Author and known conspiracy theorist Naomi Wolf claimed during an April 19 interview on Fox News Primetime that Dr. Anthony.
Ajlouny is also the former director of the Ramallah Friends School; that school’s summer programs introduced American youth to members of the terrorist group, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
When considering recent claims of antisemitism, Ajlouny began by saying, “I’m reminded of the boy who cried wolf.”
She advanced a quasi-conspiracy theory about the formulation and adoption of the IHRA definition, referring to it as “a plot” carried out by Israel-connected advocacy groups that act like “a well-oiled machine.”
With Madoff gone, Jewish nonprofits have not yet learned their lessons
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The already messy break-up of American Jews over Israel is getting messier
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Upcoming VCU speech by Peter Beinart, a critic of Israeli policy, roils Richmond Jewish community
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Book Review: The American Jewish Philanthropic Complex
In the face of a devastating global pandemic, the approximately half-trillion dollar American philanthropic sector has stepped up. As of November 2020, foundations and corporations awarded close to $20B globally for COVID-19 research and relief. The Jewish community, responsible typically for $25-50B in annual giving, continues to play a prominent role: a group of Jewish foundations allocated $80M in grants and interest-free loans for pandemic relief last April, and has now increased their pledge. Thankfully, the engine driving American and Jewish philanthropy is humming vigorously.
But to say that the sector is “alive and well” would be considered only half-correct, at least by its most strident critics. How wealth is amassed, the purposes of gifts and grants and, perhaps most importantly, the arrangements allowing charitable organizations and individuals to reduce their tax liability dominate headline news. Lila Corwi