Hizballah’s Next War Will Be Waged in the Court of Public Opinion
Making Israel seem brutal.
November 7, 2018
Once home to a large, if overlooked, community.
Although Turkey’s largest and most important Jewish communities—Istanbul and Izmir foremost among them—were located on the country’s western coast, Ankara was also once home to a sizable Jewish population. In the 1930s, it numbered some 5,000 souls, most of whom lived in a separate neighborhood in the old part of the city; now only two dozen are left. Jeyan Idil Aslan, a resident of Ankara, recounts a visit to the now-decrepit Jewish quarter:
Making Israel seem brutal.
Lawsuits from terror victims could be fatal to its finances.
Admiration for Farrakhan and Hamas.
The U.S. has a long history of anti-Semitism, but it’s always been different.
Once home to a large, if overlooked, community.
Although Turkey’s largest and most important Jewish communities—Istanbul and Izmir foremost among them—were located on the country’s western coast, Ankara was also once home to a sizable Jewish population. In the 1930s, it numbered some 5,000 souls, most of whom lived in a separate neighborhood in the old part of the city; now only two dozen are left. Jeyan Idil Aslan, a resident of Ankara, recounts a visit to the now-decrepit Jewish quarter:
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