Lessons in Confronting Anti-Semitism, Learned from Years of Ignoring It
A writer admits he'd been “terribly, horribly, utterly wrong.”
June 2, 2015
A writer admits he'd been “terribly, horribly, utterly wrong.”
How should students respond to the rising tide of anti-Semitism on their campuses? Liel Leibovitz, in a letter to today’s undergraduates, recalls how at their age he’d been “terribly, horribly, utterly wrong” about the anti-Israel disease and offers them “the sort of wisdom that comes only from repentance”:
A writer admits he'd been “terribly, horribly, utterly wrong.”
Despite President al-Sisi's calls for religious reform.
Claims of excessive civilian casualties become even more untenable.
An newly-unearthed 1988 recording of the famous novelist.
“We will sing to the Nazis what we cannot say to them.”
How should students respond to the rising tide of anti-Semitism on their campuses? Liel Leibovitz, in a letter to today’s undergraduates, recalls how at their age he’d been “terribly, horribly, utterly wrong” about the anti-Israel disease and offers them “the sort of wisdom that comes only from repentance”:
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