Iran Could Be Planning to Strike at the U.S. in Latin America
Aiming for the soft underbelly.
March 13, 2020
“It’s fashionable to have a Jewish friend—the way it’s fashionable to have a gay friend.”
Only about 10 percent of Poland’s roughly 3 million Jews survived World War II, and most of those who remained in the country were forced out in 1968. But the annual Krakow Jewish Culture Festival is the largest in Europe, bringing in some 30,000 attendants in the course of a week—most of whom are Gentiles. Sarah Glazer examines the strange nostalgia that drives this interest:
Aiming for the soft underbelly.
Meet Moshe Bar Siman-Tov, the economist coordinating the Jewish state’s public-health measures.
“It’s fashionable to have a Jewish friend—the way it’s fashionable to have a gay friend.”
Erasing the last remnants of an ancient community.
And one verse of Isaiah.
Only about 10 percent of Poland’s roughly 3 million Jews survived World War II, and most of those who remained in the country were forced out in 1968. But the annual Krakow Jewish Culture Festival is the largest in Europe, bringing in some 30,000 attendants in the course of a week—most of whom are Gentiles. Sarah Glazer examines the strange nostalgia that drives this interest:
Unlock the most serious Jewish, Zionist, and American thinking.
Subscribe Now