| What do do about Sderot? |  | Yated Ne'eman |  | June 13, 2007 |
Two things are ever clearer about the current situation in Sderot. The first is that it is intolerable; the second, that nobody has any clear idea of what to do about it. |
| A test for Israel |  | Jerusalem Post |  | March 23, 2006 |
Israeli society will be judged by its treatment of the Gush Katif evacuees. On that score, we are failing at present. |
| "Israelis" vs. "Jews" |  | Hamodia |  | September 16, 2005 |
The Gaza withdrawal laid bare some very deep divisions in Israeli society. In the wake of the withdrawal, the impulse of most Israelis has been to seek some sort of national reconciliation and to reaffirm that which is held in common. |
| Our champion haters |  | Jerusalem Post |  | September 9, 2005 |
Not everyone, however, is so eager to mend the tear in Israeli society. Yossi Sarid for one seems disappointed that the feared civil war with the settlers did not take place. |
| Identity crisis |  | London Jewish Tribune |  | September 8, 2005 |
The national religious community in Israel is poised, in the wake of the Gaza withdrawal, for at least the third major directional shift since the creation of the State of Israel in 1948. |
| Needed -- one more chesed entrepreneur |  | Mishpacha Magazine |  | September 1, 2005 |
Those whose world has been devastated, and whose long-cherished verities have been called into question, deserve from us an outstretched hand, a friendly smile, a shared tear. |
| Still two separate worlds |  | Maariv |  | August 29, 2005 |
Talk of the “chareidization” of the national religious world in the wake of the Gaza withdrawal is much in the air. |
| A time to reach out |  | London Jewish Tribune |  | August 26, 2005 |
The refugees have lost everything, and their entire worldview has been shaken to the core. Who knows what effect have an outstretched hand, a warm embrace, a friendly smile, a shared tear could have at this point. |
| Division – certainly; Reconciliation – perhaps |  | Mishpacha Magazine |  | August 18, 2005 |
The first casualty of the Gaza withdrawal has been the sundering of the relationship between secular Israel and the national religious camp. |
| Democracy deficit |  | Jerusalem Post |  | August 12, 2005 |
Nothing could be more dangerous for our long-range survival, than for Sarid’s narrative of Jews as having stolen the Land to become the dominant Israel one |
| Just the beginning |  | Mishpacha Magazine |  | August 11, 2005 |
The repercussions of the uprooting of 8,000 Jews from Gaza are likely to be felt on Israeli society for years to come |
| Sharing the pain |  | Hamodia |  | August 5, 2005 |
there is one other aspect of the disengagement that should particularly concern us, as we approach Tisha B'Av. "Hashem is taking back the Land," in the words of one of our generation's leading ba'alei hashkafa. |
| Team Orange vs. Team Blue |  | Mishpacha Magazine |  | July 28, 2005 |
Well, the Team Orange and Team Blue are tied 2-2 on the playing field of the Rosenblum family |
| Competing nightmares |  | Jerusalem Post |  | July 15, 2005 |
THE NON-DEBATE over the Gaza withdrawal mirrors our national conversation habits. The various tribes of Israel prefer pointing out the failures of other communities to confronting their own internal problems. |
| Trauma ahead |  | Mishpacha Magazine |  | July 14, 2005 |
The impending removal of 8,000 Jews from the Gaza Strip constitutes a trauma of unprecedented magnitude for the national religious world in Israel. |
| Searching for a middle ground |  | London Jewish Tribune |  | June 24, 2005 |
Is there no choice between religious messianism and entering into an uncharted unknown fraught with great danger? |
| Messianic furies again? |  | Jerusalem Post |  | January 28, 2005 |
. OF LATE, the Gaza withdrawal has begun to transmute in the public mind into an end in itself, much as Oslo did. Under Oslo, the "peace process" required a continuous stream of new signed agreements to preserve the illusion of forward momentum. |
| False hopes |  | Hamodia |  | August 18, 2004 |
One of the most striking aspects of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s Gaza withdrawal initiative is how little time and energy he has spent explaining and selling his plan to the Israeli public. |