The Women’s March, Anti-Semitism, and ‘The Jewish Farrakhan’
…ted and repudiated, this is a political positionality that many Jews themselves did not assume when it came to Kahane. Even after Kahane was removed from the Israeli Parliament and deemed a “racist” by the Jewish state, he was invited to speak at Yeshiva University as recently as 1988. And he spoke at Brandeis University in 1990, where I was then a graduate student, only a few days before he was assassinated. I do not criticize those who defended…
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