|
|
December 1982 |
Caspar W. Weinberger, Elias M. Schwarzbart, Aaron Goldman, William Bowen and Jascha Kessler |
|
Aftermath deals with the thousands of Nazi war criminals who have found asylum-or at least a refuge-in South America since the end of World War II.
|
April 1975 |
Reviewed by Benno Weiser Varon |
|
The high financial cost of Israel's defense as described in this issue by Hal Lehrman is, of course, only part of the price that beleaguered country has to pay for security.
|
September 1956 |
Benno Weiser |
|
|
July 1956 |
Reviewed by Benno Weiser |
|
The vicissitudes which led Benno Weiser finally to adopt Israeli citizenship began in Vienna, where he was born in 1914.
|
April 1956 |
Benno Weiser |
|
The hitchhiker I picked up on the Arlberg Pass was Viennese, with all the honeyed politeness and eagerness to please of a Viennese.
|
July 1955 |
Benno Weiser |
|
A woman from London told me of a visit that a British WIZO group paid to Israel's first prime minister.
|
August 1954 |
Benno Weiser |
|
At the height of the excitement over Soviet anti-Semitism, a South American delegate to the UN said to me, “You Jews are really unlucky. First, Hitler persecuted you. Then Stalin. And now to top it off..."
|
December 1953 |
Benno Weiser |
|
“Hablan todo el tiempo de judios—All they talk about is the Jews,” said the man who walked out before the movie was over.
|
March 1949 |
Benno Weiser |
|
The family of Ecuadorians who in 1938 invited me to spend Christmas with them were surprised when I rose to leave after dinner instead of waiting to go with them to the misa de gallo (Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve).
|
June 1947 |
Benno Weiser |