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  • Sen. Bernie Sanders outside the U.S. Capitol September 8, 2014 in Washington, DC. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
    Sen. Bernie Sanders outside the U.S. Capitol September 8, 2014 in Washington, DC. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
    News section icon
    Bernie Sanders Sets Sights on the White House

    Vermont’s independent senator, a socialist, prepares for 2016 run

    byMichael Schulson
  • Kinderland, 1951.(Courtesy Katie Halper)
    Kinderland, 1951.(Courtesy Katie Halper)
    Community section icon
    ‘Commie Camp’ Documentary Captures Camp Kinderland’s Idealism, and Its Imperfections

    Once a utopian getaway for children of socialists and left-wing organizers, the camp remains an essential haven for ‘weird Jews’

    byNona Willis Aronowitz
  • MPs of Hungary's far-right Jobbik party pose in front of the Hungarian Parliament in Budapest on May 14, 2010.(Ferenc Isza/AFP/Getty Images)
    MPs of Hungary's far-right Jobbik party pose in front of the Hungarian Parliament in Budapest on May 14, 2010.(Ferenc Isza/AFP/Getty Images)
    News section icon
    Meet Europe’s New Fascists

    Hungary’s far-right activists used to rally in the streets. Now they’re in parliament, where their party, Jobbik, is stoking hatred of Jews and Roma.

    byJames Kirchick
  • Leon Trotsky.(Wikipedia)
    Leon Trotsky.(Wikipedia)
    News section icon
    You Can’t Start a Revolution on MySpace!

    Doctrinal disputes impede progress yet again

    byMarc Tracy
  • Abraham Cahan in 1937.(New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)
    Abraham Cahan in 1937.(New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)
    Arts & Letters section icon
    Abraham Cahan Speaks

    On his 150th birthday, an imaginary interview with the founding editor of the ‘Jewish Daily Forward’

    bySeth Lipsky
  • News section icon
    Run, DSK, Run!

    Could France soon see its first Jewish president?

    byMarc Tracy
  • News section icon
    Radical Roots

    Why the Yiddish workers’ movement was an American phenomenon

    bySara Ivry
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