Trump’s victory is seen by many Orthodox Jews as a rebuke to wokeness and an administration that appeased anti-Zionists.
For many rabbis, the very question of whether to acknowledge Trump's election with congregants can be fraught.
This Torah portion, Lech Lecha, shows us we must keep advocating for justice and peace in world that seems to be spinning out ...
Sign up for Weekday J and get the latest on what's happening in the Jewish Bay Area. (JTA) — David Sassoon has been serving ...
Sign up for Weekday J and get the latest on what's happening in the Jewish Bay Area. (JTA) — WASHINGTON — Eugene Vindman, ...
Pro-Palestinian organizers say she focused on courting moderates, including Republicans, rather than motivating the party’s ...
We’ve built the biggest, the broadest, the most unified coalition,” Trump said, listing Black voters, women, Hispanics and ...
Daniel Lurie, a philanthropist from a prominent Jewish family, was leading the San Francisco mayor’s race by 12 points on ...
Moshe Kasher has immersed himself in many realms including the rave scene, Burning Man, Alcoholics Anonymous, deaf culture ...
The San Francisco school district’s teacher training about antisemitism sparked its own spate of antisemitism this fall.
The harm of virulent political rhetoric can’t be “healed” with a call for solidarity, writes a Jewish journalist and book ...
Almost all voting groups shifted toward Trump, except American Jews. Why? Columnist Rob Eshman explore the question.