The events have spurred an identity crisis among some American Jews, as they increase spirituality, confront antisemitism -- and purchase guns.
Read Also
- British doctor admits trying to kill his mother’s partner with poison disguised as a COVID-19 vaccine
- Watch: Israeli hostages’ families march to Netanyahu’s home on 7 October anniversary
- UK doctor admits trying to kill his mother's partner with poison disguised as a COVID-19 vaccine
- ‘Very aggressive sucker’: Trump gets distracted by fly during campaign rally – then compares it to himself
- Canadian Natural Resources buying Chevron Alberta assets in deal worth US$6.5B
- ‘This is a tense life’: Teenager speaks from Gaza’s bombed humanitarian zone
- Celebrity birthdays for the week of Oct. 13-19
- Philippines: Duterte to run as mayor despite inquiry into his drugs crackdown
- Harris sees betting odds shrink over Trump to razor-thin margin less than a month before the election
- UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer attempts government reset less than 100 days into office
Latest The Washington Post
- American Jews cope with the fallout a year after the Oct. 7 attacks
- Russia sentences U.S. citizen to nearly 7 years for fighting for Ukraine
- Israelis, still at war, pause to remember the attacks of one year ago
- Live updates: One year since Gaza war began, fears mount over conflict in Lebanon
- ‘The land is full of blood’: An Israeli kibbutz where Oct. 7 never ends
- Israel has bombed much of Gaza to rubble. What will it take to rebuild?
- Israel has momentum in its battle with Hezbollah. But what comes next?
- No air raid sirens on Ukraine’s tallest mountain, just the promise of a future
- Live updates: Airstrikes pound Beirut as Israel expands attacks across Lebanon
- Macron urges countries to ‘stop delivering weapons’ to Israel for war in Gaza