News

For Star subscribers: Gov. Katie Hobbs should veto the bill that punishes alleged "antisemitism" by inviting lawsuits against teachers and faculty for conducting beneficial discussions on hard topics.
2 of 5 | People pass by a Hungarian government billboard, opposing Ukraine’s EU membership, showing European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, ...
R’ Shalom Friedman, one of the original members of the Chabad of Cleveland community and beloved father and grandfather, passed away on Thursday, 23 Sivan, 5785. He was 90. R’ Shalom, who was proud to ...
Large banners read, “Stop Antisemitism,” “Jesus is Jewish,” and “God loves Israel.” Organizer Pierre Bezençon, who called the event the “March of Love,” said the focus was on the ...
Andrew Cuomo, a leading candidate for mayor, criticized Zohran Mamdani’s discussion of the phrase “globalize the intifada,” and Mr. Mamdani accused him of neglecting Muslim New Yorkers.
McCormick said that protecting “all Jewish people across the country must be a national priority” and that the 2018 Pittsburgh attack “brings this issue home for me.” Fetterman said the 2018 attack ...
Friedman misses the bigger picture—antisemitism has been brewing for decades, and the war in Gaza only revealed the dangerous alliance behind it.
Prominent right-wing figures are mixing antisemitism into the policy debate over whether the U.S. should intervene in the Israel-Iran war.
The smell of antisemitism is in the air, or is it the smell of misled patriotism, or is it simply toxic smoke intended to divide us?
To the editor: Guest contributor Rabbi Noah Farkas writes that antisemitism is “a Los Angeles problem” (“L.A. has more to do to fight antisemitism and protect Jewish residents,” June 4).
These debates aren't antisemitism; they're history, theology, and interpretation. We don't defeat dangerous ideas by banning them—we challenge them in the open.