn by Farrakhan, 79, to Scientology; as Gray's subtitle puts it, "America's two weirdest sects join forces."

Arts

Chagall Redux

By Richard McBee

Chagall’s reputation needs no burnishing and yet refinements are always welcome. Indeed the Nassau County Museum of Art has mounted a wonderfully extensive survey of Chagall’s works with a unique emphasis on his 1957 Bible series of hand-colored etchings that significantly casts many aspects of his work as uniquely Jewish. Amid the complexity of Chagall’s entire oeuvre, this is deeply significant in the exhibition history of non-Jewish institutions.

Arts

Rosa Katzenelson: Paintings Beyond Hasidic Expressionism

By Richard McBee

Passion of belief can certainly lead to passion of expression, especially for an artist. Rosa Katzenelson’s paintings and digital artwork, currently at the Hadas Gallery in Brooklyn, could easily define the very essence of religious expressionism. As a Chabad devotee, every aspect of her work exudes a passion for both the chassidic subjects she depicts and the visceral act of making a painting. Nonetheless, upon closer inspection her work yields considerably more complexity.

Daniel Pipes / The Lion's Den

Romney Stumbles on Foreign Policy

By Daniel Pipes

Barack Obama has a weak record in the Middle East, but one would not learn this from the debate, where Mitt Romney praised Obama's achievements ("It's wonderful that Libya seems to be making some progress"), agreed with Obama more than he disagreed, and rarely pointed out his failings. Presumably, Romney took this mild approach to establish his likability, competence, and suitability to serve as commander-in-chief.

Politics / Media

Topics For Third Presidential Debate - This One's On Foreign Policy

By Lori Lowenthal Marcus

The issue of what happened in Benghazi, Libya in September 11, 2012 is likely to come up in at least one if not several of the different topic areas. President Obama will seek to put a definitive end to the questioning about how his administration handled the crisis, and presidential-hopeful Mitt Romney will seek to lay out the inconsistencies in the narratives presented by this administration over the course of the six weeks since the tragedy.

Op-Eds

Erdoğan at War

By Daniel Pipes

Why does the Turkish government act so aggressively against the Assad regime of Syria? Perhaps Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan hopes that lobbing artillery shells into Syria will help bring a satellite government to power in Damascus. Maybe he expects that sending a Turkish war plane into Syrian air space or forcing down a Syrian civilian plane en route from Russia will win him favor in the West and bring in NATO. Conceivably, it's all a grand diversion from imminent economic crisis due to borrowing too much.

Op-Eds

Changing the Battlefield

By Shoshana Bryen

The unwillingness of the Obama administration to label the September occupation of American diplomatic facilities in Cairo and Benghazi, and the murder of an American diplomat "acts of war" make this an opportune moment to consider two lessons emanating from more than a decade of warfare in the Arab and Moslem world.

Daniel Pipes / The Lion's Den

Is Netanyahu Again Offering the Golan Heights to Syria?

By Daniel Pipes

Shimon Shiffer reports in Yedioth Ahronoth that in secret talks in 2010 via U.S. government mediator Frederic C. Hof, Israel's Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu agreed in principle to a full withdrawal from the Golan Heights to the June 4, 1967, lines in return for the "expectation" of Bashar al-Assad cutting ties with Iran, and that the nearly-completed negotiations ended because of the anti-Assad uprising that began in January 2011.

Daniel Pipes / The Lion's Den

Impressions of the Veep Debate

By Daniel Pipes

Middle East expert Daniel Pipes' thoughts on the Biden-Ryan debate.

Blogs

Day By Day: The Temple Mount Arrests Over Sukkot

By Yosef Rabin

Over the Sukkot holiday, 12 Jews were arrested and many more were harassed and denied religious rights on the Temple Mount over the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. Eight of the arrests were for prayer crimes and three were for peacefully protesting the policies of discrimination and denigration. Here's a day by day report.

Terrorism / News Briefs / Europe

Huge Upsurge in Anti-Semitic Attacks in France This Year

By Malkah Fleisher

Several attacks on Jews over the Sukkot holiday across France have exemplified a whopping 45 percent reported increase in anti-Semitic attacks in the country in the first eight months of 2012.

Blogs

Romney Channels George W. Bush's Middle East Policy

By Daniel Pipes

Mitt Romney gave a generally fine speech today on the Middle East. Sensibly, he criticized the Obama administration for its Benghazi shenanigans, for the "daylight" with Israel, fecklessness vis-à-vis Tehran, and the cuts in military spending. Very justifiably, he called it "time to change course in the Middle East." But I worry about three specifics.

Op-Eds

Post-Mortem on the Muhammad Protests

By Daniel Pipes

As Muslim crowds dissipate and American diplomatic missions return to normal activities, here are three final thoughts on the riots that began this Sept. 11 and killed about thirty.

Op-Eds

Mocking Muhammad Is Not Hate Speech

By Daniel Pipes

My last article prompted a solemn reply from Sheila Musaji of The American Muslim website, who deemed it "irresponsible and beyond the pale." Why so? Because, as she puts it, "The solution to escalating violence and hate speech is not more hate speech."

US / Politics / News Briefs / Media / Islamists

Savaged for Daring to Name Savagery: Pamela Geller Attacked by Critics of Free Speech

By Lori Lowenthal Marcus

The ads are already running on the sides of San Francisco buses, they began running today, September 24th, in New York City, and they were scheduled to begin appearing in the Washington, D.C. metro system. However, the DC system balked, citing the violent rioting by Muslims allegedly inflamed by a YouTube video which represents, so Geller initiated an emergency court action at the end of last week to enforce her First Amendment rights.

Op-Eds

A Muhammed Cartoon a Day

By Daniel Pipes

Would repetition inspire institutionalization, generate ever-more outraged responses, and offer a vehicle for Islamists to ride to greater power? Or would it lead to routinization, to a wearing out of Islamists, and a realization that violence is counter-productive to their cause?

South Florida

New Exhibits At Florida Holocaust Museum

By Shelley Benveniste

The Florida Holocaust Museum, located at 55 Fifth Street South, St Petersburg, is proud to present the following new exhibits:

Editorial

The Democrats’ Jerusalem Problem

By Editorial Board

We probably will never know for sure whether President Obama was involved or even aware of the decision not to carry over a reference to Jerusalem as the undivided capital of Israel in the Democratic Party’s 2008 platform to its 2012 platform.

Op-Eds

Moody's 2012 Report and Israel

By Yoram Ettinger

While recognizing pitfalls of the Israeli economy such as Israel's significant social and political problems as well as a slowdown in growth, Moody's 2012 credit report seems to have more confidence in israel's economy relative to the G-20 advanced countries.

Analysis

Zionism, Neologism and Nationalism

By Alexander H. Joffe

The first step to remaking Zionism in the future is learning what Zionism meant in the past.

Analysis

Israel’s Continuing Success

By Yoram Ettinger

Israel’s economic growth during the 2nd quarter of 2012 was 3.2%, surpassing the 2.5% expectation, compared with a 2.8% growth during the 1st quarter. Growth per capita increased 1.4%, reaching almost $30,000. Exports of goods and services –40% of Israel’s economic activity - surged 10%, following a decline during the previous three quarters.

News Briefs

Neil Armstrong (82)

By Jewish Press News Desk

Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon on July 20, 1969, died at age 82 on Saturday, July 25, 2012. “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

Arts

Rylands Haggadah: Medieval Jewish Art in Context

By Richard McBee

The Rylands Haggadah, created in Catalonia Spain sometime around 1330, is a towering masterpiece of Jewish Art. In addition to pages of piyutim surrounded by ornate decorative and figurative micrography, richly decorated Haggadah text and blessings, there is a 13 page miniature cycle depicting the Exodus story from Moses at the Burning Bush to the Crossing of the Red Sea.

Analysis

The Levy Report: Reinvigorating the Discussion of Israel’s Rights in the West Bank

By Avi Bell

Earlier this month, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was presented with the report of the Commission to Examine the Status of Building in Judea and Samaria, headed by former Supreme Court Justice Edmond Levy (the “Levy report”). The report has drawn a flurry of overwrought criticism due to its inclusion of a section concerning the lawfulness of Israeli settlement activity.

Israel / Aliyah

Nefesh B'Nefesh Landing Ceremony

By Jewish Press Staff

Watch the live feed from the airport as your family & friends LIVE as they arrive in Israel as new Olim!

Arts

Itshak Holtz Drawings

By Richard McBee

Examining a choice selection of drawings done by Itshak Holtz over 30 years ago is a rare pleasure that allows for the appreciation of his unique sensitivity and insights. I was afforded that pleasure at the inaugural exhibition of the Betzalel Gallery in Crown Heights this past May. Although this modest selection of 25 drawings and watercolors of this paradigmatic frum artist ranges from 1963 to 1999, the majority of the works is from the 1970s and reveals a special aspect of his inner artistic soul. The selection of images could easily narrate the fabric of ordinary Jewish life.

Features On The Jewish World

Shema Kolainu

By Sarah Pachter

Throughout the years, she'd hidden her in the windowless room at the back of the house. I always wondered why we were never welcomed over the threshold. I knew her daughter had been born with a problem, but it was never discussed and I'd only caught a glimpse of her from afar before she was hurried away. Oh sure, people gossiped, as people always do, but Chedva was my friend, and I defended and respected her right to privacy.

Arts

Schatz’s Gambit

By Richard McBee

Boris Schatz (1866 – 1932) had a revolutionary vision. He believed that the creation of a new modern Jewish visual culture would become a major force to both articulate a Jewish national identity and sustain the Zionist enterprise. In 1904 he approached Zionist leader Theodor Herzl with the proposal to establish a national arts and crafts school in Palestine and got his blessing. Tragically Herzl died later that year, but the Zionist leadership in Vienna assumed responsibility for the project and its funding.

Arts

Kestenbaum’s Gems

By Richard McBee

The exhibitions that precede Judaic auctions are rather special events for anyone who has a feeling for the fabric of Jewish life as it has been lived for the last 500 years. Not only is one afforded the opportunity to see a wide variety of Judaica, books, manuscripts and Jewish art of considerable historic importance, but if something strikes your fancy; intellectually or acquisitively, you can actually handle the objects. For most artwork the thrill is in seeing it up close and judging the brushstrokes and details of a painting or watercolor. One stands in the exact proximity as the creator did.

Serials

Getzlight – Chapter II

By Ruchama Feuerman

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