Tuvia Tenenbom, Catch The Jew!
Tenenbom’s engrossing, shocking, cynical and humorously scripted book peels away layers of the context behind the news about Israel’s administration of Judea and Samaria.
In Memoriam: Yehuda Avner: Our Shakespeare
As we commemorate a year since Yehuda Avner passed away at the age of 86, we honor a noble Israeli who devoted his entire life to serving the Jewish state and the Jewish people.
Michelle Mazel, La Maison du Pacha; Souvenirs d’une Israélienne au Caire (The Pasha’s House – Memories of an Israeli Woman in Cairo)
The Pasha’s House is well-written, highly readable and interesting for those who have little knowledge of Egypt as well as for those who are well-acquainted with the country.
In Memoriam: Meir Rosenne (1931-2015)
Meir Rosenne was one of the last representatives of a generation of Israeli diplomats who made the defense of the Jewish State their purpose in life.
Geoffrey Herman, A Prince without a Kingdom
A Prince without a Kingdom, by Geoffrey Herman, Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism, 150, Tuebingen, Germany: Mohr Siebeck, 2012, 411 pp.
Patrick Henry, editor, Jewish Resistance Against the Nazis
Jewish Resistance Against the Nazis by Patrick Henry, ed., Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University Press of America, 2014, 630 pp.
Innocence Lost: The Impact of the Disengagement on Religious Zionism
The changes among religious Zionists during the decade since the disengagement.
The Disengagement: The Unanswered Question
Did Prime Minister Ariel Sharon implement this plan because he genuinely believed in it or were his motives based upon self-interest? Was his real aim to extricate himself from the criminal investigations against him?
The Disengagement from Gaza: Understanding the Ideological Background
It took only several days to expel more than 9,000 Israelis from their homes.
The Arab Attitude toward Israel’s 2005 Unilateral Disengagement:
A First-Hand Account from an Israeli Insider

Hamas’ 2000 election victory came after it claimed it had forced Israel out of Gaza.
Iranian Terror and Argentinian Justice: The Case of Alberto Nisman, the Prosecutor Who Knew Too Much

Alberto Nisman was a genuine hero and a brilliant idealist who believed that forces of law can defeat terrorism.
Haj Amin al-Husseini, the Nazis and the Holocaust:
The Origins, Nature and Aftereffects of Collaboration

Husseini played a central role in shaping the anti-Semetic political tradition of Islamism.
Swiss Jewry: Between Continuity and Decline
INTRODUCTION In 2010,1 after 146 years2 of continuous existence, the Jewish community of Lucerne seemed to be on the verge of disappearance.3 There were only sixty, mostly elderly members. Hugo Benjamin, head of Lucerne’s Jewish community, announced to the media: “I do not know how to go on. In the whole of the canton of […]
Germany and a Nuclear Iran
Contemporary Germany is personified by Chancellor Angela Merkel. In her famous address to Israel’s Knesset in March 2008, she declared that she would not refrain from “using additional, tougher sanctions to convince Iran to stop its nuclear program.”
Palestinians, Arabs, and the Holocaust
One of the major Palestinian Arab arguments regarding the establishment of the state of Israel is that the West facilitated its founding out of guilt over the Holocaust.