Sarcastic, exasperated entries show Mandate-era leaders appalled by Arab violence, repulsed by Jewish 'arrogance,' espionage; sides seen as 'childish,' heralding today's conflict

A hand drawn map sent tensions skyrocketing in the severed capital for 19 years, resulting in shootings, stone throwing, a secret cable car... and a blowup over a bathroom

World leaders praise April 1920 summit as first anchor of Jewish state's legitimacy in international law; Pompeo says it marked world's embrace of Jews' unbreakable ties to Israel

From killing Nazis in Lithuanian forests to jumping from flaming Altalena off Tel Aviv, young hero of Jewish Vilna participated in more than his share of Jewry's turning points

Before the virus struck, pilgrims would follow in Jesus' footsteps from the site of his Passover celebration at the Cenacle to his tomb in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre

Carved in stone, set in bronze and formed by the elements, monuments around the country by some of its most renowned artists depict towering figures of the Old Testament

British missionaries, Swiss bankers, Italians, Romanians and Finns all found their place in the Holy Land on the capital's historical Shivtei Yisrael Street

Artisan David Ohannessian and a British sponsor changed the face of the capital in the 1920s; his work is on display in the Rockefeller Archeological Museum and on the city streets

Jerusalem ramparts, recently opened to the public, provide a vivid overview of the capital's history, from its Roman and Ottoman conquerors to its modern day residents

In March 1939, weeks before the notorious White Paper, Polish Jewry sent London a desperate telegram, published here apparently for the first time. At terrible cost, it was ignored

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