Femke Halsema used the term to describe the violence which followed a football match between Maccabi Tel Aviv and the local Ajax football club.
Late on Thursday night, Nov. 7, Esther Voet heard explosions from her home in the center of Amsterdam. Voet, who is the editor of a Dutch Jewish weekly newspaper, quickly learned that she was hearing ...
The events in Amsterdam called for nuanced media coverage that contextualized events and condemned both anti-Jewish and anti-Arab violence. Instead, per usual, world leaders and media alike painted ...
Who is Mohammad HannounMarking a year since the October 7 atrocities, 62-year-old Jordanian-born Hannoun, who resides in ...
Britain on Monday imposed sanctions on an Iranian airline, shipping group and the Russian vessel Port Olya-3, a government update showed.
The events in Amsterdam show how Israel's weaponisation of antisemitism and perpetual victim narrative has reached ...
Welcome to Higher Ground, the faith-centric newsletter focused on the intersection of culture and politics from experienced ...
The application of the term "pogrom" was not an Israeli invention. It was used by Dutch politicians who recognized the severity and antisemitic nature of the incident," Sa'ar said.
Femke Halsema said the word ‘pogrom’ in relation to violence involving Israeli fans had been used by politicians to target ...
Ex-undersecretary Nora Achahbar, who was born in Morocco, quit after right-wing pol Geert Wilders called for the deportation ...
Israeli visitors spit at, threw beer at and beat Dutch residents and threatened some with death. #antizionism #Netherlands ...
Last week, we witnessed the first significant manifestation of that demand in Amsterdam, where large groups of predominantly ... the evidence strongly suggests that this pogrom was planned well in ...