Palestinian and Israeli Americans in the Tri-State Area are eagerly awaiting word that the Israel-Hamas ceasefire will begin Sunday.
The father of a New Jersey native who is being held hostage by Hamas is hopeful about the ceasefire deal announced Wednesday, even though he says his son will not be among the first wave of those released.
There is a sense of optimism among members of the Palestinian community in New Jersey that a peace settlement will begin this weekend, despite delays to the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas.
We also want to caution that diplomacy doesn't end with the signing of a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, said a member of J Street.
A federal prosecutor said that Karrem Nasr was inspired by Hamas’s Oct. 7 attacks to pursue “death and destruction.”
The tentative deal stirred hope for Israeli and American hostages but deep suspicion about bartering with Hamas after the Oct. 7 terror attack.
The hostages were released in a staged handover that saw them surrounded by Hamas gunmen and crowds of civilians.
Edan Alexander was seen on video in November and his parents were both pleased to see him alive, but saddened to see him as a captive.
In New Jersey’s large Palestinian American community, news that a ceasefire had finally been reached in a brutal 15-month war between Israel and Hamas sparked joy over an end to bloodshed but concern about what lies ahead. Amjad Abukwaik, a Paterson ...
Attorneys general from 22 states have sued to block President Donald Trump’s move to end a century-old immigration policy known as birthright citizenship guaranteeing that U.S.
The father of an American hostage kidnapped by Hamas is holding out hope his son ... s still not done for the American hostages,” the New Jersey resident told The Post. Adi Alexander is ...
Edan Alexander, an IDF soldier raised in New Jersey, is among a group of seven Americans held by Hamas, and he is not expected to be released during the initial phase. “The message is really simple.