The Times of Israel on MSN
Yemenite synagogue in central Israel vandalized, holy books ripped apart
Mishkan Shalom Synagogue decries 'pogrom,' community member calls it 'terror attack'; police yet to identify motive or ...
Religion News Service on MSN
Pro-Israel synagogue events prompt fiery protests
Synagogues holding informational gatherings about immigration to Israel have become a flashpoint in New York and London.
Religion News Service on MSNOpinion
What Mamdani missed about the Manhattan synagogue protest
That truth was once again on display Wednesday night (Nov. 19) at Manhattan’s Park East Synagogue, which was hosting a ...
Rabbi Chai Ratzabi, rabbi of the “Mishkan Shalom” synagogue of the Yemenite community in Kadima-Zoran, described this morning ...
NY Post readers discuss the hateful, intimidating protest against Nefesh B’nefesh outside the Park East Synagogue.
Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann and AAP national convener Arvind Kejriwal on Tuesday joined the large congregation here to pray for the progress of the state and prosperity ...
The Times of Israel on MSN
Can a US law protecting abortion clinics push back against protests at synagogues?
Anti-Zionist activists have been sued for 2 demonstrations at shuls under federal law, but free speech expert says New York ...
Punjab's leaders, Bhagwant Singh Mann and Arvind Kejriwal, honour Guru Tegh Bahadur Ji's sacrifice at the 350th martyrdom ...
Zoran, tore up books of the Bible and prayer books, damaged personal belongings, and threw Torah scrolls on the ground.
Explore the significance of the Acheinu prayer, a heartfelt plea for the release of captives in times of communal distress.
The Forward on MSNOpinion
What does Mamdani’s response to synagogue protests mean for Jews? No one will like the answer.
Zohran Mamdani's response to a protest outside Park East synagogue satisfied no one. But it might speak to a crucial truth ...
The Forward on MSN
As synagogues close, a grandson of Holocaust survivors is building a new one — in an Illinois cornfield
Near his family’s Illinois farm, Nik Jakobs is replanting Jewish life — turning a cornfield into a synagogue and a museum of small town Jewry.
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