WARSAW, Poland For the first half of his life, Rabbi Mati Pawlak had no idea he was Jewish. Like many Jews in communist Poland, Pawlak's family kept silent for decades about their heritage, returning to the faith only after the 1989 collapse of the communist regime...
During a clash with Hizbullah gunmen in Lebanon, St.-Sgt. Avi Hangshing heard a large explosion and hit the dirt for cover. As the two sides traded heavy fire, he gradually lost his hearing and his balance.
Released from the army for medical treatment last week, Hangshing said he still walked "like a drunk person."
The Lebanon skirmish might have been the most debilitating battle Hangshing has fought, but it was hardly his first. Before Hangshing could even join the IDF, he had to battle to be allowed into the country.
Hundreds of miles south of Moscow, in the heart of the Russian hinterland, lies one of the most compelling testimonies to the power and the appeal of Jewish identity.