Even If the Iran Deal Holds, It Will Expire in 2030. Then What?
Defusing a ticking time bomb.
July 20, 2016
Not only a story of rescue.
Since 1960, the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam has been the city’s only major monument to the destruction of its Jewish community during the Shoah. That changed this year, when the city council approved construction of a wall commemorating the approximately 102,000 Dutch Jews killed at the hands of the Nazis, and a National Holocaust Museum opened its doors. Nina Siegal describes the significance of these new efforts to preserve the realities of the country’s wartime history:
Defusing a ticking time bomb.
Seventy years of libels.
The kingdom’s troubling connections to al-Qaeda.
Not only a story of rescue.
Herodian-era luxury.
Since 1960, the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam has been the city’s only major monument to the destruction of its Jewish community during the Shoah. That changed this year, when the city council approved construction of a wall commemorating the approximately 102,000 Dutch Jews killed at the hands of the Nazis, and a National Holocaust Museum opened its doors. Nina Siegal describes the significance of these new efforts to preserve the realities of the country’s wartime history:
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