The Gaza “March of Return” Is Intended to Bring about the Deaths of Both Israelis and Palestinians
A peaceful protest with violence in mind.
March 28, 2018
Zalman Shazar and Shabbetai Tsvi.
Born Shneur Zalman Rubashov in 1889, Zalman Shazar would serve in Israel’s first cabinet and later as the country’s president from 1963 until 1973. Shazar, however, was not a politician by calling but a historian, who studied under Simon Dubnov—then the dean of Russian Jewish historians—and later trained at German universities. His research on the disastrous career of the 17th-century false messiah Shabbetai Tsvi would inspire Gershom Scholem’s definitive studies. Stuart Schoffman revisits Shazar’s peculiar fascination with this historical figure:
A peaceful protest with violence in mind.
Aided by Turkey’s offensive in Afrin.
Intersectionality shares the Nation of Islam’s views of Jews and whites.
A rabbi’s reflections.
Zalman Shazar and Shabbetai Tsvi.
Born Shneur Zalman Rubashov in 1889, Zalman Shazar would serve in Israel’s first cabinet and later as the country’s president from 1963 until 1973. Shazar, however, was not a politician by calling but a historian, who studied under Simon Dubnov—then the dean of Russian Jewish historians—and later trained at German universities. His research on the disastrous career of the 17th-century false messiah Shabbetai Tsvi would inspire Gershom Scholem’s definitive studies. Stuart Schoffman revisits Shazar’s peculiar fascination with this historical figure:
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