📚 After two years of Florida schools making headlines for pulling Anne Frank’s diary, Schindler’s List, Saul Bellow novels and other Jewish books, Gov. Ron DeSantis conceded that his state’s book challenge policy has gone too far. (JTA)
👶 Parents of a British girl were astonished to find that her father’s place of birth, Israel, had been scribbled out of a copy of the baby’s birth certificate submitted as part of a passport application. Officials are investigating the incident. (Independent)
🇬🇧 Staying in the U.K. … Prince William said on Tuesday that he would visit a synagogue in the coming days to take part in a conversation about the rise in antisemitism. In a statement, the palace said, “The prince and princess were profoundly concerned by events that unfolded in late 2023 and continue to hold all the victims, their family and friends in their hearts and minds.” (Jewish News, X)
🇷🇺 A Russian court once again extended the pretrial detention of Evan Gershkovich, a Wall Street Journal reporter who has been accused of spying. The Jewish journalist was arrested nearly a year ago. (AP)
🎒 A Jewish professor who resigned from MIT over its handling of antisemitism has accepted a post at Yeshiva University. (JTA)
💰 Jews who experienced antisemitism gave significantly more to charity than those who have not, according to newly published data. Also, the median donation from Jews who experienced antisemitism, $2,290, was nearly double that of Jews who did not, $1,150. (JTA)
What else we’re reading ➤ In The Washington Post, our Talya Zax reviews The Ukraine, a new collection of short stories about “tough, brave, funny, wounded people who find fellowship even though they’re not often looking for it.”
Shiva call ➤ Philip Kutner, a blind educator who was active in the worldwide Yiddish community, died at 97. The Yiddish Book Center recorded Kutner’s oral history.