News

“What did they have to lose? I would say everything,” said Elizabeth Quinlan, whose honoured grandparents, Eimericus and Anna ...
Today, we ask far less of our young people — yet we fail even to give them the basic tools of understanding. Holocaust ...
The teenage son of two Nicaraguan journalists who moved to Sligo seeking refuge was inspired by his personal and family ...
El Akkad writes, “It is pointless, even, to make the obvious analogies, to imagine the response had almost any other country ...
The Sioux were not the original inhabitants of the Black Hills. Their people were originally from the Northern Great Lakes and moved westward. Beginning in the early 18th century, the Sioux engaged in ...
Support for Israel was once a litmus test of conservative credentials. But perspectives on the Middle East conflict have ...
US police are searching for a 13-year-old boy and 15-year-old girl suspected of being kidnapped as human sacrifices for an ...
Yes, there were heroes, the righteous among the nations, who risked their lives to save Jews. But they were the exception. The vast majority looked away, collaborated, or remained silent.
In modern times, the heroism of the “Righteous Among the Nations,” those who, like Oskar Schindler, risked everything to protect and save Jews from the Nazi genocide, has been immortalized.