Buenos Aires
Argentinian judge to be tried for antisemitism after calling Jews 'rats' and 'vipers'
On Wednesday, the plenary of the National Council of the Judiciary unanimously voted to begin removal proceedings against Judge Alfredo Lopez of Federal Court No. 4 of Mar del Plata (Buenos Aires).
50 years after the Dirty War, Argentinians remember the Jews who ‘disappeared’
The Great Mifgash: Building global Jewish connections amid crisis
Jewish artist expelled from Argentinian street fair after dispute over Palestinian flag
Urgently reopen the Buenos Aires AMIA bombing investigation - opinion
We must not forget the tragedy that struck Buenos Aires on July 18, 1994, when a suicide bomber targeted the Asociación Mutual Israelita Argentina (AMIA), claiming 85 innocent lives.
False bomb threat hits Buenos Aires Jewish center where 85 people died in 1994 bombing
Police in Argentina are investigating the emails to determine their origin and find the individual or individuals responsible for Wednesday’s threats.
First Jewish university in South America to open in Buenos Aires next year
The seminary is named after American rabbi Marshall Meyer, a New York native who worked to revitalize the Conservative movement in Buenos Aires from 1958 to 1984.
Roger Waters drops antisemitic iconography in Argentina following legal threat
Waters completed his tour without his infamous Nazi costume, an Anne Frank comparison or his inflatable pig with a star of David. However, he insulted a Jewish hotel owner on stage.
US and Israeli embassies hit with bomb threats in Buenos Aires
The US embassy said it is back to normal operations on Wednesday afternoon.
Four Argentinian-Israelis dead, others missing from kibbutzes after Hamas attack
Argentina is home to an estimated 180,000 Jews, the sixth-largest Jewish population of any country in the world.
Argentina police shut down Nazi and antisemitic bookseller
After the war, many Nazi officials including death camp supervisor Adolf Eichmann also emigrated to Argentina to avoid trials for war crimes.
Buenos Aires to rename subway station after Jewish woman who famously stood up to sex traffickers
Born in what is now Ukraine in 1900 and raised in Poland, Liberman immigrated to Buenos Aires in 1922, joining a wave of Jewish immigration from Eastern Europe to South America.
Long-necked dinosaur fossil found by Argentine scientists is one of biggest ever
The dinosaur's bones were so big they caused the van carrying them to a Buenos Aires laboratory to tip over, though no one was injured and the remains were left intact.