Nina Totenberg, NPR Legal Affairs Correspondent unpacks rulings ranging from the limits of presidential authority and the separation of church and state to the environment and LGBTQ rights, providing insight into what happened behind the scenes and what it all means for the future. ...
Despite high hopes and media hype, Netanyahu’s trip to the White House yielded few results—while Israeli journalists were left out in the cold. ...
The latest Antisemitism Project newsletters covers the latest from Google's Sergey Brin, Elon Musk's Grok, alleged harassment of Jewish student at a Virginia private school, the NEA dropping the ADL and a synagogue attack in Australia. ...
During last month’s fighting between Israel and Iran, many Israeli families found themselves retreating to safe rooms or communal bomb shelters. ...
Israel’s various conflicts have affected a vital pathway for many migratory birds. ...
Lynne Olson, author of the new book The Sisterhood Of Ravensbrück: How an Intrepid Band of Frenchwomen Resisted the Nazis in Hitler’s All-Female Concentration Camp, for a conversation about these brave women, how they survived and the care they continued to give those who were part of the resistance after ...
Trump loved Netanyahu’s gesture, but it is an empty move. ...
After moving his mother, 92 and living with Alzheimer's, to a nursing home, a joyful transformation occurred. ...
As a friend of his put it, “These were the works of a famous man, not a famous artist.” ...
Join award-winning filmmaker Oren Rudavsky for a conversation about Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel and Rudavsky’s new film "Elie Wiesel: Soul on Fire." ...
Moment cleaned up in Pittsburgh on Monday! ...
Jewish voters in New Jersey are wondering where the candidates will meet them on issues of importance to the Jewish community. ...