JTA
By JTA
-
Fast Forward 64% of Israelis Will Fast on Yom Kippur
Sixty-four percent of Jewish Israelis will fast and 46 percent will pray on Yom Kippur, according to a survey. According to Ynet News, which conducted the survey along with a social dialogue organization called Gesher, more than 80 percent of Jewish Israelis would spend the day either praying, reflecting or spending time with family. A…
-
Fast Forward Americans for Peace Now Launch Campus Group
Americans for Peace Now is establishing a presence on college campuses aimed at reaching students and faculty. The left-leaning group is working “in full coordination” with J Street U to provide information and speakers that can be used on campuses across the country, said APN spokesman Ori Nir. Campuses in the Washington area have been…
-
Fast Forward B’nai B’rith Pension Woes Hint at Bigger Issues
The government’s recent takeover of B’nai B’rith International’s pension plan, which is more than $25 million in debt, raises serious questions about the long-term viability of the 169-year-old, once-giant Jewish organization. The plan, which has about 500 participants, has $55.6 million in liabilities but only $30.1 million in assets. On Sept. 11, the federal government’s…
-
Fast Forward Philly Retiree Eyed as Nazi War Crimes Suspect
Germany has opened a war crimes investigation against a retired toolmaker living in Philadelphia. Johann “Hans” Breyer, 87, is accused of working as an SS guard at Auschwitz. Breyer admits that he was an Auschwitz guard, but says his post was outside the Nazi camp and he had nothing to do with the deaths of…
-
Fast Forward Barak: Israel Should Pull Out of Some Settlements
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak proposed in a newspaper interview that Israel unilaterally withdraw from outlying West Bank settlements and outposts. Under the plan that Barak outlined in a pre-Yom Kippur interview with Israel Hayom, any Jewish settlers who want to remain in their West Bank homes after the withdrawal could do so under Palestinian…
-
Fast Forward Ehud Olmert Avoids Prison in Corruption Case
Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was sentenced to one to three years of probation and fined about $19,000 for a breach of trust conviction. Olmert was sentenced Monday in Jerusalem District Court. He could have faced up to three years in jail. The state had recommended a six-month jail sentence. The sentence in the…
-
Fast Forward French Train Company Loses $204M Contract
The Maryland subsidiary of a French company that Holocaust survivors accuse of not fully acknowledging its Holocaust complicity will not receive a $204 million contract with the state railway. The Maryland Department of Transportation is expected on Oct. 3 to ask the state’s Board of Public Works – which must approve all state contracts –…
-
Fast Forward ‘Fill the Void’ Will Be Israel’s Oscar Entry
Israel has selected the award-winning film “Fill the Void” as its submission to the best foreign language film category of the Oscars. “Fill the Void,” or “Lemale et ha’chalal,” won Film of the Year Sept. 21 at the Ophir Awards, Israel’s national film awards from the Israeli Academy of Film and Television. The film, about…
Most Popular
- 1
News ‘He was a mensch’: Slain Messianic Jew remembered as bridge-builder
- 2
Fast Forward Ye debuts ‘Heil Hitler’ music video that includes a sample of a Hitler speech
- 3
Opinion How anti-Israel rhetoric led to the killing of 2 in Washington, DC
- 4
Culture Ye’s antisemitism is old news, but it’s time to pay attention again
In Case You Missed It
-
Fast Forward Official who posted antisemitic rhetoric becomes Pentagon press secretary
-
Fast Forward Trump administration to cancel remaining Harvard federal funding over antisemitism concerns
-
Opinion Netanyahu is at a crossroads: Endless war, or peace?
-
Yiddish World No fighting on the day before Shavuot!
-
Shop the Forward Store
100% of profits support our journalism