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  • Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir attending a street-naming ceremony commemorating deceased members of the Lehi, the underground that fought the British, in Petah Tikva on April 15, 1992.(AFP/Getty Images)
    Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir attending a street-naming ceremony commemorating deceased members of the Lehi, the underground that fought the British, in Petah Tikva on April 15, 1992.(AFP/Getty Images)
    Israel & The Middle East section icon
    Israel’s Grittiest Founder

    Yitzhak Shamir, who died Saturday, was maligned for his politics. But his bitter realism was prescient.

    byDaniel Gordis
  • Jewish residents of Hebron brandish toy guns at a reading of the megillah, 2005.(Gali Tibbon/AFP/Getty Images)
    Jewish residents of Hebron brandish toy guns at a reading of the megillah, 2005.(Gali Tibbon/AFP/Getty Images)
    Israel & The Middle East section icon
    Up in Arms

    A new book offers a history of Jewish terrorism in Israel from the Maccabees to the present

    byBenny Morris
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