Jews

Fellowship Blog
Congratulations, Yael – One of JPost’s Most Influential Jews of 2020
The Jerusalem Post has released its list of 2020's 50 most influential Jews - and Yael Eckstein is on it!

Stand For Israel
Operation Ezra and Nehemiah
Named after the two biblical figures who led the Israelites back to the Holy Land after exile in Babylon, Operation Ezra and Nehemiah returned more than 100,000 Iraqi Jews to Israel.

Stand For Israel
Peruvian Jews Take Fellowship Freedom Flight to Flee Virus, Violence
Peruvian Jews were able to escape coronavirus and riots by making aliyah (immigrating to Israel) aboard a Fellowship Freedom Flight.

Stand For Israel
To Save Jewish Children
Known as "the British Schindler," Nicholas Winton rescued 669 Jewish children on the eve of the Holocaust.

Fellowship Blog
The Miracle of the Jewish People’s Return to Israel
Dr. David Jeremiah writes about the return of the Jewish people to Israel, a miraculous act of God that was specifically prophesied and happened exactly as it was foretold.

Stand For Israel
A Breach of Faith
In 1066, an anti-Semitic pogrom known as the Granada Massacre left most of the Jews of the southern Spanish city dead.

Stand For Israel
Police Officer Dead, Three Jews Hurt in Jersey Shooting
Breaking news of a shooting near a kosher supermarket in the U.S.

Stand For Israel
The Hebrew Orphan Asylum Band
Jewish orphans in the 1800s lived difficult lives that were sometimes made more tolerable through music.

Stand For Israel
The Congregation of the Men of the West
Illinois' oldest Jewish synagogue's early home became the site of the church where gospel music was born.

Fellowship Blog
We Must Unite to Fight
Writing at Fox News, Yael calls on Christians and Jews to come together to battle the worsening anti-Semitism we're witnessing around the world.

Stand For Israel
Fanny’s Dreams of Life
Born to a Jewish family, Fanny Mendelssohn was a composer and pianist who was the equal of her more famous brother, Felix.

Stand For Israel
The Last Rabbi of Timbuktu
A Moroccan Jew who traveled to the Holy Land to study, Rabbi Mordechai spent much of the 19th century traveling and serving such far-flung lands as Syria, Algeria, Mali, and the Sahara.
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