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Mark Lavie

Mark Lavie
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MARK LAVIE has been covering the Middle East as a news correspondent, analyst and author since he moved to Israel in 1972. Most of his work has been in radio news, starting as an anchor and reporter for Israel Radio’s English-language news service and continuing as Middle East correspondent for radio networks including NPR, NBC, Mutual, and CBC in Canada. He won the New York Overseas Press Club’s Lowell Thomas Award for “Best radio interpretation of foreign affairs” in 1994.

In 2014 he wrapped up fifteen years with The Associated Press, where he served as a reporter and editor for the news agency’s print service and Middle East Correspondent for AP Radio and its 850 stations in North America. In 2009, he began splitting his time between AP’s Jerusalem bureau and its Cairo regional hub. He moved to Cairo in 2011 and lived there for two years, experiencing Arab Spring first hand. His first book, “Broken Spring,” is based on those experiences.

His second book, “Why Are We Still Afraid?” is a personal look at 46 years of Israeli history, and it comes to a clear and surprising conclusion.

Born and raised in Fort Wayne, Indiana, Mark graduated from Indiana University with a degree in political science in 1969.

Mark is married with four children and eleven grandchildren. He is an Orthodox Jew who sometimes leads services in his local synagogue and sings in two synagogue choirs.

For more biographical details: marklavieauthor.com

Israel should help with American Jewish security

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Security—personal and community-wide—is topmost on the minds of American Jews, after two fatal terror attacks there in the past year. That’s my takeaway from a 16-day coast-to-coast lecture tour, where I met Jews of all...
Israelis cast their ballots at a voting station in Jerusalem during the general elections on April 9, 2019. Photo by Hadas Parush/Flash90.

Israel: Beating a dead Leftist horse

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Israel’s electorate has refused to grow up, and its leaders are to blame. They turned the election campaign into a fight of Right against Left—though it’s been clear for years that there is no Israeli...