World

World

India’s (Jewish) Mother

How Mirra Alfassa went from being a French bohemian to an Indian goddess
By Michelle Goldberg

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World

‘The Struggle of the World’

A Spanish leftist speaks out for Israel—and she’s not even Jewish
By Tablet Magazine | 7:00 AM Feb 16, 2010

The Emails of Zion is a collection of messages from Jewish parents, uncles, aunts, grandparents, and others who are eager—often way too eager—to inform their children about issues of pressing concern to the Jewish community. Some of these emails may sound crazy, paranoid, ethnocentric, and/or racist, while others are disturbingly sane. These are the voices ...

World

Battles of Paris

Anti-Semitism in the 19th arrondissement, a neighborhood with a recent history of violence
By Léa Khayata | 7:00 AM Feb 11, 2010

A father and his three sons enter the metro on a winter Monday morning in Paris. Wearing backpacks, raincoats, and caps over their blond hair, the kids, from 3 to 6 years old, are set for school. The man finds a seat for the two youngest children, but the eldest has to stay standing, quietly ...

World

Diplomatic Immunity

Jacobo Timerman’s son Héctor says there's no such thing as an anti-Semitic country
By Bridget Kevane | 7:00 AM Jan 29, 2010

This is the second in a two-part series.
In December 2009, I interviewed Héctor Timerman, the second of Jacobo Timerman’s three sons. Hector was 22 when his father was imprisoned by the Argentine military junta in 1977. Today he is Argentina’s ambassador to the United States. His country’s embassy is in one of Washington’s most elegant ...

World

Tortured Soul

Thirty years ago, Buenos Aires newspaper publisher Jacobo Timerman emerged as a crusading human rights icon. Newly declassified documents offer a fresh—and more complicated—view of the Argentine dissident.
By Bridget Kevane | 7:00 AM Jan 28, 2010

This is the first in a two-part series.
In a now-declassified document titled “Conversation with Jacobo Timerman,” Robert C. Hill, the U.S. ambassador to Argentina from 1974 to 1977, wrote to his superiors in the State Department about a lunch he had with the influential Argentine publisher in September 1976, six months after the military coup ...

World

Precedent

What the pending International Court of Justice decision on Kosovo’s independence will mean for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
By Milena Miletic | 7:00 AM Jan 25, 2010

The International Court of Justice will soon issue an opinion on the legality of Kosovo’s independence from Serbia, which was unilaterally declared in February 2008 and has been recognized by 65 of the U.N.’s 192 members. A decision to recognize Kosovo’s independence will likely have a significant influence on separatist movements around the world, and ...

World

A Haitian Tale

Raymond Joseph, Haiti’s ambassador to the United States, started out as a newspaperman
By Seth Lipsky | 7:00 AM Jan 20, 2010

It’s not exactly a story filled with Jewish particularity, normally the stuff of this column, but the fellow I find myself thinking of this week is Raymond Joseph. He has been in the news because he is Haiti’s ambassador to the United States, and it was Joseph who went on the air to defend his ...