A recent graduate of the University of Amsterdam remembers her time there as marked by antisemitic assumptions.
On the night of Thursday, Nov. 7, the Dutch capital of Amsterdam witnessed Europe’s first pogrom since 1945. Around 3,000 Israeli Jews were in town to watch Maccabi Tel Aviv play a UEFA league match ...
Last November, a month after the Israel-Gaza war began, far-right populist Wilders and his Freedom Party (PVV) won the most ...
The antisemitic violence in Amsterdam occurred one day before the anniversary of Kristallnacht, the Nazi-organized pogrom ...
The pogrom was apparently planned well in advance of the match, with instigators tracking and disseminating the flight and ...
Organized, widespread beatings of Israeli soccer fans led to a temporary ban on protests, which anti-Israel activists are ...
When you read the news reports of the appalling violence against Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam, there is no doubt that ...
On university campuses throughout the world, there have been chants demanding that the violent intifada – which killed ...
We must not allow our society to cross over from one that promotes the open discussion of thought and debate of philosophies ...
The recent attack on Israeli Maccabi Tel Aviv fans in Amsterdam — a brutal mob assault that Dutch police seemed unprepared or ...
Recent scenes from Amsterdam were horrifying ... again,” Netherlands King Willem-Alexander told the Israeli president. Three ...
Following violence against Israeli soccer fans in Amsterdam last week, France has thrown heavy policing muscle behind a ...