Journalism

“We Have to Be Awake”: Interview with Vaclav Havel

Published in Newsweek

Twenty years after he led the Velvet Revolution, paving the way for the rise of democracy in Eastern Europe, Václav Havel, a playwright and dissident who became free Czechoslovakia’s first president, sat down in Berlin with NEWSWEEK’s Michael Levitin to discuss fear of Russia, the importance of NATO, and why some of his countrymen still …

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Shadow Places: A Journalist’s Rediscovery Breaks the Long Silence in Bavaria

Published in Tikkun

The town of Plattling lies at the foothills of the Bavarian Forest, which climbs mountainously off the plain where the Isar and Danube rivers meet in southeastern Germany. The sky hangs oppressively gray here, even in June when the potato and sugar beet fields emit a green summer luster and the Niederbayern, or Lower Bavaria, …

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Occupy Wall Street Did More Than You Think

Published in The Atlantic

A decade before United Nations climate scientists issued a “code red for humanity,” the 20-year-old college junior Evan Weber joined several thousand protesters descending on Wall Street to declare a code red for democracy. At the height of the Great Recession, Weber and his generation saw the climate crisis staring them in the face, along …

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Spain’s Rebellion Moves to Print

Published in Truthout

La Marea, Spain’s radical new monthly magazine, operates out of a narrow, lime green-colored office space in southeastern Madrid, in the working class stronghold of Vallecas. There is a small foyer with a couch to receive visitors; some cramped desks with three second-hand computers bought at 70 euros a piece; and a back room with …

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Germany’s Greek Tragedy: Review

Published in Financial Times

In the waning days of the first world war, with two million German soldiers dead and more than twice that many injured, a sailors’ mutiny in the northern port city of Kiel kicked off a revolution that would destroy imperial Germany and set the republic on a visionary, democratic course. As a result, striking miners …

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Rescuing Mendelssohn from the Nazi Smear Campaign

Published in Newsweek

When the 20-year-old Felix Mendelssohn conducted Bach’s Saint Matthew Passion in Berlin in 1829, it caused a national sensation. In those days, when a composer died his contemporaries stopped playing him and his music died as well. But Mendelssohn, a brilliant composer, pianist and conductor who felt indebted to Bach, broke with tradition and performed …

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With Sephardic Routes, Spain Connects with Jewish History

Published in Los Angeles Times

GIRONA, Spain—For Aida Oceransky, life as a Jew in Spain today isn’t the silent burden it used to be. When she emigrated here from her native Mexico in 1968, Oceransky didn’t dare talk about her family’s Ukrainian Jewish past. All the Jews she knew in the 1970s and ’80s went to Mass. Even a decade …

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The Triumph of Occupy Wall Street

Published in The Atlantic

On her first campaign stop in Iowa in April, Hillary Clinton struck a decisively populist tone, declaring that “the deck is still stacked in favor of those at the top.” Later, she sharpened her rhetoric on income inequality by comparing the salaries of America’s richest hedge fund managers with kindergarten teachers. Clinton isn’t alone. Democratic …

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Interview With Widow of Tunisia’s Slain Popular Leader

Published in Occupy.com

Basma Khalfaoui, the widow of Tunisia’s recently assassinated political and social leader Chokri Belaid, was one hour late for our meeting at her home last Saturday. She is often late these days, occupied with an unending stream of interviews and inaugurations of the Tunis streets and squares that are now being renamed for her husband—the …

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Culture Shift: China’s New Confucianism

Published in Los Angeles Times

Last fall, on the eve of Confucius‘ birthday (Sept. 28) and the International Confucius Culture Festival, I visited several of China’s 2,000 Confucian temples, including a palatial complex in Qufu, the sage’s hometown, one of the three great examples of classical Chinese architecture. What struck me in conversation with the locals was not how much …

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Fired in Stone: A Serbian Monk Burns Through Kosovo

Published in The Walrus

Gracanica – The German peacekeeper is no older than twenty. Blond, skinny, cradling a machine gun half his size, he approaches our Jeep at the razor-wired bridge gate and tells the monk – my driver – to step out. Father Pimen curses under his breath. The only people Pimen hates more than the Americans who …

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