In Catholic Argentina, Javier Milei embraces Judaism
That is not universally welcomed by Argentine Jews

Arms spread with a black kippah on his head, Javier Milei, the Argentine president, presses his forehead against the Western Wall in Jerusalem (see picture) and begins to weep. Overwhelmed, he hugs his Orthodox rabbi, Shimon Axel Wahnish. Mr Milei’s visit in February to one of Judaism’s holiest sites was the most public moment yet in his embrace of the religion. At a rally last year in a Jewish part of Buenos Aires, the capital, the word shofar and an illustration of a man with the traditional Jewish ram’s horn were projected onto screens as the sound of the horn blared. In April Mr Milei was made an “ambassador of light” in a ceremony conducted at The Shul, a Hasidic synagogue in Surfside, Florida.
Explore more
This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline “Moses basket case”
More from The Americas

The mad, bad Maduro regime clings to power
Behind-the-scenes negotiations seek to ease him out of office

After protests over a stolen election, the goons crack heads
Yet the brazenness of Nicolás Maduro’s theft crosses a line

The plight of Brazil’s indigenous groups worsens
Blame illegal miners, ranchers, loggers, traffickers and an unsympathetic Congress
Will El Mayo’s arrest slow the spread of fentanyl?
The United States nets a very big fish
The strong dollar is hurting exports from Latin America
For three small dollarised economies it has exposed a lack of competitiveness