Cartoon

This Jewish artist fought Nazis with a paintbrush, when art like his still mattered 

First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt praised his contribution to the war effort, saying his art “fights the war against Hitlerism as truly as any of us who cannot actually be on the fighting fronts.”

A detail from Arthur Szyk's “They Too Have a Right to Live,”  which first appeared in the May 12, 1943 issue of The New York Times and was presumably sponsored by the Emergency Committee to Save the Jewish People of Europe, an organization founded by Zionist activist Peter Bergson in 1943.
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem speaks to the Republican Jewish Coalition in Las Vegas, Nov. 5, 2021.

'Petty': US Homeland Security Sec. Kristi Noem denounces South Park portrayal

 US President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as he departs for travel to Pennsylvania from the South Lawn at the White House in Washington, July 15, 2025; illustrative.

A red line for the White House: South Park episode features Trump in bed with the devil

 A female IDF soldier stands in front of a tank.

Jewish cartoon designer drew inspiration for 'Kim Possible' from female IDF soldiers


Creator of 'antisemitic' frog cartoon files copyright infringement lawsuit

The frog, created in 2005, has become synonymous with the alt-right movement.

Pepe the Frog cartoon

From the sketchbook

Illustration by Avi Katz

Exhibition mocking Iranian human rights abuses to kick off in Brussels

The exhibition was created as a forceful response to the controversial International Holocaust Cartoon Competition which takes place annually in Iran.

A cartoon from the upcoming Israeli Cartoon Project exhibition in Brussels, mocking Iran's human rights record

Still running after all these years

'We now have a community in Israel, and it seems we aren’t too bad at this cartoon caricature creation business.'

Nissim Hizkiyahu

Suicide-bomber Deri cartoon detonates row

The cartoon’s title “Work Accident,” a phrase used when Hamas and other terrorist operatives accidentally blow themselves up while constructing a bomb.

Aryeh Deri

From the sketchbook

From the Sketchbook

‘Dry Bones’ cartoonist’s new book looks back at early Israel

A collection of classic cartoons by Yaakov Kirschen is a nostalgic gaze at days gone by, when times were simpler, if no less absurd

Since 1973, cartoonist Yaakov ‘Dry Bones’ Kirschen has been commenting on the absurdities of life in Israel

Real-life nude cartoon character makes political debut

Shoshka is the brainchild of one of Israel's best-known cartoonists

Shoshka, the costumed cartoon woman running for prime minister