No stranger to danger while reporting, Jeffrey Gettleman, New York Times’s South Asia bureau chief, talks about the challenges and horrors of covering a deadly pandemic

Israel Antiquities Authority prehistorian Omry Barzilai puts a human face on early man, who he claims evidence shows was a lot like us

For director Jonathan Gruber, Menachem Begin's messages of fighting for Jewish pride and accepting all Jews as brothers has never been more timely

Israeli scholar Adi Kantor offers a disturbing look at the trend of increasing antisemitism that is sweeping the globe from both sides of the political and societal spectrums

A new archaeological study of fish remains finds that regardless of biblical ban, ancient Holy Land residents didn't get the memo that fins and scales are a must

Author Max Gross lifts up the veil on his mysterious book about a small Polish Jewish town that fell off the map for decades till it abruptly encountered modernity

For Shavuot, an in-depth conversation with Rabbi Seth Farber on the history of conversion -- and how it all went awry in the Jewish state

In an in-depth interview with expert archaeologist Tali Erickson-Gini, we hear that he who controls the spice (or garum and wine) controls the ancient world

Agreeing to disagree is a lost art in the Middle East. Yossi Klein Halevi and Mohammed Dajani show us how it's done

Until the 1930s, cannabis products were sold in local pharmacies, says Saul Kaye, head of CannaTech and iCan. Now, by not deregulating medical pot, Startup Nation is falling behind

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