Remembering the tailors' strikes of 1888, when Leeds' Jews revolted.
A history of radical Jewish migrants.
Where did Israel’s Yemenite children go?
The census reignites an old debate.
The Gregorian calendar is cancelled.
RIP Zionist summer camp. Hello wild diasporism.
A writer shares her experience of welcoming two refugees from Lviv, the town in which her great-grandparents lived.
How one family survived the Lviv ghetto, with the help of a Catholic sewer worker and occasional burglar who knew the underground labyrinth like the back of his hand.
Vernon Bogdanor’s recent op-ed is consistent with the paper’s long history of placating the British establishment, even in its anti-Jewish prejudice.
The Israeli PM’s plans to appoint an anti-Palestinian racist to lead Yad Vashem conveys the danger of particularising the Shoah, writes Naomi Magnus.
Remembering the queer, anti-Nazi art of Claude Cahun and Marcel Moore.
Cemetery- and grave-measuring were part of a female clerical role in Ashkenazi Jewish life, and powerful tools of ancestral connection.
Showing 12 of 25 total posts