The U.S. president, Israel's far-right government, its irresponsible media and at least one mysterious poll are telling Israelis – and whoever will listen – that Gazans will easily leave behind the rubble of their homeland and emigrate to greener pastures. Reliable data says otherwise
As Netanyahu faced cross-examination in his corruption trial for the first time this week, most Israelis looked away. His misjudgments and wrongdoings before and during the war mean the criminal charges against him now pale in comparison
Israelis of all kinds need to recognize that an inability to commemorate is holding them back. Trust me, I was raised in the post-Holocaust German education system
Barak says that he prefers 'to fight fascists,' Riky is worried about life without Hebrew, and Meital fears loneliness abroad. Israelis share what's keeping them in Israel – for now
French Ambassador Frédéric Journès told Haaretz that France aims to lead efforts toward 'another alternative' for Israelis and Palestinians. At the People's Peace Summit in Jerusalem, President Macron reaffirmed France's support for a Palestinian state and praised the coexistence activists
Air force pilots, commandos, police officers, military medical personnel: thousands of Israelis have signed public calls to end the Gaza war. They all share a troubling element – blindness to the suffering of Gazans, or any aspect of the war besides the hostages
The number of Israelis who believe bringing the hostages back is more important than eliminating Hamas rose from 62 percent to 68 percent, a poll by the Israel Democracy Institute shows
Most Israelis now fearful of a Kahanist police force and an insurgent autocracy never made a connection with the arbitrary abuse of Palestinians by vigilante settlers and the IDF in the West Bank. But now Tulkarm is coming to Tel Aviv, and Israelis should be asking: When the authorities come for me, who will stop them?
Mixing slasher films, haunted house and ancient Jewish myths, the Hebrew Boo! magazine explores how horror can help Israelis understand violence, grief and the boundaries between fiction and reality
The hostage families' tears are invisible to the prime minister, like all the feelings of millions of others. Israelis are losing their faith for change
As Israel awakened to the serious possibility of renewed full-scale war in Gaza, will Israelis rally around these plans? Not if recent polls are to be believed. But public opinion and protests have not been enough to break the war machine - or bring down the government
In recent cases, recruitment of Israelis for espionage was done through channels on messaging app Telegram. Security sources say that recruitment channels are regularly opened and closed, making removing them difficult, while some continue to disseminate messages
Too often, people outside Israel see its catastrophic situation and ask: 'Why aren't Israelis taking to the streets?' But they are, in their thousands and hundreds of thousands, braving abuse and failures, a sustained, multivocal phenomenon. This is why they are refusing to walk away
Israelis overwhelmingly credit U.S. President Donald Trump for the cease-fire and hostage deal, with Netanyahu at the bottom of the list, a poll by the Israel Democracy Institute shows
Despite the slurs of collective guilt, Palestinian civilians in Gaza receiving humanitarian aid have no leverage on Hamas. But withholding that aid is a war crime and reflects who we, as Israelis, are
Amid the euphoria of the return of three Israeli hostages, Israel has been roiled by angry debates about the 'cost' of the Gaza cease-fire: the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, including convicted terrorists. They're an entry point into the deeper questions about war, violence and occupation that Israelis need to grapple with
"Oakland continues to be ground zero for antisemitic hatred in the Bay Area, California, and America -- without exaggeration," JCRC Bay Area CEO Tyler Harris Gregory said.