Can you evict a homeless person?
Yes, in New Orleans, which has gained a reputation for making waves and increasingly for demolishing houses. The big news during AJC ACCESS’s recent fourth trip to the city was that the homeless people camped outside of Mayor Nagin’s office would be evicted shortly. They were given notice - how humane!
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New Orleans has become the metaphor for the problems of our nation laid bare. And while we’ve seen our share of good and bad answers, the bottom line has been inhumane.
Continue reading ‘NOLA on my Mind’
Isra Yaghoubi, Guest Writer
When Leo Frank, a New York Jew, was unlawfully lynched in 1915 by a mob in Georgia, Josephus Daniels, then Secretary of Navy, called it “the worst blot” on the history of the state of Georgia. The Brooklyn Eagle called it the act of “a mob of barbarians who have brought their civilization to a standstill”. The Evening Post declared, “Let a society be founded…with the specific aim of stamping out lynching.”
92-years later, the lynching noose is back in the public eye.
Continue reading ‘Blood at the Root’
Listen: [audio:101meeting/allam050407.mp3]
Magdi Allam, editor at Corriere Della Sera and commentator on Arab and Islamic affairs, was presented with the Mass Media Award on May 4, 2007 at AJC’s 101st Annual Meeting. Here he gives his acceptance speech.
Continue reading ‘Audio: Magdi Allam Accepts Mass Media Award’
One of the parking signs in New York City used to blare, “Don’t Even THINK of Parking Here.” Another declared, “No Parking. No Standing. No Stopping. No Kidding.” Parking has always been tough in New York, but airline travel has grown increasingly more difficult for everyone since 9/11. If going through airport security hasn’t been difficult enough, the six imams who were removed from U.S. Airways flight 300 in November are attempting to make the thought of boarding a plane even more of a hassle.
Continue reading ‘Bravo to the John Does’