“When we hide being Jewish, we embolden them to attack us.”
A diverse group of writers engage in a vigorous debate over what went wrong on October 7, who’s really to blame, and how that should influence Israel today and long into the future.
The ruse of “interfaith vigils.”
How four interlocking ways of thinking combined to leave the Jewish state at the mercy of its enemies.
What does it mean that protests and encampments were correlated with tuition price, student-body wealth, and prestige?
And one has a historical background that is not unrelated to the plight of the hostages in Gaza.
A rabbi and historian explores how rabbis and Jewish liturgy will mark the destruction of October 7 now and in the future.
A recording and transcript of our subscriber-only July event on how Israel investigates itself are now available.
A country united in dissatisfaction over the lack of a clear resolution might be better than a country even more bitterly divided by the presence of a clear resolution.
Israel indeed suffers from a lack of accountability, the source of which is a chaotic system of unrepresentative government.
Describing the battle at Kibbutz Be’eri, the report shows numerous failures.
Since its birth, the Jewish state has convened unusually powerful commissions to investigate its own mistakes. Will the same happen now, and if not, why?