The post Anti-Israel protesters hail ‘resistance’ at New York ceasefire rally appeared first on The Times of Israel.
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The Israel-Hamas war, now nearing a potential ceasefire, has devastated the Gaza Strip. Satellite photos offer some sense of the destruction in the territory, which has been largely sealed off to journalists and others.
As news of the breakthrough surfaced, stakeholders from politicians to families of hostages kidnapped at the start of the war breathed a sigh of relief that the long, violent and acrimonious
New York Mayor Eric Adams said he had a “productive conversation” with Donald Trump on Friday that touched on a number of issues, including the effect of the Israel-Hamas ceasefire agreement on public safety and ways to attract manufacturing jobs to the city.
The flames of Gaza will not stop there, they will find us all if we don’t stop them…None of us are spared in the eye of the empire,” Fatima Mousa Mohammed eerily wrote on X this week.
The Senesh School in Brooklyn provides its students with knowledge and talking points about Israel. And yet, some of my former classmates endure uncomfortable situations at their secular high schools.
Officials representing Israel and Hamas said today that the two sides had agreed to a 42-day cease-fire that would coincide with the release of Israeli hostages who have been held captive in Gaza. The final details are still being worked out, but the tentative agreement raised hopes that there could soon be an end to the war.
Far-left City Comptroller Brad Lander took money for his mayoral campaign from a recently ousted radical, anti-Israel Columbia professor.
Mount Sinai executives projected that the entire health system, which has eight hospital campuses in and around the city, will suffer a loss of $420 million in 2024, about half of which is fueled by losses from the pending Beth Israel closure, the letter said.
Argentinian president Javier Milei has been awarded Israel's prestigious 2025 Genesis Prize in recognition of his support of Israel, organizers announced Tuesday.
Jonathan Harounoff, Israel's spokesman to the United Nations, observes that anti-Israel agitators have taken their cause to "sickening" new lows in New York City.