Share to FacebookShare to XArticle printing is available to subscribers onlyPrint in a simple, ad-free formatSubscribeComments: Zen reading is available to subscribers onlyAd-free and in a comfortable reading formatSubscribe08:47 PM • June 21 2026 IDTOn a Saturday morning last July, Robert Baruh Waltl watched two processions converge on central Ljubljana. From one direction, near the river, came a column of neo-Nazis chanting nationalist slogans chanting "Long live Slovenia." From the other came pro-Palestinian marchers singing "from the river to the sea".In the NewsSlovenia's Last Jewish Institution Endures Through Desecration and DecayJewish Activist Deported for Her Book. 100 Years Later, Still No NYC ApologyNetanyahu's Israel Needs to Lay Off the 'Blood Libel' AccusationAIPAC Identity Crisis: A Decade Since Fighting Obama on Iran, It Now Faces TrumpNetanyahu Orders Shin Bet Probe Israel's Channel 12 Over Alleged Iran War LeakRemembering and rebuilding two years laterICYMIIsrael Is Conducting a Systematic Campaign of Ethnic Cleansing in the West Bank'Once-in-a-lifetime Discovery': 1,700-year-old Roman Busts Found in IsraelNetanyahu's Mouthpieces Turn on Trump, Revealing a Deeper Israeli IngratitudeTrump and Netanyahu Hurtling Toward a Rupture That Could Shock U.S.-Israel TiesIsrael Is Bleeding Support in U.S. and Pouring Tens of Millions to Change ThatReport: Netanyahu 'Likely' to Sabotage Iran Deal, U.S. Officials Tell Trump
Slovenia's last Jewish institution endures through desecration and decay
The founder of the Jewish Cultural Center Ljubljana scrounges for funds to keep the doors open. The return of an Israel-friendly prime minister could help
Slovenia's last Jewish institution faces escalating tensions as neo-Nazi and pro-Palestinian marches converged on central Ljubljana. The incident signals rising geopolitical polarization in Central Europe, pressuring minority institutions amid competing ideological movements.









