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Things To Do In London This Week: 2-8 March 2020 – Londonist

Posted By on February 29, 2020

All weekLast chance to visit Kew's Orchids Festival

SHAPE THE WORLD: All this week, LSE hosts Shape The World, a festival of free events looking at how the social sciences can make the world a better place. Highlights throughout the week include Tottenham MP David Lammy on exploring his own heritage, a preview of the American presidential race, and a look at how factors such as economic growth are shaping London. LSE (Holborn), free, book ahead, 2-7 March

WOMEN'S DAY WALKS: Ahead of International Women's Day on Sunday, Katie Wignall from Look Up London runs a series of guided walks celebrating the history of London's women. Topics include Ladies of Marylebone, and Female Rebels at the Tate Modern. Everyone's welcome on the walks, regardless of gender. Various locations, 15, book ahead, 3-8 March

MADE IN ITALY: Cinema Made In Italy is an annual film festival celebrating Italian films, and this year, focus is firmly on female directors. Highlights include If Only, about three siblings sent to live with their unconventional, broke Italian father, and Stolen Days, about a father and son road trip back to Southern Italy. Cine Lumiere (South Kensington), various prices, book ahead, 4-9 March

TROY: It's the final week of the British Museum's blockbuster exhibition, Troy: Myth and Reality. It's a huge and fascinating show about the famous city, and worth setting aside a couple of hours to explore thoroughly.British Museum, 20, book ahead, until 8 March

JEWISH BOOK WEEK: The 68th Jewish Book Week has an impressive programme, covering everything from cookery to fashion to spies to politics to trees. Former Children's Laureate Michael Rosen, celebrated novelist Elif Shafak and historian Helen Fry are among the many participants across the 80+ events celebrating Jewish themes and writers. Kings Place (King's Cross), various prices, book ahead, until 8 March

ORCHIDS: It's your last chance to visit Kew's beautiful Orchids Festival and it's a great excuse to warm up in the tropical glasshouse. Wander through rainbow floral arches, ogle the volcano centrepiece floating on a pond, and look out for model orang utans, rhinos, and other wildlife from this year's chosen country, Indonesia. Kew Gardens, included in admission, book a time slot, until 8 March

UNREAL CITY: Explore a virtual metropolis using the latest tech on the market with Unreal City. This pioneering collaboration between dreamthinkspeak and Access All Areas blends live performance and VR to explore what happens to human connection in an increasingly digital world. Battersea Arts Centre (Battersea), 10-15, book ahead, until 28 March (sponsor)

BEYOND BORDERS: This one is right up the street of cartography fans. Hear author Travis Elborough, cartographer Mary Spence and writer Zoran Nikolic discussing and exploring maps showing some of the most unusual and peculiar corners of the globe. British Library, 13/6.50, book ahead, 7pm-8.30pm

HOUNSLOW AS ONE: Two primary school choirs, a huge brass band, a street band, a guitar orchestra and an Indian dance group all take to the stage to celebrate Hounslow's musical talent. Familiar tunes, and a newly commissioned piece are played by some of the 10,000 Hounslow Music Service pupils. Southbank Centre, 8-25, book ahead, 7pm

PRIMADONNA PRIZE: Attend the first ever Primadonna Prize ceremony, hosted by Sandi Toksvig and celebrating brilliant writing. Enjoy an evening of poetry and performances before the judges including author Joanne Harris and Irish novelist Neil Hegarty reveal the winner. Conway Hall (Holborn), 15/10, book ahead, 7.45pm

JURASSIC PARK: Could the premise behind Jurassic Park really happen? Hear from Dr Susie Maidment, curator of non-avian archosaurs at The Natural History Museum, about the science behind the film, and her research on the geological preservation of soft tissues. It's a Babble Talks event, which means it's aimed at parents and carers with babies under a year old. George IV (Chiswick), 10, book ahead, 11am-12pm

WOMEN AT WAR: Author Maaza Mengiste hosts a night of readings and conversation about the women soldiers written out of African and European history. Her new book, The Shadow King, explores what it means to be a woman at war, based in Ethiopia in 1935 with the impending invasion of the Italian army. British Library, 11/5.50, book ahead, 7.15pm-8.30pm

LOST BROTHERS: Folk duo The Lost Brothers perform a live show based on music from their five studio albums, and a sixth due to be released soon. Expect to hear some impressive vocal harmonies from the Irish pair. Southbank Centre, 15, book ahead, 7.45pm

TWILIGHT TOURS: There's a rare chance to visit the Royal Hospital Chelsea by twilight on a guided tour, led by one of the Chelsea Pensioners themselves. Visit the State Apartments and the Chapel, hearing the stories of former residents, and finish up with a drink at the Chelsea Pensioners Club. Royal Hospital Chelsea, 28, book ahead, 6pm/7pm

OUTER SPACE: NASA scientist and astronaut Kathryn Sullivan was the first American woman to walk in space. Hear her telling stories about her career, including her experiences of living in space, taking off in a space shuttle, and making repairs to complex scientific instruments. Conway Hall (Holborn), 30-42.50, book ahead, 6.45pm-8pm

MISBEHAVIOUR: Catch a preview screening of new film Misbehaviour, about a team of women who plan to disrupt the 1970 Miss World competition in London. The screening launches British Librarys new Unfinished Business: The Fight for Womens Rights events season, and is followed by Q+A with its director Philippa Lowthorpe and Sally Alexander, who was central to the real-life story the film depicts. Regent Street Cinema, 15, book ahead, 7.30pm-10.30pm

FOUND FOOTAGE FESTIVAL: Organisers of The Found Footage Festival have sorted through America's thrift stores and charity shops to dig out old VHS tapes. Watch the resulting footage, including the 1987 Miss Junior America Wisconsin pageant, and a fitness video called Jugglercise. Soho Theatre, from 12.50, book ahead, 5-7 March

SILENT DISCO: Celebrate Women's Day at a silent disco workshop. Release your inner diva by learning moves from the likes of Madonna, Beyonce and the Spice Girls, before you're free to pick your own channel and dance to music from either the 70s and 80s or 90s and noughties. Antidote London (Belsize Park), 7, book ahead, 7.15pm-9pm

BLOODY BRILLIANT WOMEN: Author and Channel 4 presenter Cathy Newman hosts a talk, document display and book signing about the women of the 20th century who are often overlooked. Hear bits of British history you didn't learn in school, including a spy princess and an aeronautical engineer. The National Archives (Kew), 20/16, book ahead, 7.30pm-9pm

WOMEN OF THE WORLD: Southbank Centre's annual Women of the World Festival begins today, with three days of events looking at the state of gender equality across the globe today. Highlights include appearances by feminist activist and journalist Caroline Criado Perez, and anti-racism educator Layla Saad. Southbank Centre, various prices, book ahead, 6-8 March

AMERICAN CULTURE: Based on current NT production The Visit, Professor of American Studies Martin Halliwell offers an introduction to American culture in the 1950s. He uses examples of 1950s theatre, literature, film and the visual arts to demonstrate the politics of the decade. National Theatre, 9/6, book ahead, 5.30pm

HUBBLE: If you missed astronaut Kathryn Sullivan on Wednesday, there's another chance to hear from her tonight. This time she focuses on the launch of the Hubble Telescope, recounting her experiences in launching and maintaining the powerful telescope which has greatly furthered our understanding of the universe. Royal Institution (Mayfair), 16/10/7, book ahead, 7pm-8.30pm

SCIENCE WEEKEND: Cutty Sark celebrates British Science Week with family-friendly events taking place on board all weekend. Learn how cargo was loaded onto the ship and have a go at building your own winch, or find out how gold leaf is applied to the gilded decorative elements. Cutty Sark (Greenwich), included in admission, book ahead, 7-8 March

PROTEST AND POWER: The Royal Parks celebrate Women's History Month with a guided walk through Hyde Park. Hear stories of women in the park throughout history, from pickpockets to queens, all of whom shaped the park into what it is today. Hyde Park, 10, book ahead, 10.30am-12pm

CLIMBING FESTIVAL: Celebrate all aspects of the climbing scene at London Climbing Festival. Meet fellow climbers, hear talks about the sport, watch demos, and stock up on all the gear you need at the stalls. HarroWall Climbing Centre (Harrow), 75, book ahead, 12pm-8.30pm

FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE: 2020 marks 200 years since the birth of The Lady With The Lamp, and The Florence Nightingale Museum is celebrating with a special programme of events. Exhibition Nightingale in 200 Objects, People and Places opens today, showcasing little-known aspects of her life, as well as objects including the famous lamp which gave her the nickname Florence Nightingale Museum, included in admission, book ahead, from 8 March

PAINT STREET ART: Wind down your weekend by attempting to create your own version of the above painting, Coming of Spring. No experience is necessary, and all materials and guidance are included and it takes place in a bar, so plenty of drinks are available to get your creative juices flowing. Horniman at Hays (London Bridge), 32.99, book ahead, 5.30pm-7.30pm

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Things To Do In London This Week: 2-8 March 2020 - Londonist

Yes, Mizrahim support the right. But not for the reasons you think – +972 Magazine

Posted By on February 29, 2020

Every Israeli national election brings with it the same public discussion about Israels Mizrahi communities and their alleged support for the right, and the ruling Likud party more specifically. Many among the left in Israel regularly hypothesize about the reasons so many Mizrahim Jews with origins in Arab or Muslim countries vote for right-wing parties, but often end up either missing the mark completely or recycling racist stereotypes.

So how is one to understand this choice? The main context of the question is the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. I will not pretend to provide a full and thorough answer to the question, but instead will provide examples to show how Israels decades-long policies of discrimination and marginalization of the Mizrahi public by the Israeli Ashkenazi establishment has caused many to find an answer to economic hardship in the nationalist camp.

If we understand the history of the Mizrahi struggle and its suppression by the camp most closely associated today with the Israeli peace movement from a political-economic perspective, we will better understand how Mizrahim have found themselves in realms most often associated with the nationalistic right. More importantly, such an analysis allows us to understand precisely why the right has given Mizrahim an answer to their economic hardships that stemmed from Ashkenazi supremacy in Israels political and economic arena.

From its very beginnings, the Zionist movements historic struggle over land laid the infrastructure for the hierarchy of ethnicities and class in Israel. The 1948 war was the culmination of this struggle. After the expulsion and flight of the Palestinians and the prevention of their return Israels government and its Zionist institutions took over the vast resources that were left behind by the refugees. At the end of the war, only 13.5 percent of the countrys land was owned by the state, but through a rapid expropriation campaign, Israeli institutions took over most of the land. The immediate effect of this policy was, of course, the dispossession of the Palestinian people from their assets and homeland.

The distribution of Palestinian land among Jewish Israelis reflected a hierarchy along ethnic lines, between veteran Ashkenazim and newly-arrived Mizrahi immigrants who came to Israel after the war. This is also precisely how class differences were embedded into the fabric of Israeli society: an Ashkenazi elite with the privileges of housing and land as opposed to a disenfranchised Mizrahi population. Most of the Jewish communities that came from North Africa, particularly Morocco, were settled outside the urban center of the country, where Israel settled mostly Ashkenazi immigrants.

Protocols from meetings of the Interior Ministry and the Jewish Agency at the time reveal the way government officials viewed Mizrahim. North Africans, said the officials, could be sent to the frontier regions, while Polish immigrants among whom were professionals, they claimed should be given housing in the center of the country along the coast. The government hardly gave any land reserves to the dilapidated development towns that were built in far-flung regions of the country for North African immigrants, often on Palestinian land, as well as the Arab communities that remained after 1948. Regional councils, however, were home to kibbutzim, moshavim, and other forms of settlement associated with the Ashkenazi elite that founded the country.

Moreover, the distinction between areas in which Jewish ownership over Palestinian land was formalized in cities such as Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, and places where residents were deemed invaders, was similarly aligned to the distinction between Ashkenazim and Mizrahim. While kibbutzim, where most residents were of Ashkenazi descent, made use of admissions committees to ensure separation in housing, lower-class Mizrahim were forced into derelict public housing.

Members of the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) visit Kasalon transit campt for new immigrants. (GPO)

From the 1950s on, the Mizrahi struggle put the institutional racism of Mapai, the establishment political party and precursor to todays Labor Party, in its crosshairs, demanding immediate remedy to the difficult situation of Mizrahim in Israel. A document published by The Union of North Africans which led to the uprising by the Mizrahi residents of Haifas Wadi Salib neighborhood in Haifa in 1959 against the slum-like conditions they were forced to endure demanded the government provide humane housing for every family, the immediate elimination of all the Maabarot [government-run transit camps for new immigrants], the elimination of slums, and housing for bachelors, among other demands. They also called on the government to provide adequate education for all, put an end to discrimination, stop ethnic segregation when it came to religious matters, end the military government that ruled the lives of Israels Palestinian citizens, guarantee freedom of speech, and more.

More than a decade later, the Israeli Black Panthers, who emerged from the neighborhood of Musrara in Jerusalem in 1971, spoke about slums to describe the housing crisis plaguing Israels Mizrahi public. They called on the government to dismantle the ghettos for blacks in the city. Activists in Jerusalems Yemin Moshe neighborhood complained that Mizrahi residents deemed intruders were being evicted from their homes and replaced by rich Ashkenazim. In this way, Mizrahi activists were actively defining their politics in left-wing terms of equality and human rights.

That is why the connection between the rise of Likud to power in 1977 and the resistance of the Mizrahi public to Ashkenazi material privileges which marked the first 30 years of the state are commonly, and narrowly, viewed through the prism of a historical resentment toward Mapai. One must consider the resentment of large swaths of Mizrahim against the Israeli left in this context of decades of institutionalized racism, the kidnapping of babies, and the spraying of new Mizrahi immigrants with DDT pesticide.

While these aspects are important, they do not tell the entire story. It is important to remember that Likud strengthened the socio-economic position of the Mizrahi public. Israeli historian Danny Gutwein claims that the relatively large number of Mizrahim who vote for the right is a product, among other things, of the way in which the settlement enterprise in the West Bank and Jerusalem compensated Israelis with the dismantling of its welfare state in the 1980s. In this way, Gutwein argues, Likuds policies beyond the Green Line helped boost Mizrahi class position.

It is true that the welfare settlements provided the Mizrahi public with a solution to their economic problems. Yet despite Gutweins claims, the establishment of welfare settlements was not the result of the powerlessness of an Israeli welfare state that no longer exists, since real and equitable social welfare never existed in Israel in the first place. The main force propelling the building of welfare settlements beyond the Green Line are the socio-economic gaps between Ashkenazim and Mizrahim, the product of a regime of privileges for the former that was put in place before the 1967 occupation and gave rise to what we now call the Mizrahi struggle. The bounty of Palestinian land and resources was unequally distributed inside 48 lines, where Ashkenazim enjoyed privileges vis--vis land and housing, yet beyond the Green Line one could find new bounty, backed by government loans and subsidized housing, which, for the first time, benefitted Mizrahi families. This is how a significant portion of Israels Mizrahi public was able to find its footing.

Members of Israels Black Panthers demonstrating against the high cost of living in Tel Aviv, November 14, 1974. (GPO)

Both Ashkenazim and Mizrahim benefitted from the dispossession of Palestinians at different stages of the Judaization of Palestine. While the gains of 1948 benefitted the Ashkenazi public, the Mizrahim found their solution to the housing crisis in the welfare settlements beyond the Green Line in Jerusalem and the West Bank. Each of these groups has their own political and economic interests. It is no wonder, then, that a group like Peace Now, which is affiliated with the Ashkenazi elite, will monitor settlement building beyond the Green Line but will never speak about the connection between the dispossession of the Palestinians in 1948 and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

When it comes to education and employment, Israels regime of ethnic discrimination and segregation has pushed Mizrahim into the arms of the security establishment. In 1945, Eliezer Riger, one of the foremost advocates of vocational schooling who would later become inspector general of Israels education system, spoke about the necessity of segregation between Mizrahim and Ashkenazim in education: Pre-vocational [education] leadership could bring a special blessing to the Oriental population, after all the Oriental children, at least most of them, do not know how to appreciate simplified learning and cannot derive actual uselessness from non-practical education. Zalman Aren, who was minister of education at the time, advocated a similar worldview: I hold academic high schools in high esteem, but I have no doubt that the conditions of the state at this stage there is still preference for vocational schools. I wouldnt want the development towns to stick to this kind of snobbishness and put a child in a high school that would damage him.

The education system, until this very day, uses a policy of tracking students, placing many Mizrahi teenagers in vocational schools, while Ashkenazi students most often are sent to regular high schools. This policy clearly has a far greater impact on the educational prospects of Mizrahim, preventing many of them from continuing in academia.

According to a 2015 report by the Adva Center, an Israeli progressive think tank that monitors social and economic developments, Israels two largest vocational school networks, ORT and Amal, are mostly located in Israels geographic and economic periphery. Out of the 159 schools in the two networks, 113 (71 percent) are located in areas on the low end of the socio-economic spectrum, including 35 in Arab localities, 43 in development towns, and 35 schools in other localities. Moreover, a new study by Yanon Cohen, Noah Levin Epstein and Amit Lazarus on education among third-generation Israelis found that university or college graduation rates are around 20 percent higher among Ashkenazim when compared to Mizrahim.

Soldiers in the Golani Brigade, an infantry unit with a high proportion of Mizrahim, attend their swearing-in ceremony at the Divisional Training Base near Kfar Kara, on February 6, 2020. (Flash90)

The barriers to education have pushed many working class Mizrahim to look for employment opportunities with the Israeli army and other security forces. Israeli sociologist Prof. Orna Sasson-Levy explains how military service, even in low ranks, can provide economic opportunities for Mizrahim:

As students in vocational schools, most of them without a high school diploma, most of the soldiers in these positions do not see themselves continuing on to higher education, with their physical labor power and the profession they acquired in high school may be the main resources they have to secure themselves economically, which is why it is important for them to develop the resources available to them from an early age [] Soldiers who continue to serve for a number of years on a professional basis also explain this through mainly economic considerations. They examine the military by standards usually reserved for a workplace such as the opportunity to receive professional training, social benefits, medical care, dental care, and more.

Prof. Yagil Levy shows how the army could potentially help bolster ones socio-economic class. His book, Israels Materialist Militarism, analyzes how the army has helped validate the social demands of Mizrahim through service in the army. While secular Ashkenazim began leading a process of de-militarization and looked for other socio-economic prospects, Levy found that groups on Israels periphery began using the army to fulfill their social and economic interests.

In addition to these studies, the high proportion of Mizrahim working in the police or the Israel Prison Service can be explained by the fact that in the absence of gainful employment which requires higher education working for the security forces offers stable economic conditions. This kind of work can serve as a refuge from a crisis of education and employment, just as welfare settlements were used by many as a refuge from a housing crisis inside Israel. In both housing and education/employment, the processes can be explained in light of class differences between Ashkenazim and Mizrahim. Thus, realms that are generally seen as right wing, nationalist, or hawkish vis--vis Palestinians settlements beyond the Green Line or Israels security forces are treated as a socio-economic anchor by Mizrahi communities in Israeli society.

The entrance of Palestinian day laborers from the occupied territories into the Israeli labor market after the occupation of 1967 has also played a key role in the elevation of Mizrahi socio-economic status, according to a 1987 study conducted by Noah Levin-Epstein and Moshe Semyonov. They showed that in 1969, around 42 percent of immigrants from Asia and Africa were employed in non- or semi-professional jobs; by 1982 that number dropped to 25 percent. Levin-Epstein and Semyonov note that due to the concentration of Arabs of the occupied territories in a small number of occupations at the bottom of the occupational ladder, not only are they not perceived as a threat to most Israelis, but in many cases are even referred to as liberators from despised and unforgiving jobs, that most Israelis no longer had to work.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visits the Mahane Yehuda Market in Jerusalem along with the Likud party candidate for Jerusalem mayor, Minister Zeev Elkin, ahead of the municipal elections, on October 24, 2018. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)

In his book In the Land of Israel, Israeli author Amos Oz traveled to the development town of Beit Shemesh, where he spoke to a local resident about what peace with the Palestinians might mean for Mizrahim:

If they give back the territories, the Arabs will stop coming to work, and then and there youll put us back in the dead-end jobs, like before. If for no other reason, we wont let you give back those territories. Not to mention the rights we have from the Bible, or security. Look at my daughter: she works in a bank now, and every evening an Arab comes to clean the building. All you want is to dump her from the bank into some textile factory, or have her wash the floors instead of the Arab. The way my mother used to clean for you. Thats why we hate you here. As long as Begins in power, my daughters secure at the bank. If you guys come back, youll pull her down first thing.

For residents of development towns, Likud rule and control over the occupied territories serve as a guarantee against the threat of Mizrahim returning to a lower socio-economic status and being forced to compete with Palestinian citizen of Israel over jobs and resources. This is an additional example that shows how material conditions, borne of the power relations between different groups in Israeli society and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, led to a Mizrahi alliance with Likud.

The competition between Mizrahim and Palestinians in the labor market is not a product of the imagination of the Beit Shemesh resident it is the product of the real political conditions of the Mizrahi public in Israel. Israels first prime minister, David Ben Gurion, said We need people who were born as laborers. We must pay attention to the local element among the Oriental communities, the Yemenis and the Sepharadim, whose quality of life and demands are lower than a European laborer and can successfully compete with the Arabs.

Yet another example of how the class interests of the Mizrahi public were realized through its support for the Israeli right can be seen in the high proportion of Mizrahi members that make up the Likud party. One particularly salient moment in 2002 shows precisely why. During a rousing speech in front of hundreds of members of the Likud Central Committee, former Education Minister Limor Livnat, asked the crowd rhetorically whether the political leadership of the party had been elected to hand out jobs. Expecting the crowd to overwhelmingly respond in the negative, Livnat was taken back when committee members resoundingly chanted that, yes, they were expecting the party to give them something in return for their undying support.

This moment perfectly encapsulates how Mizrahi support of Likud is part of a deal: Mizrahim and Central Committee members will support the public only in exchange for offices in the corridors of power of the Israeli regime. Thus, Mizrahi interests coalesced around endless Likud rule in the form of political appointments, workers unions, and local authorities.

Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin at Mimouna celebrations in Jerusalem, April 19, 1979. (Herman Chanania/GPO)

One must understand the historical context in which the Likud Central Committee became a hub of Mizrahi activism. When Mapai was in power, the party engaged in what is known as protektzia, or the handing out of favors, to party members. That meant that the best jobs and housing would remain in the hands of party apparatchiks. It also meant that many Mizrahim remained outside that circle of nepotism. Likuds Central Committee can be seen as a response by the Mizrahi public as compensation for Ashkenazi privilege that resulted from Mapais control over state bodies and institutions.

The election of Menachem Begin in 1977 created a new ethno-national discourse, one which mobilized the Israelis on the socio-economic margins of society to support the right. In 2003, Prof. Sasson-Levy published a study based on interviews with Israeli soldiers from lower-class backgrounds. She found that soldiers who come from poor socio-economic backgrounds more vehemently express right-wing views. From Sasson-Levys research:

[Their] right-wing views emerge from the ethno-national discourse as a form of compensation for their class marginalization in Israeli society, as it allows them to present themselves as belonging to the heart of the Israeli consensus by nature of them being Jewish.

This argument can apply to the wider Mizrahi public in Israel. Unlike the historic leaders of Mapai, who scorned anything that even faintly resembled Mizrahi and Arab culture, Menachem Begin was able to bring Mizrahim into the fold of Israeli identity by broadening its definition to include all Jewish Israelis, rather than only those who looked and sounded like the party elite. In his famous Riffraff Speech from 1981, Begin responded to racist and disparaging comments made by Dudu Topaz one of Israels most famous television personalities and a member of the liberal Ashkenazi camp about Mizrahi soldiers, by promising to do away with the hierarchy between Ashkenazim and Mizrahim in the Israeli army. This is how the dynamics between Ashkenazim and Mizrahim led the latter to look for solutions to their socio-economic hardships in the hawkish policies of the Israeli right. Begins vision, which openly embraced Mizrahi Jews, would only further entrench the racial hierarchy between the countrys Jewish and non-Jewish citizens.

Despite claims by left wingers that the Mizrahi public votes against its own interests, it is worth taking stock of the ways in which a set of core Mizrahi interests have come into existence under Israels right-wing rule. It appears as if those who believe Mizrahim would be better off voting for the Israeli left in its current form primarily Ashkenazi and upper-middle and upper class are unaware, or do not want to confront the privileges Ashkenazim have enjoyed since the founding of this country. Without a real discussion of this aspect of the Israeli regime, we will be unable to begin a process of reconciliation and repair, both inside the Jewish public in Israel and within the context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

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Yes, Mizrahim support the right. But not for the reasons you think - +972 Magazine

Some ultra-Orthodox Jewish women in Israel are breaking with tradition to press for a political say – messenger-inquirer

Posted By on February 29, 2020

JERUSALEM -For the ultra-religious Israeli women who recently came out to meet candidates in next weeks national election, the evening was as unusual as the contest itself, the countrys third vote in less than a year.

The women were members of Israels insular ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, and the opportunity to hear such an array of political voices including representatives from five political parties was rare.

For years, most in the ultra-Orthodox, or Haredi, community have not openly questioned the directives of their rabbis urging them to vote for one of only two ultra-Orthodox political parties. Now, a group of religious women is actively seeking political alternatives that better represent their interests.

When you have no political home, you have no power, said Itamar Ben Gvir, head of the ultranationalist party Jewish Power, addressing the crowd. We want to fight for your voices.

The women in the audience call themselves the Nivcharot, or the elected women. For the past few years, they have been challenging long-held taboos by calling for more political representation and demanding that the ultra-Orthodox parties add a female candidate to their all-male tickets.

Their efforts have had some success. Theyve drawn support from a growing number of like-minded Haredi women and even some men.

But change is slow in the Haredi world, which strictly adheres to Jewish religious law and long-held traditions, particularly regarding women. The Nivcharot, who dress modestly, covering their hair and donning long skirts but refuse to conform to all the restrictive norms, are considered to be outside the mainstream and have even faced a fierce backlash, with some other Haredim labeling them offensive and inappropriate.

Its a grass-roots change. We are digging our way up with our hands, said Esty Bitton-Shushan, 42, who founded the Nivcharot seven years ago as a Facebook protest over lack of ultra-Orthodox female representation ahead of the 2013 general election. Its a bit like running a marathon.

Bitton-Shushan has remained optimistic, even in the face of opposition. She has focused on turning a lose affiliation of women interacting online into a movement, running leadership training courses and garnering wide attention from the secular media. To date, she says, some 50 women have graduated from various programs, and the Nivcharots social media accounts have tens of thousands of followers.

Ultra-Orthodox Jews make up roughly 11% of Israels population of 8.5 million. The two ultra-religious parties United Torah Judaism, representing the Ashkenazi Jews of European origin, and Shas, made up of Jews of Sephardi or eastern backgrounds are run according to strict rules set by their spiritual leaders. Many of their positions are dictated by the Torah.

The Haredi electorate overwhelmingly votes for these two parties, following instructions from religious leaders. Currently, the parties account for 16 lawmakers in Israels 120-seat parliament, with three ministers in the government. The party leaders have made clear for decades that women should not be involved in politics.

There is one ultra-Orthodox woman in the Knesset Omer Yankelevitz, who belongs to the center-left Blue and White party led by Benny Gantz, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus main political rival. The Nivcharot say her agenda does not tick all their boxes.

In the end, the only way to make real change is through the Knesset, said Efrat Chocron, 34, who joined the Nivcharot a year and a half ago. Everyone in politics deals with issues that affect them directly.

Chocron, the daughter of a former Shas politician, was among those who turned out to hear from the political parties running in the upcoming election. She said she is still considering how to cast her ballot.

Moderator Naama Idan said that while 70% of the Haredi public would vote for the ultra-Orthodox parties, roughly 10% to 15% were more liberal.

We are here to listen to you and hear what you can do for us. We need a change, she told the panelists.

The small audience, including about a dozen women, pressed the politicians on several issues, including how to incorporate academic subjects such as math, science and English into the ultra-Orthodox education system, which tends to place more emphasis on Torah study. Other concerns included the labor rights of Haredi women, who often work part time and as contractors, and health issues.

There might have only been a few women in the room, but even just the concept of Haredi feminism is a revolution of the last few years, said Lea Taragin-Zeller, a social anthropologist at the University of Cambridge who has closely studied Israels ultra-Orthodox community. Fifteen years ago, such a word did not exist in the community, but you can see a change in the discourse.

In August 2018, Israels Supreme Court ordered the ultra-Orthodox parties to include women and last year forced them to revoke clauses in their party constitutions stating that only men could be elected to public office. At the time, a representative of United Torah Judaism said that the failure to place any women on their roster is an outgrowth of a historic decision by the great rabbis since the establishment of Israel, and the High Court is aware there is no intention to mend this.

Israel Cohen, a commentator on the ultra-Orthodox radio station Kol Barama, said the position of the Nivcharot was simply not accepted by the mainstream Haredi community.

They are seen as troublemakers, he said.

The Knesset is considered too public a position for a woman, and it is not appropriate for a woman to be serving there, Cohen said. Women can and do influence the community, mostly in a spiritual way, but they work from the inside and not in the front of the world.

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Some ultra-Orthodox Jewish women in Israel are breaking with tradition to press for a political say - messenger-inquirer

The journey to Jewish pride, beginning with Begin – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on February 29, 2020

Former United States senator Joe Lieberman relates an experience he had last year at a conference, where a young woman in the audience expressed her concern at the apathy of Jewish students on American campuses. He asked her, Why do you think that is? She replied, I dont think they understand or know about Jewish history. They know there was a Holocaust but, honestly, they dont know about anything else.He tells this story by way of explanation for his support of a new initiative, inspired by Menachem Begin, called the Hidden Light Institute. The centerpiece of the work of the institute will be the first documentary film in English about Israels sixth prime minister, with a premiere screening in Jerusalem at the Menachem Begin Heritage Center, and then subsequently at film festivals across North America and the world.In addition to the film, an educational curriculum will be developed for distribution worldwide to high school and university students. The curriculum will utilize the values and legacy of Menachem Begin to inspire and educate young Jews, encouraging them to actively identify as proud Jews and to be activists against antisemitism.Jewish pride is a good place to start when explaining just why Begin is the ideal figure around whom to build this project. His will was unshakable. He was a follower of Zeev Jabotinsky, who insisted that the Jews are an ancient and proud people, with the right to sovereignty in their ancient homeland, and the right (and duty) to defend themselves from the unique hatred directed against them. As prime minister, he distinguished himself from his predecessors all avowedly secular by identifying first and foremost as a Jew. When asked by a television news reporter after his shock election win in 1977 how he intended to govern, he replied simply, as a good Jew.In 1981, he established what has come to be known as the Begin Doctrine, which states that Israel will never allow a state with the intention of destroying Israel to develop the means to do so. The occasion was Israels bombing of the nuclear reactor in Osirak, Iraq.It was a move condemned across the world, including by Israel closest ally, the United States. (The US had reason to be grateful for Israels action a decade later, when it was itself at war with Saddam Hussein over Iraqs invasion of Kuwait. Would Washington have been willing to confront a nuclear-armed aggressor?) The Begin Doctrine would be employed again in 2007, when Israeli aircraft destroyed a nuclear reactor that North Korea were building for the murderous Assad regime in Syria.Menachem Begin grew up part of the three million-strong Jewish community of Poland, before the Second World War, the largest outside of the United States. His parents and his brother were among the 90% of that population that would not survive humanitys darkest chapter. His determination was total that never again would such a crime against the Jewish people be permitted; that antisemitism must be fought at every turn.ALLIED TO this Jewish pride was his devotion to Jewish unity. Every attempt to explain his election as prime minister after almost 30 years in the parliamentary opposition must point to the significance of his capturing of the Sephardi vote. After years of marginalization by Israels secular European founders, Jews from North Africa and the Middle East finally had a champion. The clearly Ashkenazi Begin, with his European manners and ubiquitous suit and white shirt, nevertheless spoke the language of Am Yisrael of one united Jewish people and shared the same reverence for Jewish tradition as his Sephardi devotees.This had important significance outside of Israel. Diaspora Jews, accustomed to Israeli leaders who regarded the Jews in exile as principally a source of political and financial support, encountered a very different prime minister in Begin. Rabbi Alexander Schindler was one of the most prominent American Jewish leaders at the time, not only the head of the Reform movement in the US, but chair of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. When he met Begin for the first time, he was expecting to disapprove of the man labeled an extremist by the Israeli Left. Instead, in his words, He was the first Israeli leader Id met for whom it was more important to be a Jew than an Israeli... he really cared about us. Begin saw Diaspora Jews as family, part of the tribe of Israel.Real leaders lead. It sounds obvious, but we live in an age when political leaders often choose the popular policy, the one the focus groups and opinion polls indicate will help him or her win re-election. Begin was a real leader. He was a man of deep convictions, but he also saw the grand historical picture, and was capable of working pragmatically to seize the moment, most importantly when he made peace with Egyptian president Anwar Sadat in 1979. He made the painful compromise of giving up the Sinai and the Jewish settlements there. It was unpopular with a large portion of his base, and with many of his closest and oldest political confidants who attacked his decision to relinquish territory and evacuate Jews from their homes. These breaks with former brothers-in-arms were incredibly painful for Begin, but he understood that compromises had to be made and no less importantly he knew where his red lines were, and on those, he would not bend.Joe Lieberman and the founders of the Hidden Light Institute understand that Begin offers a profound example to young Jews: the example of unapologetic Jewish pride; zero tolerance of antisemitism or anti-Zionism; a commitment to the unity of the Jewish people; and leadership based on values and principle, not political expediency or choosing the path of least resistance. In both Israel and the Diaspora, Menachem Begin sets a standard to which we may aspire.The writer is a senior fellow at the Menachem Begin Heritage Center in Jerusalem. To learn more about the documentary project or to support the film, please visit hiddenlightinstitute.org.

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The journey to Jewish pride, beginning with Begin - The Jerusalem Post

‘Just no Arabs’ proves the last thing Gantzs party wants is a ‘progressive’ label – Haaretz

Posted By on February 29, 2020

Who came up with just no Arabs as a principle for building governing coalitions?

Why yes to haredim and no to Arabs? Why is United Torah Judaism wooed and the Joint List rejected? If the criteria for entry into society are the creed of Zionism and army service, does that mean the haredim are more Zionist than the Arabs? Do they enlist in greater numbers? If its so hard for us with the Joint List, why dont we just be done with it who needs them there? Just to be our fig leaf? To justify the shred of democracy that is still barely clinging to our Jewish state?

Maybe we should even remove them entirely from the Jewish and democratic society so all well have left are human rights and equality of the pure and totally kosher? After all, theyll never be true partners and never take pride in the amazing and terrible blow with which well pulverize Gaza one day. How did it come about that just no Arabs is accepted so naturally, even by good and tolerant folks? Whom do we thank for the boycott? Who deserves the accolades? The answer lies in the 72 years of education that instilled the sense of our superiority versus their inferiority, our justice versus their lies.

Benny Gantz, Gabi Ashkenazi, Yair Lapid and Moshe Yaalon are all products of this education. To them, the Israeli Arab is a citizen on probation who has to prove his loyalty twice a week. The principles of equality that they believe in do not apply to him. They promise the voter a party free of cooperation with the Arabs and their voter accepts this as something to be taken for granted.

Israel's ready for corona - but not for women in powerHaaretz Weekly Ep. 65

The voter is a product of the same education. He can cross oceans to experience different cultures but he wont travel 10 minutes from home to experience the neighboring culture. He knows nothing about it. Only hummus. When theres a hiatus in the construction work across the street from him, he knows it must be one of their holidays.

He isnt fond of the political boycott of Arabs but understands and justifies it. He sees it as a tactic, not a principle. He knows whats what, he reads the map of the political blocs and understands the polls. This is not the time to indulge oneself. Its just election talk, he says.

But its not just talk. Its the result of a national effort to distance us from the Arabs. And the education system is fundamentally responsible. First it updates the curriculum, then it issues books on coexistence from the recommended list and ultimately cancels the childrens encounters. Its dangerous with children if they talk and talk and then they become friends. Friendship neutralizes hate and without hate, what motivation will they have, when they become soldiers, to shoot children?

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The fact that 20 percent of us have no legitimacy to participate in what affects our fate no longer requires explanation, either. The explanations are known from Whats so bad for them here? to Our foreign affairs and security are not their business. Just imagine if the U.S. were to prevent 12 percent of the population from being involved in American foreign and security policy because those things arent African Americans business.

The just no Arabs slogan reflects the false ethos weve created for ourselves that were not from around here, that we are refined Europeans, so different and so superior that even the Arabic speakers among us refuse to be a bridge between the cultures. They dont want to be identified with their parents culture so theyve invented their own Mediterranean culture.

How did universal values that every enlightened person believes in become leftist and unacceptable? Have you ever heard Moshe Yaalon talk about tolerance? Or Lapid talk about human rights? Did you ever hear a Likudnik praising equality? Kahol Lavans leaders are afraid that Bibi will stick the labels of enlightenment and progressiveness on them. Thats the last thing they need. They dont want to be enlightened or progressive. Take those labels off of us right now, they insist thats not who we are! We want to be like everyone else racist and nationalist (just without Bibi).

The old familiar racism that has been simmering inside us the whole time wont be directed only at the Joint List. Racism is racism. Anyone who condescends to Arabs will condescend to others. Anyone who doesnt believe that all people are equal, believes that there are those who are superior and inferior, that there are Ashkenazim and Mizrahim, and all thats left to decide is who is up and who is down.

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'Just no Arabs' proves the last thing Gantzs party wants is a 'progressive' label - Haaretz

Netanyahu is trying to dig up dirt on the attorney general who indicted him – Haaretz

Posted By on February 29, 2020

A few months after Likuds surprisingly wide victory in the 2015 election, the cabinet secretary at the time, Avichai Mendelblit, was appointed attorney general. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who didnt spare his praise for the appointee, had another reason to believe he had made the right choice. The publisher of the daily Yedioth Ahronoth, Arnon Mozes, is against Mendelblit, Netanyahu said behind closed doors at the time. He doesnt want him in the job.

Mozes was Netanyahus antagonist during that election campaign, after the secret negotiations the two held hit a dead end. Those talks have led to one of the corruption indictments against Netanyahu; the two are suspected of planning to swap positive coverage of Netanyahu for a regulatory move that would sting a Yedioth competitor.

For Netanyahu, the world was divided into two kinds of people: those who were on Mozes side and those who werent. But now, five years later, Mendelblit is filling this demonic role in Netanyahus mind.

In recent months especially over the past few weeks Netanyahu has ordered deputies to try to obtain the full transcripts of the Harpaz affair, sources told Haaretz. Mendelblit played a role in that case when he was military advocate general around a decade ago. The Harpaz affair concerned attempts to improperly sway the process for selecting the military chief of staff to succeed Gabi Ashkenazi in 2011.

A real obsession, said someone familiar with the attempts by Netanyahu and his people to revisit Mendelblits possible role in the Harpaz affair.

The idea is to bring the materials most of which are sealed under a gag order to light to delegitimize the corruption indictments against Netanyahu and undermine Mendelblit. Netanyahus trial is due to begin on March 17.

After Mondays general election, Mendelblit is expected to decide on a number of issues critical to Netanyahu, who seems to have realized that the Harpaz affair was a traumatic chapter for Mendelblit. Thus any attention to it will wear Mendelblit down.

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Mendelblit ended his stint as military advocate general in 2011. Between April 2013 and February 2016, he was cabinet secretary for Netanyahu; he then became attorney general.

When Bibi backed up Mendelblit

Ironically, five years ago, it was Netanyahu who defended Mendelblit when the Justice Ministry tried to block Mendelblits appointment as attorney general. In 2015, Netanyahu met with the previous attorney general, Yehuda Weinstein, who placed the proverbial bomb on the table: a detailed document that summed up the implications of the investigation into Mendelblit in the Harpaz affair.

This was an extraordinary step because only a few weeks earlier Weinstein had closed the case against Mendelblit. In the detailed document, Weinstein noted alleged contradictions between what Mendelblit told the police and what he told the State Comptrollers Office. Weinstein warned that Mendelblits role in the affair could cast an ethical stain on him.

Mendelblit was furious with Weinstein, whom he accused of trying to end his career. In a letter, he noted alleged absurdities in Weinsteins document. The stain against him would mean destruction and ruin, Mendelblit wrote. And this week he reiterated that the Supreme Court did not find any fault in his actions.

Read whats written here, Weinstein reportedly told Netanyahu. If you find that hes not worthy of being cabinet secretary, summon him for a hearing and hell be allowed to receive the investigative materials. Netanyahu reportedly responded: Im not summoning him to any hearing. Summon him yourself.

According to a source, Weinstein later described the events in a private conversation: Netanyahu listened to me, demonstratively pushed the papers into a drawer and hasnt touched them since.

A person who once worked alongside Netanyahu said this week: The prime minister didnt blink. He saw Mendelblit as the leading candidate for the position of attorney general.

This could partially explain any feelings of betrayal felt by Netanyahu today. In any case, the interest Netanyahu is now showing to the stale Harpaz affair is an urgent interest; he knows he can expect many more battles with Mendelblit.

Mendelblit's to-do list

The main battle concerns the decision Mendelblit has avoided: whether the president can ask an indicted prime minister to form a government. Mendelblit will also be forced to decide whether to deeply investigate another affair: A filing by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission suggested that Netanyahu bought shares in a company owned by his cousin at a 95 percent discount.

This affair broke after Netanyahu made a request to receive donations from wealthy friends to help pay for his criminal defense. A decision by Mendelblit on whether to investigate has been waiting for months.

The events of last month peaked with the appointment of Dan Eldad as acting state prosecutor, a move by Justice Minister Amir Ohana that was not coordinated with Mendelblit as it should have been. Sources say Mendelblits instincts were to conduct an all-out war against Ohana, but he felt that the legal community and media were not giving him their support, so he surrendered.

In a conversation with a senior lawyer, Mendelblit reportedly called this surrender the hardest decision Ive made during my term, more than the decision to file an indictment against Netanyahu. In that conversation, he reportedly described Eldad as a tool in Netanyahus hands in the prime ministers war against the law enforcement system.

On February 20, Eldad ordered the police to launch a criminal investigation into Fifth Dimension, the company chaired by Benny Gantz Netanyahus main rival Monday before it went out of business. That Thursday, Mendelblit was on vacation abroad. He was furious with Eldad, but this week in an act seen by the State Prosecutors Office as a show of weakness he declared that Eldads decision was not politically motivated.

The motive for this, too, appears to be the coming election. Mendelblit may fear that Eldad will plant more land mines in his path, so he wants to mollify him until the election results are in. Then, Mendelblit hopes, with the help of a new government and a new justice minister, he will make Eldad pay him back.

Before the election last April, when it appeared Netanyahu would be able to form a new government after the vote, Mendelblit reportedly shared an apocalyptic forecast with a friend about Netanyahus plans. Mendelblit predicted that Netanyahu would request and receive immunity from prosecution, pass a law enabling the Knesset to override Supreme Court decisions, run for president in 2021 and thus once against receive immunity from prosecution. This plan collapsed when Yisrael Beiteinu leader Avigdor Lieberman played kingmaker and prevented Netanyahu from forming a coalition.

In 2020, the chances of this plan succeeding look low, but Mendelblits associates say they assume that if Netanyahu can put together a right-wing governing coalition, he will try to oust Mendelblit and promote legislation to block the criminal proceedings against him.

If this time, too, the election doesn't produce a clear outcome and the country is dragged into a fourth election, Mendelblit will once again find himself in a confrontation with Netanyahu, Ohana and Eldad. The cabinet will ignore him, as it has already done in its unanimous decision to establish an inquiry committee into the Justice Ministry unit that investigates police misconduct and to bring members of the Falashmura community in Ethiopia to Israel.

A spokesman for Netanyahu said: The sections from the recordings of Ashkenazi and Mendelblit from the Harpaz affair that were published in the media raise serious questions about the nature of the relationship between them and the attorney generals decision later on. The only way to verify that Mendelblit did not act out of extraneous motives in the prime ministers cases is to lift the gag orders on the recordings and expose to the public the content of the conversations. This is the proper and only request of Prime Minister Netanyahu.

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Netanyahu is trying to dig up dirt on the attorney general who indicted him - Haaretz

Final polling shows Likud, Blue and White tied with slight edge to right-wing bloc – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on February 29, 2020

With elections mere days away the last Israel Hayom-i24NEWS poll before Israelis go to the ballot box projects a dead heat between ruling party Likud and challenger Blue and White, but says that overall, the right-wing bloc secures a narrow, one-mandate lead.

Mondaysgeneral electionsmark an unprecedented third vote in the span of one year. But with polls consistently indicating a race that istoo close to callbetween Likud and Blue and White, and given that neither the right- nor the left-wing bloc has emerged as being able to secure the 61-seat majority necessary to form a government, concerns that Israel will find itselffacing a fourth votein the fall of 2020 are growing.

The survey, which under Israeli election laws is the last that can be published ahead of the March 2 vote, projected 33 seats for Likud and Blue and White each.

The Joint Arab List, an alliance comprising the Arab or mostly Arab parties Balad, Raam-Taal, and Hadash, is expected to with 14 seats, retaining its position as the third-largest faction in the Knesset.

The poll gave the Labor-Gesher-Meretz alliance nine seats a similar number to the mandates Yamina, a faction comprising the New Right, National Union, and Habayit Hayehudi parties, is expected to garner.

Next came Sephardi ultra-Orthodox party Shas (8), its Ashkenazi counterpart United Torah Judaism (7) and Yisrael Beytenu, also with seven seats.

The far-right Otzma Yehudit party fails to pass the prerequisite four-Knesset-seat electoral threshold of 3.25 percent of the votes.

The survey, by the Maagar Mochot polling institute, shows that neither political bloc would be able to muster a majority in the 120-seat Knesset: The Right-haredim bloc is projected to secure 57 seats, whereas the Center-Left and Arab parties would have a combined 56 seats. This again gives Yisrael Beytenu the key to the fate of the next government.

Asked who is better suited for the role of the prime minister, 49 percent named Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, 35 percent chose Blue and White leader Benny Gantz, and 16 percent said they didnt know or had no opinion on the matter.

Asked what they thought about the latest election campaign, 44 percent of respondents said they thought the parties ran a dirty campaign, 32 percent said it was boring, 5 percent found it to be fair, 4 percent said it was violent, 3 perfect thought it was worthy, and 12 percent said they didnt know or had no opinion on the matter.

Asked if the various campaigns and events that have taken place in recent weeks changed their voting inclinations, 12 percent of respondents said they changed their mind during the campaign and the reminder 88 percent said they did not. Overall, 9 percent of Likud supporters said they changed their minds as did 11 percent of Blue and White supporters.

The most significant factor for Likud voters in the elections remains the identity of the partys leader (42 percent), the poll found. Among Blue and White voters, only 26 percent said the same.

Asked whether the fact that they have to vote for the third time in one year has affected how they perceive the political system, 69 percent of the respondents said they thought less of Israeli politics over this logjam, 27 percent said their opinion hasnt changed, and 4 percent said they thought better of Israeli politics for it.

As for what lies ahead, 38 percent of those polled said they believed a fourth vote would be called. Some 31 percent think a right-wing government will be formed, 11 percent argued that a national unity government will be cobbled together, 9 percent hedged on a left-wing government, and 11 percent said they didnt know or had no opinion on the matter.

The poll was conducted using a representative sample of 1040 eligible voters in Israel. The margin of error is 3 percentage points.

This article originally appeared in Israel Hayom.

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Final polling shows Likud, Blue and White tied with slight edge to right-wing bloc - Cleveland Jewish News

TSG to launch PokerStars Sports brand and TV advertising for PokerStars Casino in 2020 – Yogonet International

Posted By on February 29, 2020

As a result of the pending combination of The Stars Group and Flutter, TSG has not held an earnings conference call for the fourth quarter and full-year 2019 and has suspended its practice of providing forward-looking financial guidance.

United States | 02/28/2020

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he Stars Group Inc. (TSG) reported Thursday its financial results for the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2019 and provided additional highlights and updates.

Total revenue for the full year climbed by 24.6% to $2,528,448,000. Operating income was up by 1.6%, and Adjusted EBITDA grew by 17.9%.Revenue for the quarter increased primarily as a result of revenue growth within the United Kingdom and Australia segments, which were largely driven by strong underlying trends in customer activity and revenues across those segments, as well as a year-over-year increase in Betting Net Win Margin.

During the quarter, online sports betting was The Stars Group's largest product vertical (39.1% versus 34.3% in 2018), followed by online casino (30.8% versus 30.1% in 2018) and online poker (27.5% versus 32.8% in 2018), while 81% of consolidated revenues were derived from locally regulated or taxed markets 76% in 2018). Revenue for the year increased primarily as a result of the Sky Betting & Gaming and BetEasy acquisitions and also the same or similar factors that impacted the fourth quarter as mentioned above.

In October 2019, The Stars Group and Flutter announced that they entered into an arrangement agreement providing for an all-share combination at an exchange ratio of 0.2253 and whereby immediately following completion, shareholders of Flutter would own approximately 54.64% and shareholders of TSG would own approximately 45.36% of the share capital of the combined group. Completion of the combination is currently expected to occur during the second or third quarter of 2020, subject to, among other things, shareholder, court and applicable regulatory approvals.

As previously disclosed, in addition to Divyesh Gadhia, TSG's current Executive Chairman; and Rafi Ashkenazi, TSG's current Chief Executive Officer, The Stars Group is entitled under the arrangement agreement to nominate three additional non-executive directors to serve on the combined group's board of directors post-completion of the combination. Accordingly, The Stars Group has nominated Alfred F. Hurley Jr., David Lazzarato and Mary Turner to also serve as directors on the combined group's board of directors.

The Stars Group ended the quarter with approximately $321.0 million in operational cash and $4.9 billion of gross debt on its balance sheet, resulting in net debt of $4.6 billion, which was relatively stable compared to the third quarter and a reduction of approximately $443.9 million from the end of 2018. In February, TSG prepaid an additional $100 million, including accrued and unpaid interest, of its USD first lien term loan using cash on its balance sheet, which brings the total amount repaid since completion of the SBG acquisition in July 2018 to over $700 million.

Since its launch in September 2019, just four months after The Stars Group announced its U.S. media and sports wagering partnership with FOX Sports, the FOX Sports Super 6 app saw more than 1.3 million downloads in 2019, with an average of over 500,000 customers making at least one prediction each week during the fourth quarter.

The Stars Group currently operates its FOX Bet real-money wagering products and PokerStars-branded real-money poker and casino products in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and since the launch of FOX Bet in New Jersey and Pennsylvania in 2019, the performance has been in-line with TSG's expectations, with strong progress in both active customers and revenue on a month-to-month basis, with approximately 65,000 combined QAUs (quarterly active unique customers) in the fourth quarter. During 2019, FOX Bet's financial performance was in-line with its previously disclosed expected loss of approximately $40 million for the year.

So far in 2020, The Stars Group announced a market access agreement with the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians Gaming Authority for first-skin online betting and gaming market access in the State of Michigan, and currently expects to increase investments in the United States to support planned FOX Bet launches in further states, including Colorado.

In December 2019, The Stars Group announced that it agreed with the minority shareholders of BetEasy, its Australian-based sports betting business, to acquire the remaining 20% interest in the company for AUD$151 million following the earlier of the release of TSG's full-year 2020 financial results or the completion of its combination with Flutter Entertainment Plc. As part of this agreement, The Stars Group also agreed to pay AUD$100 million to settle the previously disclosed performance, or earn-out, payment under the agreements for its 2018 acquisition of the initial 80% interest, which were subject to certain performance conditions primarily related to BetEasy's EBITDA and could have reached AUD$232 million, and to repay AUD$56.9 million of outstanding BetEasy minority shareholder loans.

As a result of the pending combination of The Stars Group and Flutter, TSG has not held an earnings conference call for the fourth quarter and full-year 2019 and has suspended its practice of providing forward-looking financial guidance.

"In 2019, we continued to execute on our strategy to deliver long-term sustainable growth and become the world's favorite iGaming destination. We not only began to see the full-year benefits of our transformative 2018 acquisitions, but executed on delivering a landmark media partnership in the U.S., with the launch of FOX Bet, strengthening our position in this emerging market," said TSGs CEO Rafi Ashkenazi. "We also focused on creating shareholder value through efficient capital allocation, prepaying over $450 million of debt during the year."

"In-line with our expectations, we exited 2019 with a strong fourth quarter with Constant Currency Revenue growth of 7% year-over-year driven primarily by the continued impressive underlying performance of our primary sports betting brands," continued Ashkenazi. "With sports betting now our largest product vertical and 81% of our revenues coming from locally regulated or taxed markets, we are well positioned for diversified growth in 2020 and beyond."

"We entered 2020 with the full $100 million run-rate of expected cost synergies from our 2018 Sky Betting & Gaming acquisition and earlier this month prepaid an additional $100 million of debt, underpinning our ability to execute on complex integrations and the highly cash-generative nature of our business model. In addition to cost synergies, we have detailed plans in place to continue driving revenue synergies and to increase investments in product and marketing, giving us confidence in continued revenue growth in the years ahead. In 2020, we plan to further enhance the global appeal of the PokerStars brand, including by launching the PokerStars Sports brand, leveraging the operational capabilities of our Sky Betting & Gaming business, and launching television advertising for PokerStars Casino," he added.

"Lastly, ahead of closing our combination with Flutter, which will enhance and accelerate each company's growth strategy, we remain focused on our key strategic priorities of integration, execution, and debt reduction," concluded Ashkenazi.

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TSG to launch PokerStars Sports brand and TV advertising for PokerStars Casino in 2020 - Yogonet International

The willful ignorance of lawmakers – Ynetnews

Posted By on February 29, 2020

Likud MK Sharren Haskel recently suggested that those who lost their jobs at factories in southern Israel find work washing dishes in Tel Aviv restaurants, promising them a monthly salary of NIS 12,000 ($3,500).

When you've stopped laughing and wondering whether I made this up, I recommend you watch the video of the conference at which Haskel, who earns NIS 45,000 per month, said it. Maybe after seeing it several times you will understand that she really was serious.

Employees of the Teva factory in Ashdod protest its closure

( )

After the initial shock dissipates, you will most likely feel a tinge of sadness at the way Haskel, a public elected official and a lawmaker from the country's ruling party, expresses herself.

Haskel spews a hypnotic combination of distortion and untruths (care to venture a guess how many hours of washing dishes it takes to earn NIS 12,000?) that serves to further demonstrate just how disconnected from reality she is.

MK Sharren Haskel

(Photo: Avi Moalem )

In her mind these laid-off workers, most of whom are probably old enough to be her parents, are only a bus or a train ride away from Tel Aviv and a better standard of living. If the bus or train even bothers to arrive at all that is.

It's true that our political discussion is tainted by triviality and populism when it comes to economics, but it's Haskel's willful blindness to the needs of the people that is most disturbing.

Haskel doesn't see people in front of her, she only sees a workforce, and if the factory they used to work for ran out of money (surely their fault) they should instead polish our plates and clean our cutlery.

Employees of the Teva factory in Ashdod protest its closure

(Photo: Avi Rokah)

It's too bad economic issues cannot truly be resolved with a simple snap of a finger.

Ayelet Shaked's plan to save the country's agriculture industry by cancelling the pensions of all foreign workers working in the sector is yet another great example of a demagogy in which the weakest are seen as the problem.

How can right-wing voters support such a disconnect? Where are cries of outrage from those who insist that non-Ashkenazi Jews are second-class citizens in Israel? Where is Shas leader Aryeh Deri, who built an entire election campaign on the idea he is the savior of the downtrodden?

Aryeh Deri in speaking in Holon in the run-up to the Sept. 2019 elections

(Photo: Tal Shahar)

Sharren Haskel is proof of the fact that despite claims Israel is having its best decade ever, there are plenty who have been forgotten and left behind.

In fact, they are so disregarded that people like Haskel don't even flinch when they suggest that they find a job that is more or less the equivalent of hard labor.

If only the next government could be filled with people who understand the reality of living of the edge of society - and perhaps Ms. Haskel could make big money washing dishes.

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The willful ignorance of lawmakers - Ynetnews

VIOLINS OF HOPE Announced At The Soraya – Broadway World

Posted By on February 29, 2020

The Violins of Hope collection will make the journey from Tel Aviv to Los Angeles, in an unprecedented collaboration between The Soraya, the Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust, and four Southern California symphony orchestras. The Soraya will present three concerts featuring the rescued and restored violins, with an Opening concert on March 22 featuring the LA Jewish Symphony, followed by Israeli conductor Lahav Shani leading and performing with the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra on March 25, and concluding with the Jerusalem Quartet on April 5. New West Symphony, The LA Lawyers Symphony, and Long Beach Symphony will host the violins in concerts at other venues throughout Southern California, reaching audiences across the region. Complete Violins of Hope information can be found at The Soraya.org.

Violins of Hope is an internationally renowned project created to celebrate the triumph of the human spirit. At the heart of Violins of Hope is a collection of over 60 stringed instruments rescued from the Holocaust and restored by second-generation violinmaker, Amnon Weinstein, and his son Avshalom in their shop in Tel Aviv.

Now, this unique collection will come to Los Angeles for the first time March 22 to April 26, 2020 for a month-long series of concerts, exhibits, and student educational programming at several Los Angeles cultural institutions.

The Violins of Hope concert series at The Soraya will feature three concerts in two weeks, plus an additional four student matinees. Each concert in the Violins of Hope series will feature performers and soloists using instruments from the Weinstein's collection. The Soraya's Artist in Residence and Northridge native Niv Ashkenazi, the only individual musician in North American entrusted with one of the collection's rescued violins, is currently bringing his own storied instrument on a 40-school tour to Los Angeles students. He will perform four student matinees at The Soraya the week prior to the March 22 Opening Night.

"With three generations born since the end of the Holocaust, how do we keep alive the memories of those who perished? Each instrument of the Violins of Hope shares a common past from this chapter in human history, but more so, each violin embodies a personal story," said Thor Steingraber, Executive Director of The Soraya. "Some were once played on the streets in the hands of klezmer musicians, and some held pedigrees in world-class concert halls. To experience firsthand their resonance, musical and historical alike, creates an immediate connection to our collective past."

Located on the campus of California State University, Northridge, The Soraya serves the CSUN community, the 1.9 million residents of the San Fernando Valley, and the broader regional market in Los Angeles. Under the leadership of President Dr. Dianne F. Harrison, CSUN is one of the region's leading public institutions, prioritizing inclusion and known for its many different cultural and religious studies programs.

"The Violins of Hope represent the extraordinary power of music to heal, to fight injustice and to celebrate survival," said Harrison. "Music also brings people together, and we are proud to join with our partners to bring these instruments that were witness to history to Southern California so that we will never forget."

Steingraber concluded, "Come hear them and see the violins firsthand. Experience their resonance, musical and historical alike. Make a direct and immediate connection to those who once played them. Regard them as powerful symbols, as emblems of perseverance, as sources of reflection, and as reminders of compassion and empathy. The violins stand as a tangible connection to our past, and their stories reach across the generations and demand of us Never Again."

Opening Night: March 22, 2020 - Artistic Director Noreen Green conducts the Los Angeles Jewish Symphony featuring violinist Lindsay Deutsch and special guest, cellist Lynn Harrell

March 25, 2020-Lahav Shani conducts the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra featuring Maestro Shani on Piano

April 5, 2020 - The Jerusalem Quartet

Tickets for all Violins of Hope concerts are available online at TheSoraya.org and by phone at 818-677-3000.

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VIOLINS OF HOPE Announced At The Soraya - Broadway World


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