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Beginning in February, 2007 and running until 2015, Walsh wrote for National Review both under his own name and using a fictional persona named David Kahane, the name of which "is borrowed from a screenwriter character in (the movie) The Player". [3]
In 1991, Rabbi David Kahane had a stroke. His son, Rabbi Reuven Kahane, served as the synagogue Rabbi for almost three years before moving to Jerusalem and becoming a businessperson in Israel and New York. [17] [18] [19] Rabbi David Kahane died in 1996. [20] In 1994, the congregation elected Rabbi Richard Thaler to be its religious leader. [21]
Kahane was born in Grzymałów, partitioned Poland (now Hrymailiv, Ukraine) into a religious family of the Rabbis.He studied in Berlin and in Wrocław (then Breslau). In 1923–1929, following the reconstitution of sovereign Poland, he continued his studies at the University of Vienna where he obtained the title of Doctor of Philosophy in Israelitisch-Theologische Lehranstalt.
National Review is an American conservative [4] editorial magazine, focusing on news and commentary pieces on political, social, and cultural affairs. The magazine was founded by William F. Buckley Jr. in 1955. [ 5 ]
Kuby's parents divorced when he was five years old, after which he lived with his mother and grandparents. At 13, he joined the Jewish Defense League under the influence of his father, who was a follower of Meir David Kahane. As a teenager, Kuby emigrated to Israel, but returned to the U.S. after being disillusioned by what he describes as ...
Solomon (Shlomo) Kahane, ordained in 1954 at Yeshiva University, was subsequently rabbi of the congregation for 38 years and widely considered the synagogue's most prominent Rabbi. He died in April, 2004. [7] [18] He was a first cousin of Rabbi Meir Kahane, the founder of the Jewish Defense League and the Israeli political party Kach. The ...
Ramesh Ponnuru (/ r ə ˈ m ɛ ʃ p ə ˈ n ʊər uː /; born August 16, 1974) is an American conservative thinker, political pundit, and journalist.He is the editor of National Review magazine, a contributing columnist for The Washington Post, [1] and a contributing editor to the domestic policy journal National Affairs. [2]
Brookhiser began writing for National Review in 1970. His first article, done on antiwar protests when he was 15 in high school, was a cover story in National Review in 1970. [3] He earned an A.B. degree (1977) at Yale. [1] In his freshman year he took a class on Thomas Jefferson taught by Garry Wills.