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Students React to Trump’s Victory

By New Voices Staff | Comments Off on Students React to Trump’s Victory

On Tuesday, Nov. 8, New Voices asked students across America and Canada for their first reactions to Donald Trump’s poll-defying win in the 2016 presidential election. Students share their experiences of the election on campus and their initial thoughts on the outcome: Adam Jacobs, George Washington University, Freshman “Last night I witnessed panic, fear, happiness, stress, relief, anger, denial. […]

Will Trump’s Presidency Help Israel?

By Jackson Richman | Comments Off on Will Trump’s Presidency Help Israel?

In an election between two of the most unpopular candidates in U.S. electoral history, real estate and media mogul Donald Trump accomplished the unthinkable – winning the presidency. His transition from the Trump Organization to political business in the Oval Office will entail a lot of challenges domestically and abroad. His domestic challenges will include handling […]

Is Voting a Mitzvah?

By Sara Weissman | 1 Comment

Millennials, we get a bad rap for a lot of things – many of them undeserved. We know the stereotypes: We’re self-obsessed, we’ve ruined the English language with our lol-worthy emojis and text speech, and we demand intellectual baby blankets in the form of political correctness. Basically, if there’s a venerated institution out there, someone […]

Hillel, Reject Naftali Bennett’s Exclusionary Grant

By Lara Haft | Comments Off on Hillel, Reject Naftali Bennett’s Exclusionary Grant

One of my favorite professors recently told me a story about her second-grade son. Asher* and his classmate were carpooling to school when the other eight-year-old began to lecture him about “correct” religious observance. My professor, who has raised Asher in a deeply Jewish, mixed-denomination home, was proud to hear her son reply with the […]

U of M Students React to Campus Apartheid Wall on Rosh Hashana

By Nicole Zelniker | 1 Comment

At the University of Michigan, many Jewish students spent the morning of Oct. 4 attending Rosh Hashanah services. That same morning, students in Students Allied for Freedom and Equality (SAFE) were getting ready to protest. “I just saw these two huge walls,” said first-year student Juliet Wishner. She also saw signs supporting BDS. SAFE, a […]

Why I Say Shema as a Secular Jew

By Josh Daniels | Comments Off on Why I Say Shema as a Secular Jew

Throughout my university experience, I sat in the middle of a seesaw – spirituality on one end and skeptical materialism on the other. As I took my classes, the weight of skepticism seemed to get lighter and lighter, and the seesaw slowly shifted closer towards spirituality. But no matter how much I read, I could […]

“Denial” Describes a Case of Fact vs. Fiction

By Jackson Richman | Comments Off on “Denial” Describes a Case of Fact vs. Fiction

The movie “Denial” is about a court case between Fact and Fiction. Through the case David Irving v. Penguin Books Limited, Deborah E. Lipstadt, “Denial” shows how injustices like the Holocaust cannot be denied. One of the most controversial cases of the 1990s, this case distinguished scholarship from bigotry. Emory University Professor Deborah Lipstadt (played […]

To Go to Class or Not to Go to Class?

By Daniel Levine | Comments Off on To Go to Class or Not to Go to Class?

Originally published in Ha’Am. There is perhaps no decision more representative of the difficulties of being a practicing Jewish college student than the quintessential question of whether or not to attend class during Chag. To me, this is not a question of grades or even the inconvenience of having to spend long, sleepless nights catching […]

High Holidays and Midterm Season Survival

By Sara Weissman | Comments Off on High Holidays and Midterm Season Survival

Original version published in The Daily Californian.  When I was preparing to come to UC Berkeley, my biggest fear wasn’t the academic rigor of college, making friends, or getting used to the sometimes-unidentifiable food at Crossroads dining hall – though those were definitely all high up on my list. It was observing Jewish holidays, including Shabbat, and […]

U.S. Aid Isn’t Good for Israel

By Jackson Richman | 1 Comment

The U.S. and Israel recently renewed the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU). The current version, signed in 2008, expires in 2018. According to officials, President Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu agreed to an MoU that would provide more than $30 billion over a decade, which would include advanced weaponry systems. The continuation of […]

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