Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily.
An executive order signed this week would push colleges and universities to combat antisemitism specifically by monitoring and reporting international students.
The groups emphasized that deportations carried out under the executive order must be consistent with the First Amendment and existing laws
The executive order directs government agencies to use all available tools to prosecute or remove perpetrators of antisemitic harassment and violence, especially on college campuses.
“Unfortunately, our efforts, like those of national governments, have not been sufficient to curb the drivers of antisemitism,” he said. Moratinos said new actors involved in social ...
Several other schools have recently settled similar lawsuits, and suits are pending against others, including the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University.
According to Le Monde, the left-wing New Popular Front alliance won 182 seats ... the nightmare of having to vote for the National Rally to block antisemitism.” Meanwhile, a group of French ...
M onday, Jan. 27, marks 80 years since the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. Ten days prior to the opening of the gates, Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat who saved tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews, was detained. He disappeared and his fate remains unknown.
OSWIECIM, Poland (AP) — Auschwitz survivors warned Monday of the rising antisemitism and hatred they are witnessing in the modern world as they gathered with world leaders and European royalty ...
This year's International Holocaust Remembrance Day marks 80 years since the Soviet liberation of Auschwitz, and a new Chinese AI app has wreaked havoc on the US markets.
Inside the Auschwitz concentration camp complex, the soldiers liberated roughly 7,000 prisoners who had been brutalized by a Nazi regime hell-bent on exterminating the Jewish people. The horrors there defied comprehension.
It doesn’t do any good for your heart, for your mind, for anything,” said Holocaust survivor Jona Laks, 94, about her return to Nazi Germany’s Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp.