ON JUNE 1–2, 1941, as British forces momentarily withdrew from Baghdad, a mob unleashed a systematic slaughter of the city's ancient Jewish community. Nearly 180 Jews were killed, hundreds more wounded, and thousands of homes and businesses were l...
South Africa’s Dry Pogrom Season
The fires have been burning for months. Migrants are beaten in the streets, schoolchildren riot against foreign classmates, and a charismatic activist whips crowds into a frenzy with warnings that foreigners will "say they discovered us." Yet for mainstream press, South Africa's anti-immigrant cr...
Nakba commemorations produce evidence of the very revisionism critics have long alleged
THIS MONTH'S Nakba Day commemorations — marking 78 years since the displacement of Palestinians during Israel's 1948 War of Independence — were supposed to be occasions for solemn remembrance. Instead, they produced two embarrassing episodes that, taken together, illustrate something more signifi...
SAA Ignored Severe Storm Warnings, Pushed SA313 to Near-Disaster
Cape Town: South African Airways has come under sharp criticism after Flight SA313 came perilously close to a fuel emergency during last week’s violent Cape storm, despite clear and timely severe weather warnings issued by the South African Weather Service (SAWS). The airline’s decision to procee...
Get Jet! South Africa’s Forgotten Radio Superhero
BEFORE MARVEL dominated every cinema screen and streaming platform, South Africa had its own homegrown hero — and he arrived not through a comic book or a film, but through the crackle of a radio set. Jet Jungle was a sci-fi adventure hero billed as "The Incredible Adventures of the Most Amazing...
Ghaleb Cachalia’s claim is a statistically indefensible illustration of epistemic antisemitism
THERE is a concept gaining traction in philosophy and critical theory called epistemic injustice — the idea that certain groups are systematically denied credibility as knowledge-holders and witnesses of their own experience. We are familiar with this in the context of racism, where the pain of B...