Hanukkah, Australia
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Australia, Bondi Beach and gun laws
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Australia to crack down on hate speech
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Police and local media reports said the shooting began while some people were attending a Hanukkah party on the beach. At least 40 people were hospitalized.
After two gunmen targeted and killed over a dozen people during a Hanukkah event in Australia on Sunday, Floridians are heartbroken and outraged by the international tragedy as they ramp up security measures back home.
Students of the Akiva Academy shared a special message about the reason behind the celebration of Hanukkah during a program held Thursday at Stambaugh Auditorium. That message is important not only for the holiday season but in the world today,
Candles flickered against the December sky Thursday night at the Marriott Virginia Beach Oceanfront as members of the Jewish community gathered to celebrate Hanukkah and deliver what they described as a message of unity and resilience.
The Oklahoma City Community Chanukah Festival was held, as local rabbi urged Jews and non-Jews to stand against hate in aftermath of Australia attack.
Rabbi Eli Schlanger, assistant rabbi at Chabad of Bondi, was one of 15 people killed Sunday after two gunmen opened fire on a Hanukkah celebration in Australia. On Tuesday night in Sykesville, his childhood friend Rabbi Sholly Cohen stood on a stage adorned with a larger-than-life menorah and talked to the crowd gathered on Oklahoma Avenue about the tragedy.
Sen. Lindsey Graham blasts Australian PM Anthony Albanese as "pathetically weak" following deadly Hanukkah terror attack in Sydney that killed 15 victims.
The Forward on MSN
Australia’s Jewish community is defined by Holocaust survivors, Yiddishkeit, and immigrants
An attack on a Hanukkah celebration at Bondi Beach in Sydney on Sunday killed 15 people and left Jewish communities reeling worldwide. The violence has also drawn attention to the resilience of Australia’s distinctive Jewish community,