International

JNS news briefs: November 12, 2014

Netanyahu: bill to ban free newspapers ‘shames the Knesset’ (JNS.org) Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blasted legislation seeking to outlaw free newspapers in Israel, walking out of Wednesday’s preliminary vote on the bill. The Israeli Knesset came out in favor of a bill intended to shut down the free newspaper Israel Hayom. Netanyahu said the 43-23 […]

JNS news briefs: November 12, 2014 Read More »

Middle East

U.S. Jewish leaders accuse Abbas of incitement

NEW YORK (Press Release) — “The escalating terrorist attacks in Jerusalem and other areas are of grave concern and must be put to an end. Israel must do everything possible to protect its citizens and restore peaceful conditions.   The Palestinian Authority must immediately take steps to restore order.  Mahmoud Abbas and other Palestinian officials must

U.S. Jewish leaders accuse Abbas of incitement Read More »

Middle East, USA

Enriched environs may help brain injury patients

TEL AVIV (Press Release)— As football players are learning, a violent blow to the head has the potential to cause mild to severe traumatic brain injury — physical damage to the brain that can be debilitating, even fatal. The long-term effects run the gamut of human functioning, from trouble communicating to extensive cognitive and behavioral

Enriched environs may help brain injury patients Read More »

Middle East, Science, Medicine, & Education

Kfar Kana: Too facile to compare it with Ferguson?

By Ira Sharkansky JERUSALEM — The Arabs/Palestinians of Israel and the West Bank have another martyr that justifies continuing their wave of demonstrations that began when? Maybe with the recent wave of Jews going demonstrably to the Temple Mount. Now it’s a young man, Kheir al-Din Hamdan, killed by the police in the village of Kfar

Kfar Kana: Too facile to compare it with Ferguson? Read More »

Ira Sharkansky, Middle East, USA

A Nazi’s son tells Book Fair how he became a Jew

By Jack Forman ENCINITAS, California — Dr. Bernd Wollschlaeger captivated an audience of about 250 people at Temple Solel on Sunday, November 9 with an honest, moving, and provocative 45-minute talk at the Jewish Book Fair about his stranger-than-fiction life growing up in post-World War II Germany, converting to Judaism, raising a family in Israel, and

A Nazi’s son tells Book Fair how he became a Jew Read More »

Books, Poetry & Short Stories, International, Middle East

Obesity a factor in auto- immune diseases

TEL AVIV (Press Release)— Autoimmune diseases like Crohn’s Disease and multiple sclerosis, in which the immune system attacks its own body rather than predatory invaders, affect 5-20% of the global community. A study published recently in Autoimmunity Reviews by Prof. Yehuda Shoenfeld, the Laura Schwarz-Kipp Chair for Research of Autoimmune Diseases at Tel Aviv University’s

Obesity a factor in auto- immune diseases Read More »

Middle East, Science, Medicine, & Education

Grant awarded to wipe out parasitic worm infections

BEER-SHEVA, Israel (Press Release) – Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) Professor Zvi Bentwich has received a Grand Challenges in Global Health Grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for his project in Ethiopia to wipe out parasitic worm infections. The funding will help support mass drug eradication efforts against these infections by implementing in parallel

Grant awarded to wipe out parasitic worm infections Read More »

Middle East, Science, Medicine, & Education

Omega-3 may reduce craving for nicotine

HAIFA, Israel (Press Release)–Taking omega-3 supplements reduces craving for nicotine and even reduces the number of cigarettes that people smoke a day, according to a new study conducted at the University of Haifa. “The substances and medications used currently to help people reduce and quit smoking are not very effective and cause adverse effects that

Omega-3 may reduce craving for nicotine Read More »

Middle East, Science, Medicine, & Education