A match made in Vienna: How coffeehouses shaped Jewish history
The Viennese Café scene was created to a large extent by Jews who would frequent them for many generations, but the war changed everything. Nevertheless, their memory lives on.
The Viennese Café scene was created to a large extent by Jews who would frequent them for many generations, but the war changed everything. Nevertheless, their memory lives on.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is clinging to precious antiquities stolen from the Land of Israel not because he cares about them, but because they are emblematic of the days when Turkey ruled the region.
Israel is famous for being a hot country. But Mount Hermon, on the border of both Lebanon and Syria, is covered in snow in the winter months, and it takes veterans of elite Golani units to train for conditions few Israelis will ever encounter.
Former US envoy to Russia says it's no longer a question of how to stop Kremlin disinformation, but how to promote information inside Russia.
Nimrod Eisenberg speaks to Israel Hayom about the "incredible humanitarian work" the IDF's field hospitals, which include trained medical clowns, do in disaster-stricken areas, as well as his recent trip to Latvia to work with refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine.
An Israel Hayom reporter shares his first-hand account of the harrowing ordeal average citizens faced as Russian forces began their invasion.
Longtime friends and allies in advocating for Israel Malcolm Hoenlein and Pastor John Hagee talk to Israel Hayom about the surprising partnership between the US Evangelical community and the Jewish people.
This year, the holiest month in the Muslim calendar coincides with Passover – and both Jewish and Muslim worshippers want to visit the Temple Mount. Security authorities are trying to keep the volatile situation from exploding.
Svetlana Alexievich, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, has already been living in Germany for a year, where she misses her homeland Belarus and is watching what is happening in Ukraine in horror. “Putin’s rule is reminiscent of what happened in the 1930s,” she tells Israel Hayom in an exclusive interview.
Former Mossad official Udi Levy believes the US's desperate efforts to reach a nuclear agreement with Iran in 2015 prevented the Israeli intelligence agency from completely cutting off Hezbollah from its global economic lifeline.
The first issue of Israel Hayom appeared on July 30, 2007. Israel Hayom was founded on the belief that the Israeli public deserves better, more balanced and more accurate journalism. Journalism that speaks, not shouts. Journalism of a different kind. And free of charge.
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