Middle East

Haredi-secular conflict follows familiar patterns

By Ira Sharkansky JERUSALEM–The current phase of Israel’s religious conflict is well along in its ritualized pattern.   The details may differ each time the conflict heats up, but the basic story is similar.   A specific incident excites the faithful and the not-so-faithful     Events escalate from name calling, pushing, spitting, blocking traffic, the

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Ira Sharkansky, Middle East

Conservative Jews lead demonstrations for egalitarianism in Israel

By Rabbi Leonard Rosenthal SAN DIEGO — Our celebration of Chanukah this week made the news reports coming out of Israel even more disturbing and ironic. Chanukah is the festival which celebrates Jews fighting for their rights against the Greeks. In Israel, Jews are fighting for their rights against other Jews. An eight-year-old Israeli girl

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Middle East

Hopeful and discouraging signs on Israel’s domestic and foreign fronts

By Ira Sharkansky JERUSALEM — Lots of news.   Less clarity.   It’s worth thinking about the details, and whether they amount to a watershed inviting a heroic decision.   Khaled Mashaal, the senior leader of Hamas, has ordered his forces to cease attacks on Israeli targets.   Mashaal’s expression of non-violence has something to do

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Ira Sharkansky, Middle East

Jerusalem too Jewish? Is Washington too American?

By Rabbi Ben Kamin JERUSALEM–The so-called prime minister of Hamas—a terror syndicate banned from recognition by the United States and the European Union—is campaigning in European capitals against Israel’s practice of making Jerusalem too Jewish.   Here is the verbal equivalent of Hamas’s launching of 10,000 killer missiles into Israeli towns and villages in the past

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Middle East

The guilty silence of some Haredi rabbis

  By Rabbi Michael Leo Samuel CHULA VISTA, California —   Jewish legal tradition, better known as “Halachah,” teaches that silence is “tantamount to admission.” The moral implications ought to be clear enough for anyone to readily grasp. When somebody is attempting to do something wrong and illegal, one cannot dissociate oneself from the situation and

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Michael Leo Samuel-Rabbi, Middle East

Armenian genocide question divides Israel between values and security

By Rabbi Dow Marmur JERUSALEM–One simple yet helpful way of describing the public discourse in and about contemporary Israel is to view it as a struggle between security (sometimes coupled with the quest for survival) and values (often equated with morality and prophetic justice).  I heard Steven Cohen, the American-Israeli sociologist, suggest in a talk

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Middle East