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The Australian Jewish community has only one major hard copy weekly publication, The Australian Jewish News, but has a long history of boutique publications and zines.With the advent of the internet, blogs and online magazines have proliferated reflecting the community's multitudinous religious, political, and cultural orientations.
From 1990, the newspaper has been published weekly nationally as The Australian Jewish News. [1] The newspaper celebrated its 100th anniversary in 1995 and launched an online edition in 2001. In July 2007, Robert Magid became the paper's new publisher. [5] In October 2019, the AJN became the seventh "local partner" of The Times of Israel. It is ...
The "Australia-Israel Review" has continued to be an important publication since its establishment in the 1970s. The longest-running Jewish community newspaper is the "Australian Jewish News", which celebrated its centenary in November 1995. [44]
On Wednesday, Sky News Australia reported a car was destroyed after being set on fire in a Jewish community in Sydney. At least two, but possibly as many as seven, buildings in the area were ...
The first ever Jewish newspaper The Jewish Word: Polish, Yiddish 1992–Present Periodical Primary Polish Jewish publication Folks-Sztyme: Polish, Yiddish 1946-1991 Daily Australian Jewish News: English Australia Weekly See Australian Jewish Media: Calgary Jewish News: English Canada 1962–88 Canadian Jewish News: The Jewish Post & News ...
Leader Community Newspaper group publishes 20 local news titles covering metropolitan Melbourne; Melbourne Observer (tabloid weekly) [7] Sameway Magazine (Chinese weekly) The Australian Jewish News (weekly) Viet Times (Vietnamese weekly) [citation needed] Il Globo (bi-weekly, Italian)
- Australian Jewish Association via X A 53-year-old man received cuts to his head and a 39-year-old man, who was injured after attempting to intervene, suffered cuts and a shoulder wound, police said.
On Sky News Australia, AJA president David Adler stated that there is a "crisis of antisemitism" in Australia after AJA received death threats. [11] CEO Robert Gregory stated that AJA is shocked at the level of support for Hezbollah on the streets of Sydney and Melbourne during a series of protests after the death of its leader Hassan Nasrallah.