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Actress Amber Heard spotted vacationing in Tel Aviv – Australian Jewish News

Posted By on August 8, 2022

Actress Amber Heard has been spotted on vacation in Tel Aviv in recent days, just weeks after the end of her explosive defamation trial against ex-husband Johnny Depp.

Heard was first seen at a cafe in south Tel Aviv last Monday, dining with her friend, journalist and pro-Israel activist Eve Barlow. The actress was later photographed by paparazzi pushing her daughter in a stroller around Tel Aviv.

Heard was said to be hoping to keep a low profile during her visit to the Jewish state, following a media onslaught during the highly publicised trial that made headlines around the globe.

On Saturday, Halpers Bookstore, a used bookseller in Tel Aviv published a photo of Heard that it said was from her visit to the shop the previous Tuesday.

Say what you want about Amber Heard, (and what little I knew about her was negatively influenced by the media as well), the person who browsed my store last Tuesday for almost an hour, with her toddler baby girl and a couple of friends, was a modest, polite, friendly, inquisitive self-effacing customer with high literary tastes, the stores owner, J.C. Halper, wrote on Facebook.

Halper added that Heard was wearing a gold Jewish star necklace, and wrote that As an Israeli, I can only admire the fact that she has come here, has mixed with the people in stores, cafes, and on the street, and is generously supporting small businesses like mine.

The book store owner said Heard purchased Serious poetry books. Philosophy as well, and signed his guestbook, writing: What a gem to find in such a beautiful place.

Depp sued Heard for libel over a December 2018 op-ed she wrote in The Washington Post describing herself as a public figure representing domestic abuse. Depps lawyers alleged he was defamed by the article even though it never mentioned him by name. Heard filed counterclaims, alleging that Depps former lawyer defamed her by publicly characterising her abuse allegations as a hoax.

On June 2, the jury ordered Heard to pay Depp $10 million in compensatory damages and $5 million in punitive damages. The punitive damages were reduced to $350,000 under a state cap. The jury awarded Heard $2 million on her counterclaim.

The high-profile televised court case turned into a spectacle that offered a window into a vicious marriage. The case captivated millions around the world, including impassioned followers on social media who dissected everything from the actors mannerisms to the possible symbolism of what they were wearing.

Times of IsraelAP contributed to this report.

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Actress Amber Heard spotted vacationing in Tel Aviv - Australian Jewish News

This Jewish Ukrainian professor could still be teaching. He chose to go to war instead. – Forward

Posted By on August 8, 2022

Political science professor Maksym Gon is at the front in the Donbas region of Ukraine, defending the country from the Russian army. Courtesy of Maksym Gon

By Helen ChervitzAugust 04, 2022

Shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine, a Jewish political science professor was handed a machine gun, and set out to the Eastern part of Ukraine to defend the civic values he had spent years imparting to his students.

At 56, Maksym Gon is no young soldier. And while he was drafted into the Ukrainian army, he did not have to go to war. University professors are exempt from service, and he already had his exemption in hand.

But Gon decided to go anyway. In February, during the first week of the conflict, the army put him on a train to Dnepr, and from there a bus to the front in the Donbas region to join the fighting. He looks forward to the day he can return to teaching and scholarship Gon has authored several books and more than 200 papers. But hes not leaving, he said, until hes killed, wounded or the war ends.

Here is his story, as told to Helen Chervitz, the Forwards correspondent in Kyiv, who with the permission of Gons commanding officer interviewed him over WhatsApp and email.

Translated from Ukrainian, this interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Why did you join the army when you could have remained in safety?

For more than a dozen years I had been teaching students what civic duty is. For me, those words mean something. We must defend our right to freedom in the broadest sense of the word. Ukrainians do not want to become an internal colony of the Russian Empire again. We do not want to return to the totalitarian society that modern Russia is.

Also, I believe that those of us who have already turned gray should be the first to go to war and not the boys who are just beginning to live their lives.

What did your family think about your decision to fight?

My wife supported my decision. My daughter on the eve of the invasion flew with her husband to Egypt on vacation, and then ended up as a refugee in Poland.

We didnt want to worry our daughter, so we were not totally honest with her. We told her that I was volunteering to help the war effort, always on the road, and could rarely be reached. This went on for some time. Eventually, my wife told our daughter the truth. Despite all the fears, my family understands that it was the right thing to do.

But since the day I mobilized, I have had some trouble communicating with them. The aggressors are fighting not only against the military but also against civilians, mercilessly destroying military but also civilian infrastructure.

What was your childhood like? What was it like growing up Jewish in Ukraine?

I grew up in the late 1960s and early 1970s. My brother and I were born in the Western Ukrainian city of Ivano-Frankivsk, and graduated from a secondary school in nearby Rivne.

We were raised in the world of books there was a huge library in our house. Otherwise our childhood was rather typical: school, sports, music classes.

But I had no experience with Judaism. My parents, brought up under the Soviet regime, were both atheists.

Yet, I was conscious of the fact that Im Jewish. My father explained that to me when I was in high school, while showing me a book about the Nuremberg trials. There was a part describing the execution of Jews in the town of Dubno, not far from Rivne.

I remember my brother reprimanding me when he learned that I was ashamed of my Jewish roots to be a Jew in the Soviet Union, I would say, was not considered something to be proud of. But I was not guided by the precepts of Judaism and I remain outside the world of religion. My parents didnt give us a Jewish education, and the Soviet system definitely didnt.

In truth, my Jewish identity is far from a determining factor in my decisions and actions. I am among those who oppose the aggressor because I want a simple thing: my daughter, relatives, and citizens of Ukraine as a nation to live in a democratic society. We, Jews and not-Jews, are all united in defending our homeland from a terrorist state for the right to have a future as an independent nation.

Have you experienced antisemitism?

When I was younger, during Soviet times, I served in the Russian army, and experienced prejudice because I was Jewish. This sort of prejudice when I was younger has made me not want to reveal that Im Jewish.

I will tell you a funny story from when I was in the Soviet army. One day I was sitting in a smoking room with another Jew, Sasha Huberman. Two guys from Central Asia come and turn to us and say: Guys, we heard that there are two Jews serving in our unit. What do Jews look like? Where can they be found?

What would you like people outside Ukraine to know about the war?

The democratic world needs to know about Russias aggression against the sovereign Ukrainian state. It needs to know about Russias many war crimes, and how its commiting genocide against the people of Ukraine. I could go on, but Europeans and Americans must understand that Russian President Vladimir Putin aims to restore the Soviet empire, and revive a terrorist state that would threaten everyone.

Are you well outfitted and supplied?

I received a military uniform and a machine gun on the day of mobilization. There was some delay before I received a helmet, body armor, and a first aid kit.

Have you lost friends during the war?

Fortunately, not. But two of them are seriously wounded.

How long are you going to be at the front?

Hopefully until the end of the war. Leaving the front before that means being wounded or killed. But I still have plans for the postwar future.I plan to go back to Rivne University, where I headed the political science department and most recently taught in the Department of World History.

I strongly believe that I still have a lot to say to the youth. I also want to write a book about what I have seen in the war and share my experiences.

How do you feel about Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy? What does it mean to you that hes Jewish?

By and large, nothing. I did not like his populist slogans during the presidential campaign. I didnt vote for him. But his win signified that Ukrainian society had achieved a level of democracy where it could support any candidate, regardless of his origin or religion.

Zelenskyy has tremendous support now. We will see how his political career proceeds. The image of the Jews in modern Ukraine will largely depend on this.

Have you ever thought about leaving the front?

To be honest, yes. Both the physical and psychological fatigue have taken their toll. The scale of artillery and rocket attacks has not yet significantly decreased in the Donbas, and the prospect of dying or becoming disabled is scary.

However, were I to leave, someone else would have to take my place. It will not be easy for him either, and his relatives will be waiting for him at home as mine do. Thats why Im not leaving the front lines.

What would you say to young people who have avoided the draft?

In my observation, the average age of soldiers in the Ukrainian army is between 35 and 40, though many young people fight as well. Of course there are those in Ukraine who hide and evade the draft.

I would appeal to their consciences. Sooner or later they will have to ask themselves why they didnt join the army and failed to protect the 350 Ukrainian children who have already died in this war, and others who have had to endure the horrors of occupation, bombing and shelling. Evading the draft is a moral question, and not an acceptable choice for the vast majority of the youth of Ukraine.

What have you learned from your time at the front?

I know the meaning of human life. I also know though it would seem unlikely for someone in my profession how to sleep in a sleeping bag on the ground, and many other skills you learn in the military.

This war has also taught all of us in the army, and Ukrainians citizens in general, that independence is not just a word from the dictionary.Independence is essential for Ukrainians, with its numerous ethnic groups and different faiths, to belong to their communities. That includes, of course, Jews.

Helen Chervitz is an American fashion writer in Kyiv, but since the Russian invasion has been writing about living in a country at war.

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This Jewish Ukrainian professor could still be teaching. He chose to go to war instead. - Forward

Berkeley’s 36-year-old Jewish deli was in limbo. Now owners are passing the torch to a new generation – San Francisco Chronicle

Posted By on August 8, 2022

Fans of Sauls Restaurant and Delicatessen, Berkeleys beloved 36-year-old Jewish deli, can finally stop dining in fear.

For years, longtime owners Karen Adelman and Peter Levitt have made it known that they want to retire. And retirement can often lead to closing, as is often the case at historic Bay Area restaurants. But Adelman and Levitt have just finalized a deal with the goal of ensuring Sauls lives on.

Kitchen manager Jesus Chuy Mendoza and Sam Tobis, owner of Oakland Jewish bakery Grand Bakery, will be joining Adelman and Levitt as the delicatessens newest partners. Adelman and Levitt will remain on the scene but will play gradually smaller roles at the Berkeley institution, as first reported by J. Despite the changing of hands, there is no formal sale.

It is both a re-energizing and a continuation. Nobody has to be afraid, Levitt said. Its not like an outsider is coming to change things up.

New owners Sam Tobin (left) and Jose De Jesus Mendoza (right) flank house manager Will Bekker inside the office at Sauls Restaurant and Delicatessen while longtime owners Karen Adelman and Peter Levitt, who are retiring, stand at the back.

This development means Sauls will, largely, stay the same. Couples will still gather over matzo ball soup for lunch. Families will still order rounds of bagels, eggs and lox for weekend brunch, then line up at the deli counter for slices of babka and whitefish salad by the pound. The pastrami will still be towered high on sandwiches, and the popular latke tent will still be an annual Hanukkah event.

The main departure is the start of its own in-house baking program, which will manufacture pastries and desserts like rugelach, black-and-white cookies, cheesecake and many more items. (Grand Bakery will remain kosher at a separate facility, but Sauls Delis bakery operation will not be kosher.) Israel Bustos, a longtime Sauls cook, will handle this part of the operation inside a room that was formerly an office.

Sam and Chuy made my desk and Karens desk disappear and replaced them with a beautiful, spanking-new bakery that is up and running a.m. to p.m. Its a huge improvement in quality, Levitt said.

Daniel Kretzer delivers a pastrami sandwich to a customer at Sauls Restaurant and Delicatessen in Berkeley.

The long-standing owners have lots in common with the incoming partners. Adelman started at Sauls as a waitress in 1989, while Levitt, a Chez Panisse alum, arrived in 1995 to helm the kitchen. They formed a partnership in 1996 to take over the restaurant from past owner Andra Lichtenstein.

Similarly, Mendoza arrived as a cook, working his way up to kitchen manager, a position he has held for a decade now. Meanwhile, Tobis relationship with Sauls began with his 2017 acquisition of Grand Bakery, a longtime vendor to Sauls. He has become more involved at Sauls over the past several months, with a steady presence across the dining room and behind the counter.

Daniel Kretzer hands a customer a to-go order at Sauls Restaurant and Delicatessen in Berkeley.

Peter has taught me everything about the restaurant and I have been able to help him in managing the kitchen for a long time, Mendoza said. Ive been doing everything based on his suggestions.

The news comes after the restaurants many struggles brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic, which saw Sauls add an outdoor dining area and rely on takeout more than ever before. It also comes after a sale that fell through in escrow in March 2020, with Adelman and Levitt ready to retire after the transaction.

We had already sort of levitated from excitement about that new stage of our life, but we had to come back and be really scrappy and keep the restaurant going during that period, Adelman said. It was quite a shock, but were pretty good at reacting to things. And I think this is a better situation.

A couple sit down to lunch at Sauls Restaurant and Delicatessen in Berkeley.

In all, Adelman and Levitt are optimistic about Sauls legacy carrying on with the next generation.

When we got here, we had black hair and dark hair, and now we have gray hair, Adelman said. But (Mendoza and Tobis) are seasoned, experienced, and then theres also a youthful energy and a vision. ... I think altogether, thats pretty good.

Mario Cortez is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: mario.cortez@sfchronicle.com

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Berkeley's 36-year-old Jewish deli was in limbo. Now owners are passing the torch to a new generation - San Francisco Chronicle

‘Operation Breaking Dawn’: Israel agrees to Egypt-brokered ceasefire – Intermountain Jewish News

Posted By on August 8, 2022

This is a developing story and is being updated.

Terrorists in the Gaza Strip on Sunday night fired heavy barrages of rockets at southern and central Israel, as an Egypt-mediated ceasefire between the sides came into effect at 11:30 p.m. local time.

A statement from the Israeli Prime Ministers Office confirmed that a truce had been reached, and thanked Egyptian mediators for their efforts.

A cloud of smoke rises after a rocket launched from the Gaza Strip hit an open field near Sderot on Aug. 7, 2022. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

If the ceasefire is violated, the statement qualified, Israel maintains the right to respond strongly. We will not allow any disruption to the lives of the citizens of the State of Israel.

According to several media reports, Jerusalem had agreed to an earlier Cairo-brokered truce, but PIJ held up the deal over a demand that Egyptian officials work towards the release of two terrorists jailed in Israel.

The reports also cited Israeli government sources as saying that Jerusalem had previously agreed to a humanitarian pause in the fighting but PIJ rejected the related terms.

Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi was quoted by media as saying on Saturday that his envoys have been engaged around the clock with a view to preventing the situation from spiraling out of control.

The Israel Defense Forcess Operation Breaking Dawn entered its third day on Sunday, as PIJ resumed firing rockets into the Jewish state. As of Sunday afternoon, terrorists from Gaza had fired some 800 projectiles towards Israel since hostilities broke out, according to the IDF.

The Iron Dome missile defense system successfully intercepted about 97 percent of the projectiles that were headed for populated regions. About 180 of the rockets fell short in Gaza, killing at least nine people, said the IDF.

The military added that it has struck some 140 assets belonging to PIJ in Gaza since launching Operation Breaking Dawn on Friday afternoon.

The Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) director reportedly told members of the Security Cabinet on Saturday night that Jerusalem had already achieved most of its objectives in the operation.

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'Operation Breaking Dawn': Israel agrees to Egypt-brokered ceasefire - Intermountain Jewish News

33rd Annual Jewish Family Service House Tour Raises $60,000; Proceeds Benefit The Lynn Kramer Village by the Shore – South Jersey Observer

Posted By on August 8, 2022

CVL Designs professionals Tracy Simone and Tia Bucci showcase an impeccably appointed home on Union Avenue in Margate at the 33rd Annual JFS House Tour on August 1st. Guests from the tri-state area attended the event which raised $60,000 to support The Lynn Kramer Village by the Shore program. (Photo and content provided by Jewish Family Service of Atlantic & Cape May Counties)

More than 500 attendees enjoyed an afternoon of strolling through six stunning homes in Longport and Margate during the 33rd Annual Jewish Family Service House Tour.

The event, sponsored by Surroundings Interiors, raised $60,000 to benefit The Lynn Kramer Village by the Shore at JFS program which provides essential transportation, care coordination, meal delivery, and socialization for adults (50+).

At JFS, we were delighted to host the popular House Tour after a two-year hiatus. Attendees enjoyed an exclusive look inside Downbeach homes which featured state-of-the-art kitchens, ornate fixtures and hardware, beautiful dcor, breathtaking views, and more. We are thankful to the homeowners who graciously opened the doors to their residences for this agency fundraiser, said Andrea Steinberg, JFS Chief Executive Officer.

A special thanks to the House Tour committee Rene Kane, Hope Morgan, Hanna Newcomer, Jodi Reece, Sarah Rosenthal, Beth Shor, Pam Sinderbrand, Michele Sloane, and Lesley Weinberg who organized the successful event, ensuring guests and homeowners alike had a memorable experience. In addition, nearly 90 volunteers dedicated their day to help make the fundraising event a success.

More than 70 VIPs took the tour to the next level with door-to-door transportation, priority entry into the homes, and gift bags.

House Tour VIP sponsors included Avalon Flooring, Cooper Levenson, and The Novelli Team. As part of the fundraiser, Oasis Property Group served as the Lunch sponsor and attendees enjoyed a delicious selection of food offered by Essls Dugout and TacocaT food trucks.

House sponsors included Berkshire Hathaway, Candice Adler Designs, Coast Tile & Marble Supply, Colmar Kitchen and Bath, Fox Rehabilitation, Geoscape Solar, Island Builders, JAB Design Group, Macys, Right at Home, Roth-Goldstein Memorial Chapel, and TJC Architect.

Trade sponsors were Clays Climate Control, Euro Line Designe, and Le Fashion Cottage. In addition, attendees enjoyed shopping and picked up information and goodies from Pop-Up sponsors Island Builders, Sothebys International Realty, Sunset Outpost, and Willis of Pennsylvania. Also, each home featured on-site sponsors so attendees were able to interact with kitchen designers, architects, and builders.

The Lynn Kramer Village by the Shore at JFS is a membership program that provides a variety of concierge, volunteer, professional services and socialization for adults (50+) in the community.

With more than 200 members, including 25 Holocaust survivors, the program offers Intergenerational Events, Transportation, Grocery Shopping and Delivery, Kosher Meals on Wheels, Care Coordination, and more.

Lucky raffle ticketholders won fabulous prizes including a $200 Downbeach Express gift card, Overnight Stay and Dinner at Ocean Casino Resort, and a stunning Lagos necklace from Roberts Fine Jewelers, as well as dining, shopping and lifestyle gift certificates from Dinos Subs and Pizza, Docks Oyster House, Hannah Gs, Knit Wit, Latrice Fashion, New Jersey Yoga Zone, Performance Pickleball, Sasscers Cheesecakes, and Venturas Greenhouse.

In addition, Walmart, Resorts Casino Hotel and Starkman Distributors graciously donated bottled water and snacks.

The House Tour committee is already searching for homes for next years tour, scheduled to take place on August 7, 2023.

For more information, contact Beth Joseph at bjoseph@jfsatlantic.org. For information on JFS programs and services visit http://www.jfsatlantic.org.

About Jewish Family Service

Jewish Family Service of Atlantic & Cape May Counties (JFS) encourages strong families, thriving children, healthy adults, energized seniors, and vital communities.

With dozens of program areas, JFS specializes in counseling, mental health services, homeless programs, vocational services, adult and older adult services, and also hosts an on-site food pantry.

The agency impacts 13,000 lives throughout Atlantic and Cape May Counties each year.

JFS mission is to motivate and empower people to realize their potential and enhance their quality of life.

In keeping with Jewish values and the spirit of tikkun olam (healing the world), JFS provides services with integrity, compassion, respect and professionalism regardless of their religion, race, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, age, or background.

For more information or to keep up-to-date with events and programs, visit JFS at jfsatlantic.org or follow on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn.

*Post has been updated.

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33rd Annual Jewish Family Service House Tour Raises $60,000; Proceeds Benefit The Lynn Kramer Village by the Shore - South Jersey Observer

Mormons are being oppressed and mocked on TV. We’re not alone. – Religion News Service

Posted By on August 8, 2022

(RNS) Under the Banner of Heaven. Keep Sweet. Murder Among the Mormons. LuLaRich. Mormon No More.

All five of the above are 2021 or 2022 series streaming on television. All five present Mormonism in an unflattering light in some respect Banner being the worst of the lot by locating Mormonism as a religion that breeds violent men. As the only partly fictionalized series in this string of documentaries, Banner takes massive liberties with 19th-century LDS history.

The other entries are more nuanced, but all shine a light on darker aspects of the Mormon faith and its culture.

In Keep Sweet, its the terror of polygamy in the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, a breakaway sect that became known for the forced marriage of teenage girls during the reign of Warren Jeffs, the groups prophet.

In Murder Among the Mormons, its the 1985 bombings engineered by forger Mark Hofmann. As depicted in this documentary, leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints were among those taken in by Hofmanns deceptions.

In LuLaRich, its active Latter-day Saints who are the perpetrators of lies and fraud, as the couple who founded the LuLaRoe leggings company are shown blithely defrauding their workers and customers even as they spout passages from the Book of Mormon at corporate events.

Even Mormon No More, likely the most emotionally sensitive of the bunch, still conveys the underlying message that its practically impossible for anyone to be loving, LGBTQ-affirming and true to themselves while remaining members of the church.

Its been a tough couple of years for Latter-day Saints on TV.

A reporter asked me recently if we are living in another Mormon Moment, referring to the national scrutiny that fixated on Mormonism during Mitt Romneys 2012 run for the presidency. Its possible. It does seem that every decade or so, the general public remembers that Mormons exist, and then that they dont like us much. Before 2012, it was the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City that focused the spotlight on us sometimes in a flattering light, but often in a negative one.

For me the question is: Is the current wave happening to us more than to other faiths? Are Mormons being singled out for religious persecution, as some members claim? These people are deeply attuned to (and hurt by) unflattering portrayals of our religion on the small screen, and they are crying foul.

I can understand the feeling, but lets put the recent spate of attention in some context. In particular, lets place it in the context of two trends happening in America simultaneously.

First, theres simply an explosion of television content in the last five years or so. Its not just that there are more docuseries on Mormonism; its that there are more docuseries, period.

In fact, that whole genre is exploding. It used to be that a documentary filmmaker worked for years to create a roughly two-hour film that would get limited distribution in theaters often, in small urban arthouses rather than the megaplexes. Now, opportunities exist for the same filmmakers to reach a much wider viewing audience on streaming platforms and to have more hours of content. A docuseries might run four, six or even eight hours.

The public has responded. IndieWire reports that in 2021, documentaries and docuseries had risen to comprise 16% of all Netflix original content. On HBO, it was 18%; on Disney+ and Amazon Prime, it was a quarter.

The second trend is the rise of nonreligion and ex-religion in the United States. According to Pew, in 2007 only 16% of Americans said they had no religion. In 2021, it had nearly doubled to 29%.

The fastest-growing religious segment in America is made up of those who profess no religion.

In the context of those two trends, its important to realize its not just Mormonism thats being criticized. Catholicism is seeing the worst of its dirty laundry aired in public: the sex abuse crisis that the church covered up for years. Thousands of kids were molested by priests, and they are telling their stories in docuseries such as Procession (Netflix, 2021), as well as dramatizations such as 2015s Spotlight, which won the Academy Award for Best Picture.

Evangelicals havent fared well lately, either. While Jesus Camp (2006) may be the defining documentary of this whole genre, more recent additions have included The Family, a 2019 Netflix production that looks at the outsize and shadowy role some evangelical Protestants have played in conservative politics.

And lets not forget The Eyes of Tammy Faye, a 2021 dramatization of the rise and fall of TVs much-mocked, cosmetically enhanced televangelist.

Orthodox Judaism has had its turn, too: In addition to the 2017 feature film Disobedience, a host of series have depicted the tensions of life in closed, deeply conservative Hasidic communities. One of Us and My Unorthodox Life, both from Netflix in 2021, follow former members as they try to make their way in the world after leaving their faith. Those may have been greenlighted by the tremendous success of Netflixs breakout 2020 hit Unorthodox, based on Deborah Feldmans 2012 memoir of the same name.

As a viewer, I was disturbed by the go-for-the-jugular additions Netflix made to Feldmans story. In the show, the main character, Esty, flees to Europe and is chased there by a gun-wielding Hasidic thug who is determined to bring her in line. Its a ridiculous and gratuitous subplot that is nowhere in Feldmans book.

Its scary to give someone your story for the screen because you cant control it, she told The New York Times. You can say that again.

If Mormons are being persecuted on television, then theyre in good company. Religion in general is being carefully scrutinized, especially its more conservative expressions. Given the trend lines about people leaving religion in high numbers, we can expect this to continue. Im aware of at least two new docuseries being made now about Mormonism, and Im sure more will be on the way.

Its safe to guess that future portrayals of our faith may be even less flattering. Consider the recentinvestigative AP news story about how the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints long covered up the sexual abuse of minors and encouraged bishops not to report it to the police.

Its hard to remember all the good the church does in the world, which is considerable, when faced with the reality of how many times it has done the wrong thing.

Related:

Faithful Mormons wont be happy with Hulus Under the Banner of Heaven

Hulus Mormon No More rings true

LuLaRoe and the shadow side of Mormon gender roles

Netflix docuseries Murder among the Mormons is TV worth watching

Link:

Mormons are being oppressed and mocked on TV. We're not alone. - Religion News Service

Leaked audio sheds light on "election integrity" events tied to Trump, RNC – NPR

Posted By on August 6, 2022

Attorney Cleta Mitchell is a senior legal fellow with the nonprofit Conservative Partnership Institute in Washington, D.C. The group has hosted "Election Integrity" summits in key states around the country, which have featured speakers from the Republican National Committee. Matt Rourke/AP hide caption

Attorney Cleta Mitchell is a senior legal fellow with the nonprofit Conservative Partnership Institute in Washington, D.C. The group has hosted "Election Integrity" summits in key states around the country, which have featured speakers from the Republican National Committee.

A prominent conservative attorney, who worked with former President Donald Trump on efforts to overturn the 2020 election, has been leading "Election Integrity" summits in swing states across the country, raising concerns about how false claims about a "stolen" election may affect future contests.

Leaked audio from those summits, which has been shared with NPR and other news outlets, provides an inside view of those efforts, which have been backed by key figures from Trump's orbit and funding from Trump's political operation. Officials from the Republican National Committee have also attended these events.

The attorney and guiding force behind these summits is named Cleta Mitchell. She has come under intense scrutiny ever since she took part in a Jan. 2, 2021 call to Georgia election officials, in which Trump pressured those officials to reverse the outcome.

"I only need 11,000 votes fellas, I need 11,000 votes," Trump said on the call. "Give me a break. You know we have that in spades already."

During the call, Mitchell floated multiple allegations of voter fraud, which Georgia's secretary of state himself a conservative Republican said his office had investigated and debunked.

Soon after audio of the call was released, Mitchell resigned under pressure from her position as partner with the law firm Foley & Lardner, which expressed concern with her participation on the call.

The congressional committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol has subpoenaed Mitchell. In addition to her participation on the call with Georgia election officials, the committee also released an email indicating that two days after the 2020 election, Mitchell suggested that state legislators could choose which electors to send to the Electoral College. That strategy could have allowed pro-Trump electors to essentially disregard their states' election results.

The district attorney of Fulton County, Ga., also secured a subpoena for Mitchell to testify as part of a separate criminal investigation into Trump's election efforts.

As those investigations have pressed forward, Mitchell has been working for a conservative nonprofit group based in Washington, D.C., called the Conservative Partnership Institute (CPI), where "now I get to work on election integrity every single day," she recently said. Former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows is a senior partner at CPI, and Trump's Save America political action committee gave $1 million to CPI last summer. Under the umbrella of CPI, Mitchell runs the "Election Integrity Network."

With the support of those connections and funding, CPI has hosted "Election Integrity Summits" in several states this year, including Michigan, North Carolina, Nevada, Arizona and Pennsylvania. "We're taking back our election systems," Mitchell told former Trump adviser Steve Bannon earlier this year, with the help of "an election integrity movement that is populated and driven by people who supported President Trump and who saw their votes literally cast aside."

Documented, a Washington, D.C.-based watchdog group that reports on the influence of corporations and wealthy people in politics, obtained leaked recordings from multiple events. They shared hours of tape from a March 31, 2022 summit just outside of Harrisburg, Pa., with NPR and other news outlets.

On its face, neither the mobilization of poll watchers nor increased scrutiny of election officials is necessarily concerning or even unusual. Brendan Fischer, the deputy executive director of Documented, says the difference with these events is their reliance on false and debunked information about the 2020 election.

"The concern is that the conspiracy theorists who see fraud around every corner are going to disrupt voting and the administration of elections," said Fischer.

Election officials have described receiving a barrage of threats since the 2020 election. On Monday, the Department of Justice announced that election officials and workers had reported receiving about a thousand "hostile or harassing" contacts. More than 100 of those contacts, the department said, "met the threshold for a federal criminal investigation."

Mitchell, for her part, has stressed the importance of volunteers remaining polite. "Never lose your temper or raise your voice," the group's "Citizen's Guide" states.

CPI did not respond to multiple requests for comment about their events.

Here are four takeaways from the recordings:

Though Mitchell has attracted intense scrutiny for her fraud claims about the 2020 election, an RNC official praised Mitchell and expressed a degree of deference to her work.

Joshua Findlay, the RNC's national director for election integrity, opened his remarks by thanking Mitchell.

"I am very grateful, first of all, that you're putting these on," said Findlay. "And, second of all, that we're invited. I flew overnight from meetings we had in Nevada to be here just for this."

Findlay went on to suggest that the RNC would take its cues from Mitchell.

"Cleta Mitchell, she's like the best election and election law expert out here. We're not going to tell her what to do," Findlay said. "But hopefully we can provide some infrastructure and some muscle and that's what we want to do."

Andrea Raffle, the RNC's director of election integrity for the state of Pennsylvania, also spoke at the event, and discussed ways for people to get involved in election offices. One goal of that effort, Findlay and Raffle explained, was to connect both volunteer and paid election workers with the Republican party's "war room," which could help address problems at the polls and inform the party's potential legal challenges.

"The RNC works with other groups who have an interest in promoting election integrity but the party's efforts are independent from any outside organization," said Emma Vaughn, a spokesperson for the RNC. "As such, the RNC is not a part of any formal coalition with outside groups."

Vaughn said that in places where the RNC had already engaged in "election integrity" efforts, "elections have run smoothly, and turnout has increased."

Michael Roman, who served as director of election day operations for the Trump 2020 campaign, also took part in the summit.

About a month prior, Roman was subpoenaed by the Jan. 6 committee in Congress.

"The Select Committee is in possession of communications reflecting your involvement in a coordinated strategy to contact Republican members of state legislatures in certain states that former President Trump had lost and urge them to 'reclaim' their authority by sending an alternate slate of electors that would support former President Trump," said committee chair Bennie Thompson in a letter to Roman regarding the subpoena. "It appears that you helped direct the Trump campaign staffers participating in this effort."

Roman did not respond to NPR's request for comment.

According to the Washington Post, a grand jury in Washington has also subpoenaed records of communications between Arizona officials and Findlay, as well as several other Trump campaign staffers, as part of a Department of Justice investigation.

There is no indication Findlay himself is under investigation.

Throughout the event, several presenters suggested that it was especially important to closely monitor areas with large numbers of Democrats.

Doug McLinko, a county commissioner for Bradford County, Pa., said efforts to "clean up" voter rolls should be focused on Philadelphia and the surrounding areas, "Because that's the counties that are a problem. Yeah, we can go to the rural counties and we can clean up voter rolls. We need to do that. But let's be honest where it's at let's be honest where the steal was at."

At another point, a member of the audience from Philadelphia, who did not identify himself by name, said, "in certain sections of the city which are very dangerous because Black Lives Matter is there do we have and will we find people of color who are conservative number one and willing to work?"

Organizers for the event did not directly address the question, but said they were working on finding more volunteers for election monitoring positions in Philadelphia.

The comments about more racially diverse and predominantly Democratic areas were not limited to Pennsylvania.

The RNC's Findlay described Harris County, Texas, which includes the city of Houston, in similar terms.

"That's like the Philadelphia of Texas," said Findlay. "It's the county where we know all the problems are."

"Our job is not to win," said Christine Brim, a conservative activist from left-leaning Fairfax County, Va. "Our job is to lose less badly. And when you face that reality, when you're the blue county that can ruin a statewide vote, that really focuses what you're doing."

Toni Shuppe, the founder and CEO of Audit The Vote PA, was introduced at the summit as a leader of the state's "election integrity" coalition. She told NPR she is now working with a large number of groups in the state on those efforts.

As Shuppe recounted in a video posted to Facebook, she was in Washington, D.C., and outside the Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021 attack. She said she did not witness any of the violence that day, and things were peaceful where she was.

Shuppe has written that her path to political activism began, in part, by watching a 10-part three-hour online video called "The Fall Of The Cabal." The video promotes a wide variety of conspiracy theories, including some related to the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, to theories known as Pizzagate and QAnon. The Anti-Defamation League has described QAnon as "a wide-reaching conspiracy theory popular among a range of right-wing extremists," with "marked undertones of antisemitism and xenophobia."

"I don't know if any of the information in the video is true," Shuppe told NPR in an email. "But what if it is? The video opened my eyes to be more analytical and to question all narratives. I feel the same way about 9/11. Question all narratives."

In one startling scene from the video, the narrator claims that "worldwide, children are stolen and sold to elite pedophile rings," which then "drink the childrens' blood and they eat their flesh."

NPR asked Shuppe if she believed that specific claim.

"I have no idea," Shuppe responded. "Wish I knew. Great question though. Why don't you do some digging to figure that out and report back?"

Another participant at the event has used incendiary rhetoric in the past.

Ned Jones, the deputy director of the Election Integrity Network at CPI, gave a presentation on ways to hold local election officials accountable, including by filing public records requests.

During the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, Jones responded to a tweet about the breach of the Capitol building, "They don't say a word when BLM/Antifa burn cities. It's our turn! About time!"

He has also frequently tweeted about the possibility of a second "civil war."

Responding to a tweet about street violence during post-election protests in Washington state in December 2020, Jones wrote, "The Civil War has started in Olympia, WA! Let's roll Patriots!"

Jones did not respond to NPR's request for comment.

Continued here:
Leaked audio sheds light on "election integrity" events tied to Trump, RNC - NPR

ADL: Twitter removes only 5% of reported antisemitic posts J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on August 6, 2022

Twitter has an antisemitism problem, and its not doing nearly enough to combat it, according to an investigation by the Anti-Defamation League.

Twitters Failure to Enforce its Policy Against Antisemitism, the title of a statement published by the ADL on July 14, cites 225 tweets posted during a nine-week period in early 2022 that expressed anti-Jewish sentiment and that repeated antisemitic tropes, including conspiracy theories about Jewish power and greed, Holocaust denial and accusations of pedophilia.

After ADL reported the offending tweets to San Franciscobased Twitter, only 11 of them, or 5 percent of the total, were taken down by the platform, the agency said. That ratio is not good enough for ADL, which closely monitors antisemitic hate speech and acts of violence against Jews and others.

Twitter must enact its most severe consequences, the report read, and remove destructive, hateful content when reported by experts from the communities most impacted by such content.

Twitter did not respond to a request for comment.

The ADLs Silicon Valleybased Center for Technology and Society undertook the investigation, which retrieved 1 percent of all content on Twitter during a 24-hour window twice a week from Feb. 18 to April 21. The CTS filtered that content through its Online Hate Index, an algorithm designed to sift quickly through millions of posts and search for inarguably antisemitic hate speech. Human experts further narrowed the search down to 225 tweets that met the criteria.

One of those tweets said You are owned by jews and I cant imagine worse masters. Another said, Its not a demon who wants a pound of flesh, its a jew. Yet another said, in part, If anyone is going to hell, its the last few generations of Judeo Americans

Wrote ADL: As of May 24, 2022, 166 tweets of the 225 we initially reported to Twitter remain active on the platform. The remaining tweets have a potential reach of 254,455 users. While we know that Twitter removed 11 of the original 225 due to our directly reporting them, the reasons behind the removal of the other 48 are less clear.

Twitter told the ADL that some tweets were de-amplified (meaning they could not be shared or engaged with) and that others did not meet a particular threshold of hateful content on the platform, according to the ADL. The statement also noted Twitter claimed that tweets with one hateful comment were not subject to content moderation action but if a tweet had repeated hateful comments, it would be subject to content moderation.

Seth Brysk, the director of ADLs S.F.-based Central Pacific Region, said the ADL was very careful to include not only a cross-section of tweets, but we made sure these were the most egregious expressions of antisemitism. They were easy to spot.

Brysk said the tweets contained classic expressions of Jewish power and greed, and hate directed at other communities, and yet to this day, over three-quarters of them are still on the platform, in violation of their own policy.

Twitter policy, as stated in its Abusive Behavior section at help.twitter.com, expressly forbids threats of violence, Holocaust denial and the use of insults, profanity, or slurs with the purpose of harassing or intimidating others. Though the policy also notes that while some individuals may find certain terms to be offensive, we will not take action against every instance where insulting terms are used.

Consequences of violations include downranking and de-amplifying tweets, requiring tweet removal and banning violators from the platform.

The ADL decried Twitters response, noting that the decisions made by Twitter significantly minimize the impact of antisemitism and that hate more broadly has on individuals from targeted communities. It is neither enough to de-amplify hate nor wait for hate to rise to a certain threshold before taking action. If a swastika was painted on a public building, we would not tell a community to put up a sign in front of it telling passersby to avert their eyes or wait to take action until there were a few additional swastikas painted on the same building.

Brysk conceded that hate speech is not a precise term but added that there are policies among these companies that largely address some of these issues, but sometimes they dont get it right.

Only recently did Facebook start considering Holocaust denial as an expression of hate, he said. Social media companies need to be willing to center the experiences of communities targeted by hate. There may be expressions of hatred directed at the Jewish community that might not be fully understood by some.

Brysk echoed ADLs recommendations that social media companies boost enforcement of their anti-hate-speech terms of use, strive for greater transparency around these issues and place greater trust in input from targeted communities.

He warned of the dangers of allowing hate speech to proliferate on social media.

When denigrating and demonizing [groups and] referring to them as vermin, a cancer, and cockroaches becomes normalized, that starts to prepare [citizens] for the notion of eliminating these groups, Brysk said.

Originally posted here:
ADL: Twitter removes only 5% of reported antisemitic posts J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Biden Said it Best: You Don’t Have to Be Jewish to Be a Zionist – Jewish Journal

Posted By on August 6, 2022

On July 13, 2022, President Biden arrived in Israel for the tenth visit of his career. Addressing Israels President and Prime Minister, he gave inspiring remarks, stating passionately that you need not be a Jew to be a Zionist. Truer words have rarely been spoken. While the restoration of Jewish nationhood in the land of Israel has deep roots in the ancient faith, most Americans and freedom lovers around the world support the Jewish state, the only democracy in the Middle East. The truth is that Israel has deep roots in common with the worlds other free nations.

This is why Israel has been consistently supported by United States administrations, starting on the very day of Israels independence when Harry Truman was the first world leader to officially recognize Israel. As President Kennedy once said: The cause of Israel stands beyond Jewish life. In our pluralistic society it has not been merely a Jewish cause, any more than Irish independence was the cause merely of those of Irish descent, because wherever freedom exists, there we are all committed. And wherever it is endangered, there we are all endangered. In 1974, Richard Nixon became the first president to visit Israel; most presidents since have followed suit, deepening Americas commitment to its gallant ally.

From the very beginning, Zionism the movement for the re-establishment of a sovereign Jewish nation has counted non-Jews among its most enthusiastic supporters. In 1891, several years before the modern Zionist movement was formally organized, a petition known as the Blackstone Memorial was presented to President Benjamin Harrison calling for the return of the Jewish people to their historic homeland, signed by 431 prominent Americans, including J.P. Morgan, John D. Rockefeller, future President William McKinley, and numerous congresspeople, as well as several notable organizations, including the Washington Post and New York Times.

Its easy to understand the reason so many leaders support Zionism. As President Biden put it, the connection between the Israeli people and the American people is bone deep We dream together. In response to this statement, historian Gil Troy noted:

While belonging to that exclusive club of democracies, Israel and America belong to an even smaller subset of dreamocracies, countries founded around defining ideas, not just shared space America is forged by a shared commitment to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Similarly, Israel is more than a smaller, more contested, home Israelis share a desire to be a free people in our ancient homeland. Although particular to each nation, these dreams overlap in a universal vision.

Our mutual support is explained by the depth of our shared values. Many of us have heard the increasingly shrill extremist voices calling for the United States to reverse its historic friendship with our fellow democracy and instead side with the dictatorships and terrorist groups arrayed against it. While in Israel, President Biden gave the first interview of his presidency to foreign media when he sat down with Israel Channel 12s Yonit Levy. She took the opportunity to ask him directly about the voices in the Democratic Party calling for the destruction of Israel, and he admitted: There are a few of them. But, he countered: I think theyre wrong. I think theyre making a mistake. Israel is a democracy. Israel is our ally. Israel is a friend.

The United States and Israel also took a strong step with the adoption on July 14 of the Jerusalem U.S.-Israel Strategic Partnership Joint Declaration. This document provides that [t]he United States and Israel affirm that they will continue to work together to combat all efforts to boycott or delegitimize Israel, to deny its right to self-defense, or to unfairly single it out in any forum While fully respecting the right to freedom of expression, they firmly reject the BDS campaign.

Zionism is in fact a progressive movement. It was created to progress Jews from two millennia of discrimination, pogroms and persecution to self-governance and self-determination in their indigenous land.

Due to a well-organized campaign against it, Zionism is now considered a slur in certain circles. Inspired by the Soviet Unions sponsored and later revoked UN resolution declaring Zionism racism, some in the U.S. are now invested in this false notion. But Zionism is in fact a progressive movement. It was created to progress Jews from two millennia of discrimination, pogroms and persecution to self-governance and self-determination in their indigenous land. Zionism is not in opposition to anyone elses self-governance and self-determination, Palestinians included. On the other hand, Free Palestine from the river to the sea, the chant adopted by BDS and its celebrity followers, is indeed that a call for the destruction of the single Jewish state in the world, a shamelessly antisemitic goal.

Biden, and fortunately the majority of Americans, understand this. Indeed, Biden has done more than state his support; he has come through for the region and the world by helping increase ties between Israel and its neighbors. Following his visit, Biden became the first U.S. president to fly directly to Saudi Arabia from Israel. On July 15, Saudi Arabia made the historic announcement that it would open its airspace to aircraft of all nations, including flights originating in Israel. Two days later, Israels national airline, El Al, submitted an official request to overfly Saudi airspace. These may not seem like major steps to anyone outside the region, but their meanings are significant and they are the real life manifestation and a clear indication of a transforming Middle East.

President Biden got it exactly right. The truth is that while there are only a few million Jews in the world, there are hundreds of millions of Zionists.

Lovers of democracy around the world understand that Israel like those other precariously placed democracies including Ukraine and Taiwan is fighting the battle for all free people to live in peace and dignity. President Biden got it exactly right. The truth is that while there are only a few million Jews in the world, there are hundreds of millions of Zionists.

Noa Tishby is Israels special envoy for combating antisemitism and delegitimization of Israel.

See the original post here:
Biden Said it Best: You Don't Have to Be Jewish to Be a Zionist - Jewish Journal

Israel – Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Posted By on August 6, 2022

The State of Israel is a country in southwestern Asia on the eastern side of the Mediterranean Sea. Israel is the only Jewish country, and the spiritual home for Jews all over the world. Israel's population was 8.1 million people in 2013 and 6.04 million are Jewish. Almost all the other citizens of Israel are Arab (1.6 million) and include Muslims, Christians, Druze, and Samaritans.[21][22][23] Israel's largest city is Jerusalem. Israel's capital city is Jerusalem (limited recognition). Most countries keep embassies in Tel Aviv.

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Israel is a small country, but it has mountains, deserts, shores, valleys and plains. The climate is hot and rainless in the summers with high humidity in the coastal plain and lower elevations, and cool and rainy in the winters, rarely going below freezing temperatures.

Israel has few natural resources and imports more goods than it exports. It has a relatively high standard of living and life expectancy. Almost all of its people can read and write.

According to the Democratic Index, Israel is the only democratic republic in the Middle East. According to Freedom House, Israel is the only full democracy in the Middle East.[24] It has a long history of conflict with Palestine.

The country's history goes back thousands of years, to ancient times. Two world religions, Judaism and Christianity, began here. It is the place where the Jewish nation and religion first grew. Jews and Christians call it the Holy Land, because it is the place of many events described in the Bible, and because some commandments of Jewish law can be accomplished only on its soil.[25]

From the time of the first Jewish patriarch Abraham four thousand years ago, the land now called Israel were populated by Canaanites and other Semitic peoples. Around 1400 BCE, another Semitic people, called the Hebrews, settled in Canaan under the leadership of Moses and Joshua. They were named the Children of Israel or Israelites: which were divided into 12 tribes. A few centuries later, the Hebrews made Saul, as their leader. The next king, David, began the Kingdom of Israel in about 1000 BCE and made the city of Jerusalem his capital. His son, Solomon, built the first Temple for the worship of their God. Solomon died in about 928 BCE. His kingdom broke into two countries. The northern country kept the name Israel. The southern country, called Judah, kept Jerusalem as its capital.

The Assyrians conquered the Kingdom of Israel in 732 BCE and the Babylonians conquered the Kingdom of Judah in 586 BCE and destroyed Solomon's Temple. Many Jews returned from Babylonia and built a country again and rebuilt the Temple. First the Persians, then the Greeks and then the Romans ruled the Land of Israel.

The Jews fought against the Romans but the Romans defeated them. In 70 CE, the Romans destroyed Jerusalem and the Second Jewish Temple there. Again, in 135 CE, the Romans defeated the Jews and killed or took many of them to other places. The number of Jews living in Israel became much smaller. Many were forced to live in other countries. This spreading of Jewish communities outside of Israel is called the Diaspora.

Many of the Jews who remained moved to the Galilee. Jewish teachers wrote important Jewish books, called the Mishnah and part of the Talmud there, in the 2nd to 4th centuries CE.

The Romans began to call this region by the word that became Palestine in English. The Roman and then the Byzantine empires ruled until 635 CE, when Arabs conquered the region. Different Arab rulers, and for a while Crusaders, ruled the land. In 1516, the Ottoman Empire conquered the land and ruled the region until the 20th century.

Since the Diaspora, there have been many attempts to make a new homeland for the Jewish people. In the 1880s, this wish for a Jewish nation in Israel became a movement called Zionism. Jews from all over the world began to come to the area and settled in desert zones, then governed by the Turkish and later by the British Governments.

On 14 May 1948, British control over Palestine ended. The Jewish inhabitants (under the leadership of David Ben-Gurion) declared independence for the new Jewish state. Immediately following Israel's declaration of independence, the armies of several nearby countries including Egypt, Syria, Jordan, and Iraq attacked the new country.[26] Since the 1980s, Israel's main military opponents have been Islamist groups, such as Hezbollah.[27]

The countries of Lebanon and Syria are to the north of Israel; Jordan is on the east; and Egypt is to the southwest. Israel also controls the West Bank of the Jordan River.

Israel has a long coastline on the Mediterranean Sea. In the south, the town of Eilat is on the Gulf of Aqaba, which is part of the Red Sea.

The Galilee is a fertile and mountainous region in the north. There is a flat plain called the Coastal Plain to the west, near the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. The Negev Desert is a barren area of flat plains, mountains, and craters in the south. There is a range of mountains in the center that runs from the north to south.

On the eastern side, there is a low area called a depression. The Hula Valley and the Sea of Galilee are in this low area in the north. The Jordan River runs from the Sea of Galilee to the Dead Sea. The land next to the Dead Sea is the lowest in the world. It is -426meters below sea level.[28]

The weather is normally hot and dry in the summer and mild to cool in the winter. Rain falls mostly in the winter (between the months of November and April). There is more rain in the north than in the south, and hardly any rain in the desert. Snow falls in higher elevations. Israel built a very big irrigation system to bring water from the north to the dry areas in the south so that crops can grow there also.[28]

Jerusalem is the biggest city in Israel. Tel Aviv, Haifa, Beersheba and Rishon LeZion are also large cities. Israel says that its capital city is Jerusalem. Most countries do not recognize that. They treat Tel Aviv as the capital.[28]

Israel is a parliamentary democracy. All Israeli citizens who are 18 years or older may vote. The Israeli parliament is called the Knesset. The Knesset has 120 members. Each member is elected for no more than four years at a time. The Knesset makes laws, helps decide national policy, and approves budgets and taxes.

Voters do not vote for individual candidates in Knesset elections. Instead, they vote for a party. This party makes a list with all its candidates. The list may have only one candidate or as many as 120 candidates. In an election, the percentage of the vote that each list wins decides how many representatives, or seats, the party gets in the Knesset. For example, if a party list gets 33 percent of the vote, it gets 40 Knesset seats.

Israel has no written constitution. Instead, the Knesset made "Basic Laws". The Basic Laws say how the government must work and give civil rights to the citizens.

The Prime Minister is the head of Israel's government. He or she is usually the leader of the party that has the most seats in the Knesset. The prime minister must keep the support of a majority of Knesset members to stay in office. He or she appoints ministers to the cabinet. The Knesset approves appointments to the Cabinet. The ministers are responsible for subjects such as education, defense, and social welfare. The prime minister is the head of the cabinet and decides the topics of cabinet meetings and makes the final decisions.

Yair Lapid has been the Prime Minister since July 2022.

The President is the head of state. The Knesset elects the president for seven years. Most of the president's duties are ceremonial: The president signs laws and treaties approved by the Knesset, appoints judges, and members of some public organizations. He or she also accepts the documents from ambassadors and foreign diplomats bring when they are appointed.

Isaac Herzog has been the President since July 2021.

Israel has many political parties, with a large variety of opinions. In the elections of 2020, 20 parties won seats in the Knesset.

The parties belong to three main groups. The biggest groups are the Zionist parties. These include the conservative liberals, such as HaLikud;[29] social democrats, such as HaAvoda (Labor Party); and the religious Zionists. There are also smaller religious Orthodox Jewish parties, special-interest parties, and Israeli Arab parties.

A single party usually does not win enough seats in the Knesset by itself to have a majority, so one of the bigger parties asks for support from the other parties, including the religious parties, to form a coalition government. This gives these parties a lot of power although they are small.

The Likud supports free market policies and limited government involvement in the economy. Likud believes strongly in protecting Israel's security. It wants to give less away in the peace process for a negotiated agreement with the Palestinians and the Arab states.

The Labor Party supports government control of the economy, but also believes in a limited amount of free enterprise. The party says it will give more away for an agreement with the Palestinians and the Arab states.

Current Knesset is the 24th Knesset, sworn in on April 6, 2021. Current government is the Bennett-Lapid Government, installed on June 13, 2021.

At independence, Israel was a poor country with little agricultural or industrial production. But Israel's economy has grown tremendously since 1948. The nation now enjoys a very high standard of living, despite having few natural resources and a limited water supply.

Many immigrants came to Israel in the years immediately after independence. Many of these immigrants were skilled laborers and professionals who greatly aided the nation's economic development.

Many of Israel's service industry workers are employed by the government or by businesses owned by the government. Government workers provide many of the services that are needed by Israel's large immigrant population, such as housing, education, and job training.

Tourism is one of the country's important sources of income. Tourists visit many archaeological, historical, and religious sites; museums; nature reserves; and beach resorts in Israel.[30]

Tourists support many of Israel's service industries, especially trade, restaurants, and hotels. Approximately 4 million tourists visited Israel in 2018.[31]

Israeli factories produce such goods as chemical products, electronic equipment, fertilizer, paper, plastics, processed foods, scientific and optical instruments, textiles, and clothing. The cutting of imported diamonds is a major industry. Government-owned plants manufacture equipment used by Israel's large armed forces. Israel is the world's largest exporter of drones.[32] Tel Aviv and Haifa are Israel's major manufacturing centers.

Agriculture formerly employed a much larger percentage of Israel's workforce. But much of the work once performed by people is now performed by machines. Important agricultural products include citrus and other fruits; eggs; grain; poultry; and vegetables.

The government develops, helps finance, and controls agricultural activity, including fishing and forestry. Israel produces most of the food it needs to feed its people, except for grain. Agricultural exports provide enough income to pay for any necessary food imports. Most Israeli farmers use modern agricultural methods. Water drawn from the Sea of Galilee irrigates large amounts of land in Israel.

Most Israeli farms are organized as moshavim or kibbutzim. Israel also has some private farms.

The Dead Sea, the world's saltiest body of water, is Israel's leading source of minerals. Bromine, magnesium, potash and table salt are extracted from the sea. Potash, used mainly in fertilizers, is the most important mineral.

In the Negev Desert, there are mines for phosphates, copper, clay, and gypsum.

Israel has few energy sources. It has no coal deposits or hydroelectric power resources, and only small amounts of crude oil and natural gas. As a result, Israel depends on imported crude oil for gasoline and diesel for transportation, and coal producing electricity for its energy needs.

Solar energy energy from the sun is used widely to heat water for houses. Israel is developing other ways to use solar energy to power houses and factories.

In 2008, Israel began investing in building electric cars and the stations to charge them. There may also be large natural gas fields in the Mediterranean Sea that Israel could develop.

For 2006, Israeli exports grew by 11% to just over $29 billion; the hi-tech sector accounted for $14 billion, a 20% increase from the previous year.

Because it has few natural resources, Israel imports more goods than it exports. The country's main imports include chemicals, computer equipment, grain, iron and steel, military equipment, petroleum products, rough diamonds, and textiles.

Israel's main exports are chemical products, citrus fruits, clothing, electronic equipment, fertilizers, polished diamonds, military equipment, and processed foods. The nation's main trading partners include the Benelux countries (Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg); Germany; Italy; Switzerland; the United Kingdom; and the United States.

Israel has a well-developed transportation system. Most middle-class Israeli families either own a car or have one provided by their employer. Paved roads reach almost all parts of the country. Public transportation both in and between cities is provided primarily by bus.

Ben-Gurion Airport is Israel's main international airport. It is near Tel Aviv. There are smaller airports are located at Atarot, near Jerusalem, and at Eilat. El Al, Israel's international airline, flies regularly to the United States, Canada, Europe, and parts of Africa and Asia. Israel has three major deepwater ports: Haifa, Ashdod, and Eilat.

Israel's communication system is one of the best in the Middle East. Israel has about 30 daily newspapers, about half of which are in Hebrew. The rest are in Arabic, Russian, Yiddish, or one of several foreign languages. The Israel Broadcasting Authority, a public corporation set up by the government, runs the television and nonmilitary radio stations.

Notes

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