Kippah
Can Naftali Bennett win Israel without belonging to anyone? - analysis
Bennett has never built a home. Bayit Yehudi was a vehicle. Yamina was a vehicle. Bennett 2026 was a vehicle. Together, his new merger with Lapid, is a vehicle.
A kippah, and Israel’s heart and soul - opinion
The tear that exposes Israel’s democratic crisis - opinion
Unabashedly proud of being Jewish: A stand against antisemitism in New York City - opinion
Arab wearing kippah, carrying knives stopped in attempt to enter synagogue
Attempts to gain access to synagogues, which are restricted to worshipers for security reasons, are common in Antwerp. But such attempts by men carrying knives are extremely rare.
German warning
“I can no longer recommend Jews wear a kippah at every time and place in Germany,” said Felix Klein, the federal government commissioner for Jewish life in Germany.
Fighting for equality - Rabbis demand the addition of kippah-wearing emoji
"We request the creation of a new emoji that will symbolize the Jewish religion, either a woman wearing a hat, a person wearing a kippah, or even an emoji of Torah books."
German Jews demand ban on Hezbollah after kippah warning
Merkel's gov't has refused to outlaw the terrorist entity
Kippah belongs to Germany, declares leading German paper 'Bild'
“Bild printed a kippah to cut out” because “it should not be allowed” that Jews in Germany have to hide after the Holocaust in order to be safe.
U.S. ambassador urges Jews in Germany to wear kippot and not conceal identity
Grenell, the US ambassador to Germany, tweeted: "The opposite is true. Wear your kippa. Wear your friend’s kippa. Borrow a kippa and wear it for our Jewish neighbors."
On erasing Jews
A recent discovery in a Paris flea market should awaken the world to a frightening possibility
Hellenists wearing kippot
What is Hellenization? How does the abuse of power, even though power is not itself a bad thing, lead to human rights violations?
Frank Sinatra's kippa sells for almost $10k
Hand-crocheted yarmulke with musical notes auctioned off by Sotheby's
Democrats push to allow religious headwear within U.S. Congress
Hats and head coverings of any kind were prohibited from the House following the passage of a motion on proper decorum in 1837.