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(JTA) — Pro-Palestinian demonstrators in Melbourne, Australia, chanted “Death to the IDF” at a rally Sunday, two days after a ...
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'Total engagement in the fight against antisemitism', National Rally leader to 'Post' - MSNNational Rally vs. National Front Q: The Jewish community in France has a long history of fighting against the National Front, of which the National Rally descends, especially under the leadership ...
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Premier Jacinta Allan, who is expected to visit East Melbourne Synagogue today, will announce that the new anti-hate ...
"Words from our leaders matter and we expect more from the President of the United States," the Anti-Defamation League said ...
First invitation of National Rally leader to ... admitted in recent months that in front of the mounting Islamist threat and the left-wing antisemitism, the National Rally is seen today as a ...
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The Forward on MSNCan the global far-right help fight antisemitism? Israel sure wants to think so - MSNAmong them: Jordan Bardella, president of the French National Rally party — the founder of which minimized the atrocities of ...
In 2022, he had co-signed an article in the Libération newspaper headlined, “No to Le Pen, daughter of racism and antisemitism.” The National Rally, all taboos apparently shattered, now holds ...
Antisemitic violence in Boulder, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania highlights our ongoing struggle with hatred toward Jews.
Barry Moore (R-Ala.) recently reintroduced the Define to Defeat Act, a much-needed federal measure that would help address the gaping loopholes in how our laws currently respond to antisemitic attacks ...
After a past marked by anti-Semitism, ... They included Jordan Bardella, president of France's National Rally; Kinga Gal, an MEP for Hungary's Fidesz party and Milorad Dodik, ...
The National Rally is the successor to Jean-Marie Le Pen’s National Front, founded in 1972 by neo-fascists and former members of the Waffen-SS – all members of the far-right New Order movement.
After a past marked by anti-Semitism, far-right parties now often portray themselves as defenders of Jews, but critics accuse them of shifting their stance solely for political gain.
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