Racial State. By Gerhard Jacoby. (New York: Institute of Jewish Affairs of the American Jewish Congress and World Jewish Congress1944. Pp. xii, 355.) - Germany's Stepchildren. By Solomon Liptzin. (Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society of America. 1944. Pp. viii, 298. $3.00.)

1945 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 593-595
Author(s):  
D. Beatrice McCown

Author(s):  
Nerijus Udrenas

RENE COHEN and JENNIFER L. GOLUB, Attitudes toward Jews in Poland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia: A Comparative Survey, Working Papers on Contemporary Antisemitism (New York: American Jewish Committee, Institute of Human Relations, Aug. 1991); pp. 44 The Skinhead International: A Worldwide Survey of Neo-Nazi Skinheads (New York: Anti-Defamation League, 1995); pp. 90...


2021 ◽  
pp. 290-292

This chapter examines Jerold S. Auerbach's Print to Fit (2019). In this book, Auerbach charges that the New York Times consistently slanted its treatment of Israel in ways that discredited its struggle for survival and instead sympathized with the enemies of Zionism. Having assiduously combed through close to a century of articles, editorials, and op-ed pieces, Auerbach has discovered, especially in recent decades, a “preoccupation with Palestinian victimization — even when Israelis were the victims.” Print to Fit is especially harsh in its treatment of two of the Times' stars, the late Anthony Lewis and Thomas L. Friedman for having so often conveyed their own disenchantment with what they held to be the moral and political failings of Israel — in particular, the extension of Jewish settlements into the West Bank. Written from the political periphery of American Jewish life, Print to Fit risks overstating its case by simplifying it.


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