What the EU Doesn’t Want Israelis to Know
The NGO law and Israel’s crush on Europe.
July 18, 2016
The not-“Jesus novel.”
The Hungarian Jewish novelist György Spiró’s Captivity tells the tale of a Roman Jew named Uri who travels to Jerusalem as part of an official delegation. To Wesley Hill, the novel lacks literary sophistication but makes up for this deficiency with large doses of historical erudition and excitement—and a deftly executed appearance by Jesus, with whom the protagonist briefly shares a cell in Pontius Pilate’s prison:
The NGO law and Israel’s crush on Europe.
The other coup.
“Intersectionality” at work.
John Selden, Brexit, and the need for national laws.
The not-“Jesus novel.”
The Hungarian Jewish novelist György Spiró’s Captivity tells the tale of a Roman Jew named Uri who travels to Jerusalem as part of an official delegation. To Wesley Hill, the novel lacks literary sophistication but makes up for this deficiency with large doses of historical erudition and excitement—and a deftly executed appearance by Jesus, with whom the protagonist briefly shares a cell in Pontius Pilate’s prison:
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