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Israel | Facts, History, & Map | Britannica.com

Posted By on August 21, 2015

Israel,officially State of Israel, Hebrew Medinat Yisrael, Arabic Isrl, country in the Middle East, located at the eastern end of the Mediterranean Sea. It is bounded to the north by Lebanon, to the northeast by Syria, to the east and southeast by Jordan, to the southwest by Egypt, and to the west by the Mediterranean Sea. Jerusalem is the seat of government and the proclaimed capital, although the latter status has not received wide international recognition.

Israel is a small country with a relatively diverse topography, consisting of a lengthy coastal plain, highlands in the north and central regions, and the Negev desert in the south. Running the length of the country from north to south along its eastern border is the northern terminus of the Great Rift Valley.

The State of Israel is the only Jewish nation in the modern period, and the region that now falls within its borders has a lengthy and rich history that dates from prebiblical times. The area was a part of the Roman Empire and, later, the Byzantine Empire before falling under the control of the fledgling Islamic caliphate in the 7th century ce. Although the object of dispute during the Crusades, the region, then generally known as Palestine, remained under the sway of successive Islamic dynasties until the collapse of the Ottoman Empire at the end of World War I, when it was placed under British mandate from the League of Nations.

Even before the mandate, the desire for a Jewish homeland prompted a small number of Jews to immigrate to Palestine, a migration that grew dramatically during the second quarter of the 20th century with the increased persecution of Jews worldwide and subsequent Holocaust perpetrated by Nazi Germany. This vast influx of Jewish immigrants into the region, however, caused tension with the native Palestinian Arabs, and violence flared between the two groups leading up to the United Nations plan to partition Palestine into Jewish and Palestinian sectors and Israels ensuing declaration of statehood on May 14, 1948.

Israel fought a series of wars against neighbouring Arab states during the next 35 years, which have resulted in ongoing disputes over territory and the status of refugees. Despite continuing tensions, however, Israel concluded peace treaties with several neighbouring Arab states during the final quarter of the 20th century.

Israel: geographical featuresEncyclopdia Britannica, Inc.Despite its small size, about 290 miles (470 km) north-to-south and 85 miles (135 km) east-to-west at its widest point, Israel has four geographic regionsthe Mediterranean coastal plain, the hill regions of northern and central Israel, the Great Rift Valley, and the Negevand a wide range of unique physical features and microclimates.

The coastal plain is a narrow strip about 115 miles (185 km) long that widens to about 25 miles (40 km) in the south. A sandy shoreline with many beaches borders the Mediterranean coast. Inland to the east, fertile farmland is giving way to growing agricultural settlements and the cities of Tel Aviv and Haifa and their suburbs.

In the north of the country, the mountains of Galilee constitute the highest part of Israel, reaching an elevation of 3,963 feet (1,208 metres) at Mount Meron (Arabic: Jebel Jarmaq). These mountains terminate to the east in an escarpment overlooking the Great Rift Valley. The mountains of Galilee are separated from the hills of the Israeli-occupied West Bank to the south by the fertile Plain of Esdraelon (Hebrew: Emeq Yizreel), which, running approximately northwest to southeast, connects the coastal plain with the Great Rift Valley. The Mount Carmel range, which culminates in a peak 1,791 feet (546 metres) high, forms a spur reaching northwest from the highlands of the West Bank, cutting almost to the coast of Haifa.

Dead SeaPeter Carmichael/ASPECTThe Great Rift Valley, a long fissure in the Earths crust, begins beyond the northern frontier of Israel and forms a series of valleys running generally south, the length of the country, to the Gulf of Aqaba. The Jordan River, which marks part of the frontier between Israel and Jordan, flows southward through the rift from Dan on Israels northern frontier, where it is 500 feet (152 metres) above sea level, first into the ula Valley (Hebrew: Emeq ula), then into the freshwater Lake Tiberias, also known as the Sea of Galilee (Hebrew: Yam Kinneret), which lies 686 feet (209 metres) below sea level. The Jordan continues south along the eastern edge of the West Banknow through the Jordan Valley (Hebrew: Emeq HaYarden)and finally into the highly saline Dead Sea, which, at 1,312 feet (400 metres) below sea level, is the lowest point of a natural landscape feature on the Earths surface. South of the Dead Sea, the Jordan continues through the rift, where it now forms the Arava Valley (Hebrew: savannah), an arid plain that extends to the Red Sea port of Elat.

The sparsely populated Negev comprises the southern half of Israel. Arrow-shaped, this flat, sandy desert region narrows toward the south, where it becomes increasingly arid and breaks into sandstone hills cut by wadis, canyons, and cliffs before finally coming to a point where the Arava reaches Elat.

The principal drainage system comprises Lake Tiberias and the Jordan River. Other rivers in Israel are the Yarqon, which empties into the Mediterranean near Tel Aviv; the Qishon, which runs through the western part of the Plain of Esdraelon to drain into the Mediterranean at Haifa; and a small section of the Yarmk, a tributary of the Jordan that flows west along the Syria-Jordan border. Most of the countrys remaining streams are ephemeral and flow seasonally as wadis. The rivers are supplemented by a spring-fed underground water table that is tapped by wells. Israel has a chronic water shortage, and its hydraulic resources are fully utilized: about three-fourths for irrigation and the remainder for industrial and household water use.

The coastal plain is covered mainly by alluvial soils. Parts of the arid northern Negev, where soil development would not be expected, have windblown loess soils because of proximity to the coastal plain. The soils of Galilee change from calcareous rock in the coastal plain, to Cenomanian and Turonian limestone (deposited from about 99 to 89 million years ago) in Upper Galilee, and to Eocene formations (those dating from about 55 to 35 million years ago) in the lower part of the region. Rock salt and gypsum are abundant in the Great Rift Valley. The southern Negev is mainly sandstone rock with veins of granite.

Israel has a wide variety of climatic conditions, caused mainly by the countrys diverse topography. There are two distinct seasons: a cool, rainy winter (OctoberApril) and a dry, hot summer (MaySeptember). Along the coast, sea breezes have a moderating influence in summer, and the Mediterranean beaches are popular. Precipitation is light in the south, amounting to about 1 inch (25 mm) per year in the Arava Valley south of the Dead Sea, while in the north it is relatively heavy, up to 44 inches (1,120 mm) a year in the Upper Galilee region. In the large cities, along the coastal plain, annual rainfall averages about 20 inches (508 mm) per year. Precipitation occurs on about 60 days during the year, spread over the rainy season. Severe summer water shortages ensue in years when the rains come late or rainfall totals are less than normal.

Average annual temperatures vary throughout Israel based on elevation and location, with the coastal areas adjacent to the Mediterranean Sea having milder temperaturesranging from about 84 F (29 C) in August to about 61 F (16 C) in Januaryand higher rates of humidity than areas inland, especially during the winter. Likewise, higher elevations, such as Upper Galilee, have cool nights, even in summer, and occasional snows in the winter. However, the coastal city of Elat, in the south, despite its proximity to the Red Sea, is closer to the climate of the Jordan and Arava valleys and the Negev, which are hotter and drier than the northern coast; there, daytime temperatures reach about 70 F (21 C) in January and may rise as high as 114 F (46 C) in August, when the average high is 104 F (40 C).

Natural vegetation is highly varied, and more than 2,800 plant species have been identified. The original evergreen forests, the legendary cedars of Lebanon, have largely disappeared after many centuries of timber cutting for shipbuilding and to clear land for cultivation and goat herding; they have been replaced by second-growth oak and smaller evergreen conifers. The hills are mostly covered by maquis, and wildflowers bloom profusely in the rainy season. Only wild desert scrub grows in the Negev and on the sand dunes of the coastal plain. North of Beersheba, most of the country is under cultivation or is used for hill grazing. Where irrigation is available, citrus groves, orchards of subtropical fruit, and food crops flourish. Millions of trees have been planted through a government reforestation program.

Animal life is also diverse. Mammals include wildcats, wild boars, gazelles, ibex, jackals, hyenas, hares, coneys, badgers, and tiger weasels. Notable among the reptiles are geckos and lizards of the genus Agama and vipers such as the carpet, or saw-scaled, viper (Echis carinatus). More than 400 species of birds have been identified in the region, including the partridge, tropical cuckoo, bustard, sand grouse, and desert lark. There are many kinds of fish and insects, and locusts from the desert sometimes invade settled areas. Several regions have been set aside as nature reserves, notably parts of the Arava in the south and Mount Carmel, Mount Meron, and the remains of the ula Lake and marshes in the north. The Mediterranean coast and the Jordan and Arava valleys are important routes for migratory birds.

Jewish immigration in the 20th century greatly altered the settlement pattern of the country. The first modern-day Jewish settlers established themselves on the coastal plain in the 1880s. Later they also moved into the valleys of the interior and into parts of the hill districts, as well as into the Negev. Small cities such as Haifa and Jerusalem grew in size, and the port of Jaffa (Yafo) sprouted a suburb, Tel Aviv, which grew into one of the largest cities in Israel. Jewish immigrants also settled those areas of the coastal plain, the Judaean foothills, and the Jordan and Arava valleys evacuated by Palestinians during the war of 1948, thereby becoming the majority in many areas previously inhabited by Arabs. Although the majority of the Bedouin of the Negev left the region when Israel incorporated the territory, the desert has continued to be largely the domain of the Arab nomads who remained or returned following the end of fighting.

The non-Jewish population is concentrated mainly in Jerusalem (about one-fifth of the residents of the city), and in the north, where Arabs constitute a substantial part of the population of Galilee.

Jerusalem, perched high among the Judaean hills, is one of the great cities of the world, with a long history, unique architecture, and rich archeological heritage. It is the capital of Israel, and its walled Old City is divided into four quartersMuslim, Jewish, Christian, and Armeniansymbolizing its spiritual significance to the regions major religious and ethnic groups.

The rural population, defined as residents of settlements with less than 2,000 people, amounts to less than one-tenth of the nations total inhabitants. About one-tenth of the Jewish population is rural, of whom more than half are immigrants who arrived after 1948. The Jewish rural settlements are organized into kibbutzim (2 percent of the total population), which are collective groups voluntarily practicing joint production and consumption; moshavim (3 percent), which are cooperatives of small holders who practice joint sales and purchases, make common use of machinery, minimize hired labour, and lease national land; and agricultural communities or individually owned farms engaged in private production. The kibbutzim and moshavim pioneered settlement in underdeveloped areas, performed security functions in border areas, and contributed substantially to the nations ability to absorb new immigrants in the early years of the state.

Only a tiny fraction of the Arab population lives in rural areas. Those who do are divided between the Bedouin and residents of small agricultural villages. Many such communities are now defined as urban by the Israeli government because their populations exceed 2,000, despite the fact that some residents still engage in agriculture. Before 1948 Jewish and Arab agricultural settlements existed side by side but were largely independent of each other. Since then, however, thousands of Arabs from the Gaza Strip and the Israeli-occupied territory of the West Bank have found employment in Israel in the citrus groves or in industry or as construction labourers. This ready labour pool, together with increased agricultural mechanization, has led to a drop in the number of Jewish agricultural workers. In Arab villages, fewer than half of the adult labourers, both men and women, are engaged in working the land.

There has been a growing tendency among farmers to practice intensive cultivation, to diversify crops, and to shift from small holdings to large farms. Most of the remaining Arab farmers work their own land, although some either lease land or work for Arab or Jewish landlords. Many Bedouin also have abandoned herding for work in towns and cities, establishing residence in permanent settlements that continue to maintain traditional tribal identity.

The great majority of the population, both Jewish and Arab, reside in urban areas. As the industrial and service sectors of the economy have grown, the two large conurbations of Tel AvivYafo and Haifa, along the coastal plain, have come to house more than half of the countrys population. The government has made great efforts to prevent the population from becoming overconcentrated in these areas, overseeing in both the north and south the development of new towns occupied largely by the countrys most recent immigrants. These towns serve as centres of regional settlement and fulfill specialized economic functions, such as the manufacture of textiles, clothing, machinery, electronic equipment, and computer software. One such place, Beersheba, in the northern Negev, grew from a planned new town founded on a small older settlement in the 1950s into a city, the result of waves of Jewish immigrants from North Africa and the former Soviet Union.

The major urban centres inhabited by Arabs include cities and towns with both Arab and Jewish populationssuch as Jerusalem, Haifa, Akko, Lod, Ramla, and Yafoand towns with predominantly Arab populations, including Nazareth in Galilee, where a mainly Jewish suburb is nearly equal in population to the Arab city. Many of the former differences in ways of life between Arabs and Jews are diminishing in towns with mixed populations, even though each group usually lives in different quarters.

Jews constitute about four-fifths of the total population of Israel. Almost all the rest are Palestinian Arabs, of whom most (roughly three-fourths) are Muslim; the remaining Arabs are Christians and Druze, who each make up only a small fraction of the total population. Arabs are the overwhelming majority in the Gaza Strip and the occupied territory of the West Bank. (For information on Palestinians residing outside Israel, see Palestine.)

The Jewish population is diverse. Jews from eastern and western Europe, the Middle East and North Africa, Central Asia, North America, and Latin America have been immigrating to this area since the late 19th century. Differing in ethnic origin and culture, they brought with them languages and customs from a variety of countries. The Jewish community today includes survivors of the Holocaust, offspring of those survivors, and migrs escaping anti-Semitism. The revival of Hebrew as a common language and a strong Israeli national consciousness have facilitated the assimilation of newcomers to Israel but not completely eradicated native ethnicities. For example, religious Jews immigrating to Israel generally continue to pray in synagogues established by their respective communities.

Religious Jewry in Israel constitutes a significant and articulate section of the population. As such, it is often at odds with a strong secular sector that seeks to prevent religious bodies and authorities from dominating national life. The two main religious-ethnic groupings are those Jews from central and eastern Europe and their descendants who follow the Ashkenazic traditions and those Jews from the Mediterranean region and North Africa who follow the Sephardic. There are two chief rabbis in Israel, one Ashkenazi and one Sephardi. Tension is frequent between the two groups, largely because of their cultural differences and the social and political dominance of the Ashkenazim in Israeli society. Until recently, it was generally true that the Sephardim tended to be poorer, less educated, and less represented in higher political office than the Ashkenazim.

The Karaites are a Jewish sect that emerged in the early Middle Ages. Several thousand members live in Ramla, and more recently in Beersheba and Ashdod. Like other religious minorities, they have their own religious courts and communal organizations. Considered part of Jewish society, they have maintained their separate identity by resisting intermarriage and preserving their religious rites based on the Torah as the sole source of religious law.

Samaritans trace their roots to those Jews not dispersed when the Assyrians conquered Israel in the 8th century bce. About half of the few hundred surviving members of the Samaritan community live near Tel Aviv in the town of olon. The rest live on Mount Gerizim (Arabic: Jabal al-r), near Nblus in the West Bank. They preserve their separate religious and communal organizations and speak Arabic but pray in an archaic form of Hebrew. They participate in national life as part of the Jewish section of the population.

Arabs constitute the largest single minority in Israel, and though most are Muslims of the Sunnite branch, Arab Christians form a significant minority, particularly in the Galilee region in northern Israel. Arabs, whether Christian, Muslim, or Druze, speak a dialect of Levantine Arabic and learn Modern Standard Arabic in school. An increasing number also avail themselves of higher education within Israels public schools and colleges, and many younger Arabs are now bilingual in Hebrew. Although most Israeli Arabs consider themselves Palestinians, all are full Israeli citizens with political and civil rights that are, with the exception of some limitations on military service, equal to those of Israeli Jews. Many Arabs participate actively in the Israeli political process, and several Arab political parties have members in the Israeli Knesset. Despite this inclusiveness, however, many Israeli Arabs still see themselves as living in an occupied state, and suspicions and antagonism persist.

The overwhelming majority of Israels Muslims are Arabs. Like all other religious communities, Muslims enjoy considerable autonomy in dealing with matters of personal status. They have separate religious courts for issues such as marriage, divorce, and inheritance. The state oversees their religious institutions. Israels Bedouin, roughly one-tenth of the Arab population, are exclusively Muslim.

Most Christians in Israel are Arabs, and Christian communities in Israel, regardless of ethnicity, have a wide degree of autonomy in religious and communal affairs. The Greek Catholic and Greek Orthodox churches are the largest denominations, and most of them are found in Jerusalem. Apart from the Greek Orthodox church, which has a patriarchate in Jerusalem, each church is dependent to a degree on a supreme hierarch abroad. These communities include Roman Catholics and Uniates (Melchites, Maronites, Chaldean Catholics, Syrian Catholics, and Armenian Catholics). Jerusalem also has a Russian Orthodox community. The Evangelical, Episcopal, and Lutheran churches are small and primarily Arabic-speaking.

The Druze, who live in villages in Galilee and around Mount Carmel, have traditionally formed a closed, tight-knit community and practice a secretive religion founded in 11th-century Fimid Egypt. Though Israeli Druze maintain contact with coreligionists in Lebanon and Syria, members of each group adhere to the authority of the country of their residence. Israel has recognized the Druze as a separate Arab community since 1957, and Israeli Druze serve in the armed forces. Druze have traditionally been agriculturists, but younger members have found employment throughout the economy.

The Bah faith, a universal religion founded in Iran in the mid-19th century, is the only religion other than Judaism to have its world centre in Israel. A teaching centre, archive building, shrine, and administrative headquarters are located on Mount Carmel in Haifa. There are a few hundred adherents in Israel, most of whom are employed at the centre in Haifa.

The Circassians, who are Sunnite Muslims, emigrated from the Caucasus in the 1870s. They number a few thousand and live in villages in Galilee, preserving their native language and traditions. Older Circassians speak Arabic as well as the Circassian language, but members of the younger generation speak Hebrew. The men serve in the Israeli armed forces.

The most significant demographic issue in Israel since its establishment has been Jewish immigration. In 1948 the Jewish population of Israel was about 670,000; this number increased to more than 1,000,000 the next year as a result of immigration. Between 1949 and 1997 about 2,350,000 Jewish immigrants entered the country; about 700,000 to 750,000 Jews left it, although some later returned. The total number of immigrants includes more than 320,000 Soviet Jews who came to Israel in 198991 and have continued to arrive at the rate of about 50,000 per year. Nearly 28,000 Ethiopian Jews immigrated in 199092, adding to an earlier migration of 11,000 in 198485. The largest proportion of Jews trace their roots to Europe (including the former Soviet Union) and North America, though some also hail from Africa (mostly North Africa), Asia, and the Middle East.

More than half of the Arab population fled their homes during the war of 1948, of whom only a small fraction were allowed to return after the end of hostilities. While the Jewish population has grown more from immigration than from natural increase since that time, the Arab population has grown mainly through high birth rates, which are markedly higher than among Israels Jews, and through the addition of about 66,000 residents of East Jerusalem, captured from Jordan in 1967 and later annexed by Israel. Overall, the population is youthful, with about one-fourth being 15 years old or younger. Life expectancy is among the highest in the world: some 80 years for women and 77 years for men.

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Israel | Facts, History, & Map | Britannica.com

Israel: Pictures, Videos, Breaking News – The Huffington Post

Posted By on August 21, 2015

Donald Trump keeps on saying stupid, hateful things. About Mexicans, women, John McCain, Megyn Kelly... And he keeps on leading the Republican presidential race. Gosh, could there be a correlation?

The violence that has rocked the Middle East since 2011 has largely bypassed Arabs in Israel. Had they risen up they could have cited many causes: job discrimination, racism, an alien national anthem, minimal state funding for education and social services and low income.

Jonathan Adelman

Professor, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver

I crave, in no particular order, respect for the audience, respect for the story and its characters and respect for women. It boils down to the basic definition of the principle of this grand word "respect," which is "due regard for the feelings, wishes, rights or traditions of others."

JERUSALEM -- The history of the last century provides a seemingly endless list of atrocities that were not stopped, and rarely was this ever for a lack of information about them. We, at least as countries and societies, simply don't really care. We would like to think we do, but, empirically speaking, we don't -- and the latest case in point is the sheer existence of a system of Yazidi sex slave trade in 2015.

Whether the deal is rejected or not by the U.S. Congress, in the process, conservatives in Israel and in the U.S. will have enhanced their ability to flex their lobbying muscles going forward, and Israel will be well positioned to receive enhanced defense assistance from the U.S.

The first GOP debate and the resultant infighting has shown us that passion, emotion and ideology will be our political undoing. Let's ignore our petty grievances, behave like adults and do what's best for our country by picking the candidates that can serve us best.

Rob Taub

Writer, Humorist & Television Commentator

If the liberal Jewish community can welcome LGBTQ Jews and Interfaith families into their midst why are Jews who stand for Palestinian freedom so easily excluded?

Fear-mongering and deliberate distortions will not make us safer. Outspending those of us who endorse the deal will not silence us. For the sake of Heaven, I urge you to support this historic accord.

Rachel S. Mikva

Herman Schaalman Chair in Jewish Studies and Director of the Center for Jewish, Christian & Islamic Studies at Chicago Theological Seminary

22 Democratic and 36 Republican members of Congress spent a full week of the August recess in Israel rather than among the constituents they were elected to serve.

Some ordinary people view the deal and Iran-West improving their ties as a sign that their living standards will improve. They hope for the possibility of reform and the advance of human rights, such as, freedom of speech, press, assembly, social justice, rule of law and democracy.

No American citizen should be subjected to the treatment that George Khoury and Habib Joudeh received when they arrived at Ben Gurion Airport in Israel last month.

James Zogby

President, Arab American Institute; author, 'Arab Voices'

Frankly, no one named Bush should be proposing anything in the Middle East. Especially a Bush who has 17 of 21 formally named geopolitical advisors who are alumni of the Bush/Cheney administration.

Padraig O'Malley's idea that both Israelis and Palestinians are so addicted to their meaning-systems ("narratives") that they are willing to slide into a chaotic abyss is chilling, but seems strongly supported by recent history and current facts.

Carlo Strenger

Professor of Psychology and Philosophy, Tel Aviv University

War cannot and should not be considered before all other options have been eliminated. This deal provides the option of significantly curtailing the Iranian program before a single sanction is lifted and keeping it under the vigilant eye of the world for at least the next decade -- three to five times longer than a preemptive strike.

Elie Jacobs

Public affairs and strategic communications consultant; partner, Truman National Security Project

If Congress blocks the Vienna Agreement, it will be a gross betrayal of our closest allies, it will do lasting damage to America's global leadership, and it will clear the path for Iran to advance towards a weapon.

Let me be clear, I have no sympathy for the Muslim Brotherhood and would never cast a vote in their favor. However, labeling the Arabic HuffPost as a mouthpiece for the Muslim Brotherhood is not only patently false, it is an attempt to constrain free speech that endangers journalists who are already suffering for simply reporting facts, or their insight, on Arab issues.

Chaker Khazaal

Writer, Reporter, Public Speaker and Author of the 'Confessions of a War Child' trilogy

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Israel: Pictures, Videos, Breaking News - The Huffington Post

Israel Map / Geography of Israel / Map of Israel – Worldatlas.com

Posted By on August 21, 2015

The small (densely populated) State of Israel occupies about 75% of an area long known as Canaan. It has a population of 7,707,042 and became an independent state in 1948, celebrating their national day on May 14th.This historic, volatile spot is significant for Christians, Muslims and Jews, as Jerusalem is recognized as a holy city by all three religious faiths.

The Old Testament of the Bible (the Jewish Torah), describes how, after being led out of Egypt by Moses into the land of Canaan, Hebrew tribes, the descendants of the 12 sons of Jacob, settled and later formed the Northern Kingdom of Israel.

Constant warfare was common between the Jews and neighboring tribes, and the kingdom was ultimately split into two: the Kingdom of Judah and the Kingdom of Israel.

Around 750 BC, the Kingdom of Israel was annihilated by the Assyrians, but an attempt at gaining control of Judah failed. The Assyrians commanded the region for only a short time before being conquered by the New Babylonian Empire in 612 BC. According to the Hebrew Bible, King Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon ravaged Solomon's Temple, forcing the Jews into exile.

In the centuries to follow, Israel was taken over by numerous strong leaders, including Cyrus the Great of Persia in 538 BC and Alexander the Great in 333 BC.

In the 2nd century BC, an attempt by Antiochus IV of the Seleucid Empire to abolish Judaism for a Hellenistic religion sparked the Maccabean Revolt, led by Judas Maccabeus. The uprising ended the Greek rule, and Maccabeus' victory is celebrated in the festival of Hanukkah.

Insurrections within the region continued for centuries. The First Jewish Revolt in 66 AD, against the Roman Empire, ended with the defeat of the Jews, dispersing much of the population to other areas around the Mediterranean, and forcing the remaining to be sold into slavery.

As decades progressed, the Jewish community became banned from several areas, including Cyprus, Jerusalem and the Roman province.

Jewish leader, Simon Bar Kokhba, sparked another major revolt in 132 AD, known as the Bar-Kochba revolt, which was the last of the Jewish-Roman Wars. Unfortunately, the outcome was not in the Jewish favor, as hundreds of thousands were massacred, and the Jewish religious and political authority became suppressed.

This page was last modified on August 14, 2015.

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Israel Map / Geography of Israel / Map of Israel - Worldatlas.com

Israel & the Palestinian Territories – Lonely Planet

Posted By on August 21, 2015

At the intersection of Asia, Europe and Africa both geographically and culturally Israel and the Palestinian Territories have been a meeting place of cultures, empires and religions since history began.

Cradle of Judaism and Christianity and sacred to Muslims and Bahais, the Holy Land invites visitors to immerse themselves in the richness and variety of the region's religious traditions. Ancient Jewish sites include Jerusalems Western Wall and Byzantine-era synagogues adorned with sumptuous mosaics. The Roman-era synagogues around the Sea of Galilee may have been used by Jews and Christians before they diverged into separate faiths. Both Christian pilgrims and tourists can explore sites associated with Jesuss birth (in Bethlehem), ministry (in Nazareth and around the Sea of Galilee) and crucifixion (in Jerusalem). For Muslims, only Mecca and Medina are holier than Jerusalems Al-Haram ash-Sharif, known to Jews as the Temple Mount perhaps the most contested real estate on earth.

Few countries have so much geographic variety packed into such a small space. Distances are short, so you can relax on a Mediterranean beach one day, spend the next floating in the mineral-rich waters of the Dead Sea, and the day after that scuba diving in the Red Sea. Hikers can trek the length of the country on the Israel National Trail, splash through seasonal streams as they tumble towards the Jordan, explore spring-fed oases tucked into the arid bluffs above the Dead Sea, and explore the multicoloured sandstone formations of Makhtesh Ramon. Many trails are ideal for mountain biking.

By Daniel Robinson, Author

One of the things I most enjoy about life in Israel is the exuberant diversity. Plenty of people look like characters in a Middle Eastern epic, but more interesting are the women and men who defy stereotypes and convention, crossing religious, cultural, artistic and culinary boundaries to bridge seemingly irreconcilable differences. The results played out against a backdrop of desert wildflowers, sandy beaches, snowy peaks and cityscapes both modern and ancient are inspiring, confounding, contradictory and, not infrequently, astonishingly delicious!

Thanks to the painstaking work of generations of archaeologists, modern-day visitors can explore the 10,000-year-old mud-brick relics of Jericho, enter into the world of David and Solomon in Jerusalems City of David, and twin a visit to Masada, with its dramatic tale of resistance to the mighty legions of Rome, with a tour of the thoroughfares and theatres of Beit Shean, still pulsing with Roman opulence. Many of the countrys most extraordinary finds including a 1st-century-BCE manuscript of the book of Isaiah (one of the Dead Sea Scrolls) are on display in Jerusalems Israel Museum.

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Israel & the Palestinian Territories - Lonely Planet

Israel – State

Posted By on August 21, 2015

Country Profiles Select a Country or Other Area Afghanistan Albania Algeria Andorra Angola Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas, The Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Brazil Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burma Burundi Cabo Verde Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad Chile China Colombia Comoros Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Republic of the Costa Rica Cote d'Ivoire Croatia Cuba Curacao Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Fiji Finland France Gabon Gambia, The Georgia Germany Ghana Greece Grenada Guatemala Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti Holy See Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Kosovo Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macau Macedonia Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Mauritania Mauritius Mexico Micronesia Moldova Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Morocco Mozambique Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands Netherlands Antilles New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria North Korea Norway Oman Pakistan Palau Palestinian Territories Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Qatar Romania Russia Rwanda Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Samoa San Marino Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Sint Maarten Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Korea South Sudan Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Suriname Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syria Taiwan Tajikistan Tanzania Thailand Timor-Leste Togo Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela Vietnam Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe

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Israel - State

Israel – Nations Online

Posted By on August 21, 2015

Official Name: Medinat Yisra'el short form: Yisra'el int'l long form: State of Israel int'l short form: Israel

ISO Country Code: il

Time: Actual Time: Fri-Aug-21 08:42 Local Time = UTC +2h Daylight Saving Time (DST) April - Oktober (UTC +3).

Country Calling Code: +972

Capital City: Jerusalem (Israel proclaimed Jerusalem as its capital in 1950. But nearly all countries maintain their embassies in Tel Aviv)

Other Cities: Haifa, Nazareth, Tel Aviv

Government: Type: Parliamentary democracy Independence: 14 May 1948 Constitution: no formal constitution

Geography: Location: Middle East, bordering the Mediterranean Sea, between Egypt and Lebanon. Area: 22,000 km (8,494 sq. mi.); including the Golan Heights and East Jerusalem. Terrain: Plains, mountains, desert, and coast.

Climate: Temperate, except in desert areas.

People: Nationality: Israeli(s) Population: 7.9 million (2012) Ethnic groups: Jewish and non Arab Christians: 80%; Arabs 20%. Religions: Judaism, Islam, Christianity, Druze Languages: Hebrew (official), Arabic (official), Russian, English Literacy: total population 95% (female 93%; male 97%).

Natural resources: Timber, potash, copper ore, natural gas, phosphate rock, magnesium bromide, clays, sand.

Agriculture products: Citrus, vegetables, cotton; beef, poultry, dairy products.

Industries: High-technology projects (including aviation, communications, computer-aided design and manufactures, medical electronics), wood and paper products, potash and phosphates, food, beverages, and tobacco, caustic soda, cement, diamond cutting.

Currency: (New) Israeli Sheqel (ILS)

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Israel - Nations Online

Israel – Forbes

Posted By on August 21, 2015

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Israel has a technologically advanced market economy. Cut diamonds, high-technology equipment, and pharmaceuticals are among the leading exports. Its major imports include crude oil, grains, raw materials, and military equipment. Israel usually posts sizable trade deficits, which are covered by tourism and other service exports, as well as significant foreign investment inflows. Between 2004 and 2011, growth averaged nearly 5% per year, led by exports. The global financial crisis of 2008-09 spurred a brief recession in Israel, but the country entered the crisis with solid fundamentals, following years of prudent fiscal policy and a resilient banking sector. In 2010, Israel formally acceded to the OECD. Israel's economy also has weathered the Arab Spring because strong trade ties outside the Middle East have insulated the economy from spillover effects. The economy has recovered better than most advanced, comparably sized economies, but slowing demand domestically and internationally, and a strong shekel, have reduced forecasts for the next decade to the 3% level. Natural gas fields discovered off Israel's coast since 2009 have brightened Israel's energy security outlook. The Tamar and Leviathan fields were some of the world's largest offshore natural gas finds this past decade. The massive Leviathan field is not due to come online until 2018, but production from Tamar provided a one percentage point boost to Israel's GDP in 2013 and is expected to contribute 0.5% growth in 2014. In mid-2011, public protests arose around income inequality and rising housing and commodity prices. Israel's income inequality and poverty rates are among the highest of OECD countries and there is a broad perception among the public that a small number of "tycoons" have a cartel-like grip over the major parts of the economy. The government formed committees to address some of the grievances but has maintained that it will not engage in deficit spending to satisfy populist demands. In May 2013 the Israeli government, in a politically difficult process, passed an austerity budget to reign in the deficit and restore confidence in the government's fiscal position. Over the long term, Israel faces structural issues, including low labor participation rates for its fastest growing social segments - the ultra-orthodox and Arab-Israeli communities. Also, Israel's progressive, globally competitive, knowledge-based technology sector employs only 9% of the workforce, with the rest employed in manufacturing and services - sectors which face downward wage pressures from global competition. More

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Israel - Forbes

Next stop for GOP 2016ers: Israel – CNNPolitics.com

Posted By on August 20, 2015

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Serious presidential candidates, especially Republicans, now routinely extend the campaign trail to Israel to vow solidarity to the Jewish state, bolster their foreign policy credentials and impress pro-Israel donors and evangelical voters back home. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who Tuesday started a trip to the country, is only the latest in a long line.

The trips allow the candidates to look like statesmen abroad and -- nowadays -- draw contrasts with President Barack Obama and his estranged relationship with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. But are the hassles, expense and time off the trail really worth it for the candidates?

Fred Zeidman, a businessman and board member of the Republican Jewish Coalition, which often helps facilitate visits of high-profile Republicans, said that it was smart for presidential candidates to go to Israel to brief themselves on a region that he said provides the single biggest threat to the United States.

Washington battle rages over Iran nuclear deal's fate

"It is a genuine need on their part to truly understand not only the issues that are facing Israel, but the issues that are facing the U.S. You have got to have an understanding of them," said Zeidman, adding that those who argue the trips served merely as a political stage are wrong.

"You gain more by eating a corn dog in Iowa for three days than by going to Israel," Zeidman said, referring to the domestic political payoff to a campaign for visiting Jerusalem.

But politics often seem to be at the forefront of many visits.

The former Arkansas governor actively used his visit to Israel as a political platform, telling CNN in an interview that the Iran deal that Obama says will stop the Islamic Republic from obtaining a nuclear weapon was a capitulation and would actually lead to an Iranian bomb.

"We caved on all of it," Huckabee said on "The Situation Room" with Wolf Blitzer.

And in the highly polarized environment whipped up by the open feud between Netanyahu and Obama amidst the fallout over the nuclear deal, the trips by Republican candidates have become even more politically explosive.

Huckabee's visit comes just a few weeks after he charged in an interview with Breibart News that by agreeing to the deal, Obama was marching Israel to the "door of the oven," using stark Holocaust imagery to condemn the agreement.

But RJC spokesman Mark McNulty said that the trips have an important educational component. Candidates, especially those with scant experience of international diplomacy, are often taken aback by Israel's physical geography, which gives them new appreciation for the risks it faces.

"When you get there and you are able to drive or fly from one side to the next -- it gives you a real factual and instinctual feeling for how small it is and how precarious a position it is in as a country," McNulty said.

Former President George W. Bush experienced such an epiphany during his first visit to Israel in 1998, when he was taken on a helicopter ride over Israel by Ariel Sharon, then an Israeli minister and prime minister during Bush's term.

The episode hinted at a delayed diplomatic value for trips to Israel by White House hopefuls who later become president.

"He knew every inch of the land and it didn't seem like he intended to give any of it back," Bush wrote in his memoir "Decision Points" of Sharon.

"I was struck by Israel's vulnerability in a hostile neighborhood," continued Bush, who went on to become one of the most pro-Israel U.S. presidents in modern history.

In addition to such helicopter tours showcasing Israel's perilous geographic perch, candidates usually sit down with Israeli prime ministers and opposition leaders, scout areas in the firing line for Hamas rockets and visit the iconic ancient religious sites.

In addition to Huckabee, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, a foreign policy neophyte, visited Israel in May -- riding in a helicopter close to borders with Lebanon and Syria.

Walker said that the trip, during which he met Netanyahu and Israeli opposition leader Isaac Herzog, made a deep impression on him and, though he supported a two-state solution for the Israeli-Palestinian question, the Middle East was "not ready" for that right now.

Walker rival Marco Rubio was in Israel as part of Middle Eastern tour in 2013, a year when fellow Republican candidates Rick Perry and Rand Paul also visited. The only woman in the GOP field, Carly Fiorina, frequently name drops about her friendship with "Bibi Netanyahu" and Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor, has visited Israel multiple times.

Candidates often earn more than just an enhanced geopolitical perspective. Critics of Republicans see them as means to rack up points -- and dollars -- from pro-Israel and Jewish donors.

"People are going to Israel not on fact-finding missions, not to make themselves smarter on foreign policy, they are going to Israel to show to some very, very large donors they can pass their litmus tests for hawkish views on Israel," said Matt Dorf, who formerly worked as a liaison to the Jewish community at the Democratic National Committee.

When 2012 Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney visited, he held a fundraiser where seats cost five figures.

Israel's security is a preoccupation of a number of big donors who fund super PAC committees able to spend vast sums to support candidates.

"There is clearly a Sheldon Adelson primary," said Daniel Kalik, vice president of political affairs at J Street, a progressive pro-Israel advocacy group in Washington, referring to the casino magnate who has spent millions of dollars supporting Republican politicians.

But it's not only Jewish heavyweights like Adelson who progressive activists see as the target for Republicans' visits.

"Someone like Huckabee is also doing it for conservative primary voters," said Dorf, referring to Christian conservatives who revere the land of Israel for religious reasons and who play a significant role in nominating contests in early states like Iowa and South Carolina.

Obama's Iran nuclear deal rhetoric troubles American Jews

But it's not only Republican candidates who travel to Israel. In 2008, Obama stopped there as part of a European and Middle Eastern tour, meeting top political leaders including then-Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and then-President Shimon Peres.

He also visited with Netanyahu, then the Likud Party leader who headed the Israeli opposition -- the opening gambit in a political relationship that would develop into a bitter estrangement over Iran and the peace process and severely test U.S.-Israel ties.

Unlike many Republicans, Obama also traveled to the Palestinian administrative center in Ramallah in the West Bank, laying the groundwork for what would be several intense but futile attempts to solve the Palestinian question during his presidency.

The fact that Republican candidates rarely meet Palestinian politicians is in part a sign that they tend to side more closely with Israelis in the right-wing Likud Party of Netanyahu.

But it's also a sign that with the fractured peace process, their cause has become less prominent in the United States and throughout the wider Middle East, which is wracked with sectarian conflict, said Hussein Ibish, senior scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.

"Nobody cares about them, because there is no peace process," Ibish said.

It remains unclear whether any Democratic candidates will visit Israel during this campaign. The favorite for the nomination, Hillary Clinton, would not need a visit to familiarize herself with the place, having served as secretary of state and dealt with Israeli leaders dating back to her husband's administration.

And Clinton, like other Democratic candidates, already has a strong standing with Jewish voters, who tend to be socially liberal and side overwhelmingly with the Democratic Party in general elections.

Republicans are aware of this, and Zeidman said they hold few illusions about winning over the constituency by taking pictures of themselves at the Western Wall.

"They are unequivocally not going because they think they are going to woo the Jewish vote," said Zeidman.

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Next stop for GOP 2016ers: Israel - CNNPolitics.com

Makow – B’nai B’rith/ADL Does Not Represent Jews Jews …

Posted By on August 19, 2015

While claiming to represent "the interests of the worldwide Jewish Community" the B'nai B'rith http://www.bbidirect.org/ is in fact a Masonic Order that represents British Freemasonry, and shifts blame for its Luciferian "world government" agenda onto Jews in general. Thus while pretending to fight anti- Semitism, it actually puts Jews in jeopardy. The B'nai B'rith has no mandate to represent the Jewish people. But by equating opposition to the globalist agenda with anti-Semitism, it ensures that Jews are blamed for the emerging New World Order. For example, recently an Internet forum posted an item about B'nai B'rith advocacy of "Hate Laws" and Internet censorship. A member responded, "Those Jews are setting themselves up for extermination again." Thus "Jews" become the scapegoat for the Freemason agenda despite the fact that about 50 per cent of American Jews have nothing to do with Jewish organizations or religion, and in fact intermarry. http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=526039 Yes, many other Jews who are ignorant of the Masonic plan naively subscribe to Zionism and the phony "War on Terror." They might be surprised to learn that the Star of David featured on the Israeli flag was an occult symbol and not a Jewish symbol in the Old Testament; that most Israeli leaders, like American Presidents, are Freemasons; and that the new Israeli Supreme Court is loaded with Masonic symbolism and is located along Satanic "ley-lines." Financed and designed by the Rothschilds, it is the court of the New World Order. http://www.planetquo.com/Illuminati-Design-And -Symbolism-In-The-Israeli-Supreme-Court-Building The B'nai B'rith-ADL is probably active in your city. It approaches schools, private companies, and professional associations offering indoctrination in "diversity" and "hate crimes." It trains the local police to recognize political crimes. "Hate" is anything or anyone that interferes with the world government agenda, partly listed on the ADL website (appropriately in the left column). http://www.adl.org/ The B'nai B'rith is part of the Masonic Scottish Rite Order established in 1843. It's militant arm, the "Anti Defamation League" (ADL) was formed in 1913, the same year as the US Federal Reserve. According to a book, "The Ugly Truth About the ADL" (1992) http://www.truthinstitute.org/TEI_Book_AnalysisUTA.htm by the Executive Intelligence Review, the B'nai B'rith has always played a leading role in returning the US to the Masonic control of the British "Crown" (a.k.a The New World Order.) (See "The Jewish Conspiracy is British Imperialism" http://www.savethemales.ca/000447.html) "Not only is the ADL emphatically not a Jewish civil rights lobby; the ADL and its parent agency B'nai B'rith have been from their inception, arms of the British secret intelligence services and secret societies that are sworn enemies of the United States. The B'nai B'rith and the ADL have used their nominal Jewishness to conceal their actual allegiance and agenda." ("Ugly Truth" p. 3) The B'nai B'rith/ Scottish Rite was instrumental in starting the Ku Klux Klan and causing the US Civil War, which destroyed the flower of American manhood. A B'nai B'rith leader, Simon Wolf, was a Confederate spy and was implicated in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, the first of many such coup d'etats (i.e. the assassinations of Presidents Garfield, McKinley, Kennedy.) The book goes on to detail ADL links to organized crime, drugs and prostitution, domestic spying, the purchase of the US Congress and the removal of Christianity from public institutions. It says the ADL fought Texas legislation to prosecute satanic ritual crimes and lost numerous libel suits for defaming critics as "anti-Semites." http://www.americanfreepress.net/Censored/17_02 %20Victims%20Persevere-%20Court%20.htm ADL SHILLS FOR ELITE AGENDA As I have said, the mainspring of the New World Order is the private central bankers' need to translate their unlimited financial power, derived from their control of your government's credit, into permanent world institutions of political and social control. Millions of non-Jews and a disproportionate number of Jews have sold their souls to these Lucifer-loving bankers. Led by the Rothschilds and Rockefellers, the banking cartel is behind the Sept. 11 attacks, the Iraq war and the phony "War on Terror. They are behind the B'nai B'rith-ADL. Take their "Diversity" program for example.You cannot work for a large corporation or government today without receiving this insulting Stalinist indoctrination which forces us to accept differences regardless of their merit. A measure of the Masonic control of Western society is that "Diversity" was never debated or put to a vote. It became the official ideology as if by magic. Particularly distasteful is the ADL's "early childhood initiative" which targets 3-5 year-olds for indoctrination. They hide behind a smokescreen of platitudes but the net effect is that youngsters of European origin do not learn pride in their national or cultural heritage. The ADL boasts that 375,000 teachers and 12 million students have participated in these programs. http://www.adl.org/education/miller/">" In the workplace, "Diversity" discriminates against Europeans, and particularly white heterosexual males in favor of women, coloreds and homosexuals. People are chosen on the basis of this political profile instead of their competence, which would be truly non-discriminatory and fair, not-to-mention efficient. The purpose is to fragment society and destabilize the family so there is no coherent basis for resistance to world government. At the same time, the ADL actively promotes Zionist education and consciousness, including free trips to Israel for Jewish youth. Thus Jews are indoctrinated to promote the Masonic agenda and to take the fall when the time comes. http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=526039 CONCLUSION: THE TRAP Recently President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran told a student conference "Israel must be wiped off the map." He then joined a million-strong demonstration shouting "Death to Israel, Death to America" and recalled three ambassadors who apologized for his original statement. It is inconceivable that he would play into the Zionist hand by making such a rash statement, right on cue, unless he was also controlled by the Illuminati (i.e. the highest rank of Freemasonry.) The stated goal of the Illuminati is to foment a Third World War between the "political Zionists and the leaders of the Islamic world." Presumably Iran backed by Russia and China would face off against Israel, the US and the UK. http://www.halturnershow.com/ChineseDefenseMinisterTalksWarAgainstUS.html Albert Pike, the Head of the Scottish Rite in the 19th Century, continued: "The [third] war must be conducted in such a way that Islam (the Moslem Arabic World) and political Zionism (the State of Israel) mutually destroy each other." The rest of the world will be drawn in. "Meanwhile the other nations, once more divided on this issue will be constrained to fight to the point of complete physical, moral, spiritual and economical exhaustion..." At this point they will be constrained to accept the Luciferian one-world government. See my "Countdown to World War Three" http://www.savethemales.ca/000546.html Thus we are all pawns in a diabolical game from which no one, certainly not Jews or Israelis, will emerge victorious. We need to unite to resist those who lead us into this deadly trap. The B'nai B'rith-ADL doesn't represent Jews. It represents Freemasonry, which casts a morbid spell over the Anglo-American establishment and plots the demise of Western Civilization.

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Makow - B'nai B'rith/ADL Does Not Represent Jews Jews ...

In Historic Soccer Match, Gaza Team’s Loss Doesn’t Tell …

Posted By on August 19, 2015

When Gaza's leading soccer team took the field for the Palestine Cup finals in the West Bank, they were welcomed like national heroes. The crowd roared as the younger, less experienced Ittihad Shuja'iiya sprinted into Hebron's stadium Friday night to face off against the hometown team, Al Ahly.

Drums banging, horns blowing, the "Shuja'iiya" cheers drowned out the chants for the home team.

The second game in the two-part championship series marked the first time in 15 years that Israel had granted a Gaza-based team permission to play in the West Bank. The first leg was played in Gaza last week, also marking the first time a West Bank team had crossed into the Gaza Strip in a decade and a half. The Palestine Cup has traditionally pitted the best team from Gaza against the best team from the West Bank, but the two sides have not met on the same field since Israel tightened restrictions following the first intifada in 2001.

The winner of the Palestine Cup will represent Palestine in the next Asian Football Confederation Cup.

But making it into the championships was already a big win for Gaza, says Shuja'iiya team member Ibrahim Muajib Wadi.

"This game is a big victory for Shuja'iiya and a break of the seige."

"All of Gaza is Shuja'iiya," he said last week, clutching the club's green flag, surrounded by heaps of twisted metal and crumbled cement in the Shuja'iiya neighborhood where he's spent all 27 years of his life.

"We are all coming from underneath the rubble. Every player knows someone who was killed or injured, every player has had their house destroyed."

Molly Hunter / ABC News

Young football fans in the stands at the Palestine Cup final match.

The UN estimates 18,000 housing structures were destroyed in last summer's war, leaving 108,000 Palestinians homeless in Gaza. Most of the eastern neighborhood of Shuja'iiya was flattened in last year's war; one year later, little has changed.

Wadi's family was lucky. Just a block from the worst devastation, the house's foundation still stands and the family is slowly piecing it back together.

But last week, three of the Wadi brothers were staying in a hotel with the rest of Ittihad Shuja'iiya before the team's biggest match since any of them first donned the club's jersey. Ibrahim Wadi is also on the roster, though he has not been on the field in nearly two years due to injury.

A disappointed home crowd watched the first game at Gaza's Al Yarmouk stadium end in a draw, 0-0, meaning Shujaiiya would have to win on the road, in the West Bank, to take the cup.

Molly Hunter / ABC News

PHOTO: The Shuja'iiya Football Club before the match started. They would lose 1-2 to Hebron's Al-Ahly team.

Earlier this year, Israel agreed to allow freer movement of Palestinian athletes after Palestine tried in May to have Israel barred from soccer's world governing body, FIFA. Despite the agreement, the teams 39-mile trip was far from smooth.

Game two was postponed because seven members of the Shuja'iiya team were denied entry to Israel, according to the club. Four days later, Israeli security officials allowed 38 members of the team through the Erez Crossing, which links the Gaza Strip to Israel, after questioning four of the players for three hours.

After Erez, the team drove to Jerusalem where they prayed at the city's Al Aqsa Mosque, before continuing across an Israeli checkpoint into the West Bank.

But the club says Ibrahim Wadi's name was never approved and he was left behind. Wadi, who remains injured and cannot play, said he got no explanation for why he was not allowed to travel with the team.

The Israeli Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) didn't comment when asked specifically about Wadi's case, only telling ABC News that 38 team members had received permission to cross.

Molly Hunter / ABC News

PHOTO: Die hard soccer fans packed into Hebron's main stadium for the Palestine Cup final match.

When the game finally took place Friday, the delay had only served to intensify the sense of unity in the stands.

"No matter who wins, this is our night. This is Gaza's night. This is Palestine's night," Hebron native Muhammad, 19, yelled, his face pressed against a metal fence in the front row of the stands.

Molly Hunter / ABC News

PHOTO: One of the youngest fans at the Palestine Cup final match looks on nervously as the clock ticks down.

Despite the crowd's support, though, Hebron's more experienced team beat Shuja'iiya 2-1 to take home the Palestine Cup.

As the Shuja'iiya team's manager fell to his knees in tears on the field, the crowd cheered wildly when Wadi's brother Houssam, the team captain, accepted the second place trophy.

"In the end," said Wadi, who watched the game on TV from Gaza, "the only winner is Palestine."

Molly Hunter / ABC News

PHOTO: Kids cheering at the Palestine Cup final match.

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In Historic Soccer Match, Gaza Team's Loss Doesn't Tell ...


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