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As editor-in-chief, I’m finding my way Forward (and back)

It’s with excitement and awe — of all that the Forward is, was and will be — that I arrive as your new editor-in-chief, at a moment like so many before when the Jewish world (and the world, period) urgently needs unflinching journalism.

Disorientation is hardly just a Jewish experience in this moment — nor is the craving for community, inspiration and joy. But an extraordinary mix of forces pulls at us.

Antisemitism gains currency even as the hounding and hunting of asylum-seeking immigrants echoes ancestral trauma. The same president who has sent deadly troops into U.S. cities to round up “aliens” has also declared himself the angel of peace in Gaza with a brazen, self-serving scheme that at the same time can’t be dismissed.

A flagrantly Jewish movie about the American Jewish experience, starring Hollywood’s hottest (Jewish) star, is a leading Oscar contender, exhilarating and demanding to be discussed. Ask me about Marty Supreme’s ending, anytime.

We’re on a wild, sometimes stomach-dropping ride. And it’s all happening at a moment when knowing what’s signal and what’s noise, sorting through AI garbage and disinformation, while seeking out news and informed insight, is a frustrating experience even for those of us whose job it is to report what’s happening in the world. The temptation to tune out the din is powerful.

It’s the job of the Forward’s committed and talented editorial team to make sense of the chaos, to highlight what’s important in the face of information overload, and to elevate Jewish concerns and achievements. To analyze the evidence and arrive as close as possible to the truth of complex conflicts. To offer a compassionate and inclusive alternative to fury and contempt. To say “no thanks” to talking points, and “yes, please!” to inquiry.

And that’s just the foundation. The Forward was born of chutzpah and ambition — and of an immigrant, let’s remember — and I intend to advance that legacy with journalism that takes on tough subjects, challenges assumptions and holds power to account. Why else do this work?

As a journalist, I’ve played a lot of instruments in the orchestra, as a writer and editor, in magazines (remember those?), books and online, covering culture, crafting editorials and driving investigative journalism that exposes exploitation. My work has led to criminal convictions for wrongdoers and exposed corruption. A nerd for my passions — law and policy, music and film among them — I’m driven by a need to make sense of a world that often doesn’t. Grateful readers and viewers make it clear that they value the results.

Until now, I’ve kept my engagement in Jewish life separate, including as a volunteer leader in my synagogue — shoutout to East Midwood Jewish Center in Brooklyn! — and a participant in a family historic preservation project in Warsaw. My own upbringing, as the daughter of a hidden child Holocaust survivor mother and an Israeli father, pushed me toward assimilation in the tribe of New Yorkers, in which I proudly remain.

Many events in my life and the world aligned to bring me to Jewish journalism now. Those certainly include the horrors of Oct. 7 and its intolerable aftermath. I am committed to taking on the tough questions of what it will require, both here in the U.S. and there in Israel, Gaza and the West Bank, to build a functional, peaceful future for all. For the first time in my American life that my parents paved the way for, I realized that my disengagement was a choice, and that my skills and experience have a role to play in helping lead compassionate and constructive coverage.

The Forward is also a forum for necessary conversations about influential institutions and individuals within Jewish life in the U.S., as well as about the political movements challenging their actions.

Legendary editor Abraham Cahan
Abraham Cahan, founder of the Forward. Photo by New York World-Telegram staff photographer/Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division

As a longtime muckracker turning my lens to Jewish affairs at a time of political tumult, I’m mindful of the legacy set by Abraham Cahan, a socialist refugee and activist who, after founding the Forward in 1897, turned for a time to a newspaper called the Commercial Advertiser, where — writing in English, his newly acquired language — he produced powerful, often humorous portraits of the lives of immigrant Jews of New York’s Lower East Side for audiences of curious outsiders.

There, as former Forward editor Seth Lipsky writes in The Rise of Abraham Cahan, he was mentored by legendary investigative reporter Lincoln Steffens. It was only with some persuading that Cahan came back to the Forward, to Yiddish, to elevate the newspaper into a guiding light for its readers, who relied on it to navigate a new country and its intoxicating freedoms, finding their place within its pages.

In this perpetually strange land that I was born to and that, like so many, I increasingly do not recognize, carrying on that legacy of helping readers steady their place in the world is my new aspiration. I’m so glad to join you in the Forward community.

The post As editor-in-chief, I’m finding my way Forward (and back) appeared first on The Forward.

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Man Charged With Hate Crime for Car Ramming at Chabad Headquarters in Brooklyn

Police control the scene after a car repeatedly slammed into Chabad World Headquarters in Crown Heights section of Brooklyn. The driver was taken into custody. Photo: ZUMA Press Wire via Reuters Connect

Police in New York City charged a man on Thursday with a hate crime and other charges after he allegedly rammed his car repeatedly into Chabad Lubavitch World Headquarters in Brooklyn.

The suspect, 36-year-old Dan Sohail, has been charged with attempted assault as a hate crime, reckless endangerment as a hate crime, criminal mischief as a hate crime, and aggravated harassment as a hate crime, New York City Police Department (NYPD) Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny announced at a press conference on Thursday.

“The hate crime right now is that he basically attacked a Jewish institution,” Kenny explained. “This is a synagogue, it was clearly marked as a synagogue, he knew it was a synagogue because he had attended there previously.”

The Chabad-Lubavitch movement is an influential force in Orthodox Judaism that operates around the world. The iconic 770 Eastern Parkway building in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn became the world headquarters of the Hassidic movement in 1940.

The NYPD’s Hate Crimes Task Force is leading the investigation into the car ramming.

Sohail is a resident of New Jersey and has no criminal history in New York City, Kenny said. The vehicle he allegedly used on Wednesday night was registered under his name and, earlier this month, Sohail attended an event at the Chabad Lubavitch World Headquarters.

“We believe that he was in Brooklyn last night to continue this attempt to connect with the Lubavitch Jewish community,” Kenny said. Sohail was due in court on Friday.

Footage from the incident showed Sohail drive his vehicle multiple times into the rear door of the 770 Eastern Parkway building in Crown Heights, according to Kenny, who added that the suspect stepped out of his vehicle, removed several blockades from his path, and cleared snow away from a sidewalk before ramming into the building.

Later, when talking to police, Sohail claimed his foot slipped and that he lost control of the car because he was wearing “clunky boots,” Kenny said. No injuries were reported and the damaged synagogue door is currently being repaired, according to Yaacov Behrman, head of public relations at the Chabad Lubavitch World Headquarters.

“It is clear the incident was intentional,” Behrman added. “The attacker removed the metal bollards that typically block the ramp and protect the entrance shortly before driving into the building. The bollards have since been restored.”

The car ramming took place the same day as the 75th anniversary of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson being chosen as the leader of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement.

Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, chairman of the Chabad Lubavitch World Headquarters, said in a statement on Thursday night that the incident “underscores a painful and undeniable reality: acts of hate, intimidation, violence, and antisemitic aggression are no longer isolated incidents or abstract threats.”

“Condemnation alone is insufficient. Real deterrence requires prompt, decisive action by the justice system — through swift prosecution and meaningful consequences — to discourage further incidents and ensure public safety,” he said. “As this incident occurred while the anniversary of the beginning of the Rebbe’s leadership was being observed worldwide, we reaffirm our faith that the world is meant to be refined — not ruled by fear or force, but cultivated as a place of moral clarity, responsibility, and goodness. We remain committed to that vision, even in the face of events such as this.”

The ramming incident occurred amid an alarming surge in antisemitic hate crimes across New York City.

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Left-Wing Conspiracists Attempt to Connect Israel With Minneapolis ICE Shootings

Derek French / SOPA Images via Reuters Connect

People tend to a candlelight vigil assembled for Alex Pretti at the Veterans Affairs New York Harbor Healthcare System on Jan. 29, 2026, in New York, New York, USA. Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse at the Minneapolis VA hospital, died Jan. 24 after being shot multiple times during a brief altercation with border patrol agents. Photo: Derek French / SOPA Images via Reuters Connect

Political progressives are attempting to draw a direct link between the ongoing unrest in Minneapolis over US Customs and Immigration Enforcement (ICE) and Israel, suggesting that the Jewish state has trained or infiltrated critical American governmental agencies.

A sprawling constellation of left-wing social media accounts and news outlets have argued that Israeli agencies have trained or assisted ICE, a federal agency responsible for conducting criminal investigations and enforcing immigration laws. They claim that Israel has collaborated with ICE in surveillance and detainment strategies. On social media platforms such as TikTok, baseless claims that ICE agents are from Israel have gone viral.

“From Palestine to Minneapolis, ICE and Israel use the same playbook,” wrote popular, far-left social media pundit Sulaiman Ahmed on X/Twitter.

Protests in Minneapolis have intensified following a surge in federal immigration enforcement operations and two controversial fatal shootings involving federal agents this month. Demonstrations grew after large numbers of ICE and partner agents were deployed to the area under an expanded enforcement initiative, drawing criticism from local activists and officials. A statewide strike and mass rallies followed, then expanded nationally after the shooting of a Minneapolis hospital worker during an ICE operation, prompting a US Justice Department civil rights investigation.

Controversial leftist social media personality Hasan Piker was suspended from the Twitch streaming platform for spreading anti-Israel conspiracy theories and making antisemitic comments in attempt to connect ICE to the Jewish state.

“This is another big suck my d**k to all the f**king Israel d**k riders out there. You f**king rabid ultra-Zionist pigs,” Piker wrote.

“You run around going ‘Why are you tying this back to Palestine?’ Because this is precisely the same s**t. You Israel-first monsters,” he added.

Piker also posted that Israel had helped the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) implement a “censorship regime” to label Americans “domestic terrorists” and carry out surveillance “on the basis of their anti-Israel & anti-ICE activism.”

“Two senior national security officials tell me there are more than a dozen secret watch lists that homeland security is using to track protestors (both anti-ICE and pro-Palestinians),” he wrote.

Other progressive commentators pointed out that ICE maintains offices in Tel Aviv, suggesting that the agency is controlled by Israel

“ICE isn’t just trained by the IDF [Israel Defense Forces], they have a whole office on Israeli-occupied land,” wrote another left-wing account on X/Twitter.

However, ICE maintains a broad international presence through its Homeland Security Investigations division, operating dozens of offices at US embassies and consulates in more than 50 countries worldwide. While ICE is best known domestically for immigration enforcement, its overseas units primarily serve as investigative and liaison posts focused on transnational crime, including human trafficking, smuggling networks, financial crimes, and sanctions violations.

Josh Paul, a self-described “human rights activist” and a former director of congressional and public affairs for the Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, attempted to draw parallels between ICE and Israeli policy in the West Bank

“You have units of a security force that are imposed on the local authorities, imposed on the local police, that engage in checkpoints, detentions, including of children […] And it seems to operate broadly with impunity,” Paul told Responsible Statecraft, a publication of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, a think tank critical of US support for Israel.

“It’s kind of every man for himself. They are obviously not operating under any standard operating procedures,” Anthony Aguilar, a US Army veteran and former contractor for the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) who has made discredited claims against Israel, told the publication. “This is exactly how the Israel Defense Forces operate in Gaza.”

Aguilar claimed he witnessed the IDF shoot a child — Abdul Rahim Muhammad Hamdene, known as Abboud — as the GHF was distributing humanitarian aid on May 28. The GHF was an Israeli and US-backed program that delivered aid directly to Palestinians, blocking Hamas from diverting supplies for terrorist activities and selling them at inflated prices. An independent investigation later revealed that Abdul had not been killed and was alive with his mother, exposing that Aguilar’s story was fabricated.

There is no evidence to suggest that ICE, which is part of the US government and charged with enforcing American immigration laws, has taken any direction from Israel in Minneapolis.

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Israeli NGO Uncovers Online Terror Plot Targeting Jews in US on Passover, Shares Data With FBI

Rabbi to the UAE Rabbi Levi Duchman helping to prepare matzah. Photo: Jewish UAE/Shneor Shif.

The Israeli nongovernmental organization Fighting Online Antisemitism (FOA) announced this week that it uncovered a terrorist plot by white nationalists to target Jewish communities in the United States on the eve of Passover and that the intelligence was handed over to the FBI.

The NGO said the planned terrorist attack was orchestrated by a “white nationalist accelerationist cell” and was scheduled for April 1, the first night of the Jewish holiday. FOA discovered messages by the terrorist cell on X in which the white nationalists discussed their goal to “bring the Nova massacre home,” which is a reference to the deadly Hamas-led terrorist attack at the Nova music festival in Re’im, Israel, of Oct. 7, 2023. Members of the cell talked about their intent to repeat the Nova attack in the US by using weapons and targeting Jewish families that would be gathering to celebrate Passover.

“We have been following this X account for a few months and recently we have noticed a shift from general slurs to operational specifics,” said Tomer Aldubi, FOA’s founder and executive director. “The group began discussing the acquisition of knives and celebrating the Oct. 7 atrocities as a blueprint. They explicitly stated it was ‘time for violence’ because ‘Jews don’t learn.’ We realized they were counting down to April 1.”

FOA shared several of the messages it found on X that were related to the terrorist plot. One post read: “Honestly we don’t have to go anywhere. Everyone just wake up on April t, choose violence, clean up our communities and cities.” Another message said: “April 1. Delete the Invaders. Pass It On!

FOA, which was founded in 2020, said it shared its intelligence with X so that the platform could remove the accounts owned by members of the terrorist cell. FOA has worked with X for many years, according to the Israeli organization. The data has also been shared with the FBI.

“The team secured a comprehensive evidentiary file, including digital fingerprints of the ringleaders, operating under specific handles, and transmitted the intelligence directly to the FBI Detroit Field Office’s hate crimes division via a confidential channel,” FOA stated.

“The distance between an online post and a terror attack is shrinking,” said Aldubi. “This success was made possible by our trained volunteers, proving that individuals have the power to protect their communities and fight antisemitism. Join us and get training on how you too can stop the next attack.”

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