The Jewish Legion and British Jews

One hundred years ago in August 1917, the London Gazette published an official announcement that “a Jewish regiment” had been established. Based on the international regiments of small oppressed nations in Europe that had fought in foreign armies against great empires during the 19th century, it heralded the Israel Defence Force in 1948. Its formation marked the … Read more

Jewish Activism in the Soviet Union

Review of Yuli Kosharovsky’s “We are Jews Again: Jewish Activism in the Soviet Union” (Syracuse University Press 2017) pp.440 David Khavkin, the Podolsky family, Anatoly Rubin, Joseph Schneider, Baruch Veissman – such names are largely unknown to Jews in Israel and in the Diaspora. Yet these people, and many others, kept the flame of Jewish … Read more

Labour Party Jews

Is Labour unapologetically antisemitic? Is British Jewry merely a conduit for Benjamin Netanyahu’s policies? For some, those pro-Israel Jews who insist on remaining in Labour appear to be out of sync with the prevailing wisdom pervading both party and community. Caught in the crossfire of the breast-beaters, this is not an easy time for those … Read more

American Jewish settlers on the West Bank

Review of City on a Hilltop by Sara Yael Hirschhorn ‘HOW DOES a nice Jewish boy from East Flatbush, Brooklyn, a gifted social worker, marcher for civil rights, loving husband and father, end up blowing off the legs of the PLO mayor of Nablus?” This question, asked of Era Rapaport, member of the Jewish underground, … Read more

Who was responsible for the Balfour Declaration?

Martin Kramer has rightly attempted to resurrect Nahum Sokolow’s role in the Zionist diplomacy that led up to the Balfour Declaration. He demonstrates clearly the incremental progress of that diplomacy during World War I, and how the Zionist diplomats ensured that political significance was attached to each new step, no matter how seemingly insignificant. He … Read more