A cautious Ramadan: Balancing security, rights, and common sense for a peaceful month - editorial
As Ramadan begins, Israel takes a cautious approach, managing security without escalating tensions, hoping for a month of prayer and peace.
As Ramadan begins, Israel takes a cautious approach, managing security without escalating tensions, hoping for a month of prayer and peace.
Terrorism isn’t just a security threat; it’s a political tool exploited by actors who profit from instability.
Israel has the chance to turn national trauma into national growth and emerge more resilient than ever.
Two female soldiers were attacked in Bnei Brak; if we believe in Torah and unity, Jew-on-Jew violence can never be tolerated.
A Super Bowl ad meant to fight Jew-hatred instead showed weakness, missing the moment for true Jewish strength.
The behind-the-scenes journey from draft to deal raises uncomfortable questions about whom the UN truly serves, and for what purpose.
A ban on non-mechanically stunned slaughter would profoundly harm the lives of observant Jews.
It would be most appropriate for Tucker Carlson to ask forgiveness for the harsh and hurtful things he said about Israel, especially while the nation has endured such profound pain and suffering.
The contrast between Ahad Ha’am and Netanyahu is not between idealism and realism. It is between moral realism and political cynicism.
The Islamic Republic is a regime whose survival depends on confrontation, whose legitimacy is built on exporting violence, and whose leadership feels secure enough to threaten the US.
A loud minority shouldn’t define the debate around Israel; respond to anti-Zionist hysteria with clarity, boundaries, empathy, and proud Zionism.