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The Long Con(federation): Understanding the latest attempts to legitimize Israeli colonization – Mondoweiss

Posted By on July 31, 2022

If there is one thing Zionism has been consistent about over the past century, it is its commitment to territorial expansion to achieve demographic supremacy in Palestine, whatever diversionary tactics may be used by politicians to confuse and mislead the unwary. When such expansion was impossible through military means, and ever since before 1948, Zionism adopted the gradualist approach, dubbed dunam after dunam. In that sense, Israels partaking in any of the subsequent peace plans with the Palestinians was always underwritten by the aim of controlling the entire country over the long duree.

Anyone who viewed Bidens vacuous and cringeworthy newspeak about a two-state solution during his recent visit to Israel and Saudi Arabia must be aware of the unease with which even Biden himself was spouting his hackneyed political platitudes. Nevertheless, the two-state mantra has served Israel well, allowing the continuation of its unrelenting expansion of illegal settlements and land confiscation in the West Bank with total impunity.

The two-state solution now faces serious challenges, to the point that it has become clear that a new linguistic formula is necessary for the main supporters of the Zionist project to continue their uncritical support over the next few decades.

For three whole decades after the 1993 Oslo Accords, Israel has combined talk of the two-state solution with a refusal to accept any vestige of a Palestinian polity, as well as acting decisively to make such a purported solution totally unobtainable. While every western politician has learned the two-state mantra by heart, they have all colluded with Israel to make such an arrangement impossible.

Israel has understood, however, that to continue the occupation and its many travesties, it needs to be seen as always working towards a solution, which explains its nominal commitment to the two-state framework. Yet the two-state solution now faces serious challenges, to the point that it has become clear that a new linguistic formula is necessary for the main supporters of the Zionist project to continue their uncritical support over the next few decades.

The search has started for the next verbal smoke-screen, alongside the social machinery serving to keep it alivemuch like the PA has kept alive the two-state solution despite being aborted before it could ever be born.

No one carefully watching the debate about Zionism and Palestine in the last decade could have missed the emergence of a whole range of solutionsones that are designed to achieve that elusive but prescient dictum of Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, in his novel Il Gatopardo: For things to remain the same, everything must change. Such squaring of circles has become a specialty of Israeli politics.

Leading the pack of would-be liberals who rush to offer the world another suit of the emperors clothes to cover the Zionist shame, are a number of erstwhile projectsthe Federation Plan, the Israeli-Palestinian Confederation, Two States, One Homeland, and the unnamed J Street Confederation.

This avalanche of proposals is hardly accidental. It provides an effective coverup for Israels policy of dispossession and brutal apartheid, put forward by a motley crew of politicians of fading notoriety in search of an unlikely revival.

First, the so-called federation and confederation, the first being the cruder of the two, the second being somewhat more astute and sophisticated. The Federation Plan hardly hides its light under a bushelin its very first tenet, it already declares its objective clearly:

[To] reach political understandings with representative of the Palestinians, Arab nations, Europe, and the USA, over a solution which allows for the application of Israeli sovereignty over all land west of the Jordan River (with the exception of Gaza), full citizenship for West Bank Palestinians, and a federal government in the extended State of Israel.

The non-inclusion of Gaza in this utopian arrangement is not accidentalthe leaders of the Federation Plan openly explain that the Israeli Federation will not include the Gaza Strip, because as a Jewish state, it must have a Jewish majority. Instead, Gaza would be segregated and declared an independent political entity, a sort of city-state. And in order to secure Israeli-Jewish control, the country would be divided into 30 cantons, about 20 of which will have a Jewish majority and ten with Arab majorities (one of which will have a Druze majority).

One cannot blame them for not being open about their priorities. The political positioning of this grouping is of the Israeli extreme right, as exemplified by the terms used for the West BankJudea and Samaria.

While the Federation Plan is clearly a naked ruse to bring about Israeli control of all of Palestineexcluding Gazathe Israeli-Palestinian Confederation (IPC) represents a sophisticated effort to achieve the same aim and is the most detailed of all the solutions. Over the past year it seems to have garnered some degree of interest, attracting an unlikely combination of speakers, including Noam Chomsky, Cornell West, and Alan Dershowitz, for what it terms its simulationsa series of bi-weekly online meetings, with repetitive votes by the partakers, and role-playing members of the three Parliaments of Israel, Palestine, and the IPC itself. The speakers are supposed to endorse the process; if they do not, they are soon ignored. The IPC game plan is complex: two physical parliaments, the Israeli Knesset in Jerusalem, and the Palestinian assembly in Ramallahin which the Majority party, Hamas, is not representedare to be joined by a third, that of the IPC, which is proposed to have some sort of web-existence.

This voluntary body will serve as a government of the people to resolve conflicts and develop into the future in a fair and equitable manner. In other words, it is a low-cost virtual assembly, and will be constructed along imaginative lineswith 300 members personally elected in 300 districts in which either Israelis or Palestinians can stand and be elected. The first assembly will not be elected, but appointed by the founding committee, which will then decide on and call the first election, as well as the manner, time, and place of its meetings. After the first election, the 300 districts will be set up by an Israeli-Palestinian committee of members who will not stand for office. No bill passed by this body may become law, unless a number of conditions have been met relating to the percentage of Israeli and Palestinian parliament members that have passed it.

Interestingly, this text uses Israeli and Palestinian as exclusive identities, with both seemingly defined along ethno-national lines. This means that a Palestinian with Israeli citizenship may well be confused about their identity, whose status is not addressed by the definitions. This confusion is very evident in the presentations of the founder, Josef Avesar, who runs the sessions in an imperious manner. Such an essentialist set of problematic definitions of civic identity are evidence of the non-democratic and confused assumptions behind the projectseparating people across ethno-religious lines. This is not surprising, though, as the structure is designed to uphold such divisions rather than transcend them.

A very different offering comes from the crew behind Two States, One Homeland, and somewhat more substantial than the monarchic Josef Avesar. These are led by the renowned journalist Meron Rapoport, and the Fatah activist Awni Al-Mashni. Behind them range a long line of academic-activist-experts, such as Prof. Oren Yiftachel, the media activist Ran Cohen, Dr. Assaf David of the Van Leer Institute, Reluca Ganeafounder of the Zazim movementHuman Rights lawyer Michael Sfard, Dr. Thabet Abu-Rass, and Dr. Rula Hardal, to name but a few. This is the most serious of the three organizations dealt with here; their website is detailed and asks the rightand difficultquestions, answering these comprehensively.

In sum, what is proposed could be called a two-state plus solution. The borders proposed are those of June 1967the so-called Green Line. This is done in part to give the State of Palestine a better chance of functioning properly. The assumption here is that a viable Palestinian state is allowed to emerge and shape its policies independent of Israeli and other outside control. The element of Confederacy is not external, as it is in the Israeli-Palestinian Confederation, but is provided by a range of shared institutions of a confederate nature, such as the Human Rights Court, Economic Authority, cooperative institutions for regulating water, natural resources, and the environment, and a special body for realizing the Two States, One Homeland solution. The plan also includes provisions on how the rights of minorities are to be protected, giving them certain rights as a national minority, including civil equality and certain forms of institutional representation.

The main innovation of the plan, and one not shared with the other plans described here, is the partial (and unspecified) acceptance of the Palestinian right of return. This is to be enacted by the tiny Palestinian state that is to be established in the West Bank and Gaza. As the plan envisions, this will be done in stages, but like in the Oslo Accords, no specific or firm undertakings are made when describing the restitution of the refugee problem, save for some lip-service to appropriate monetary compensation and the possible rebuilding of some towns, as well as some freedom of movement of refugees that are naturalized within their homeland. In other words: this is not a full returnbut we cannot satisfy one hundred percent of everyones desires.

In that way, while the rights of the settlers (many of whom originate in the Jewish diaspora) are fully protected, and they may live on either side of the border, Palestinians from the diaspora are offered very little, though their diasporic state is a direct result of illegal Israeli acts.

Moreover, an important part of the plan is the principle of Open Land, where citizens of both countries are free to move and live in all parts of the land, but not all those who have residence rights in those lands have the same political rights. Instead, residents would exercise their voting rights in the state where they enjoy citizenship, not where they live.

Disconnecting the two sets of rights is clearly designed to defend the Zionist principle of the Jewish State. The plan does not clearly specify the annulment of the racist legislation of Israel, nor a process of de-Zionisation.

In a +972 Magazine article last year, Arianna Skibell reported on a shift within J Street regarding the two-state solution, quoting the opinion of an anonymous J Street staffer who believed that facts on the ground rendered the solution impossible, and that a sizable proportion of staff membersrecognize that this solution is increasingly infeasible. Notably, however, the staffer spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

This shift has been seen in small ways, such as a presentation from Bernard Avishai, an Israeli-American professor, and Sam Bahour, a Palestinian-American business consultant on April 6, 2021 to members and followers of J Street Chicago. The title of their joint presentation was Confederation: An Emerging Plausible Two-State Solution? and discussed an Op-Ed the pair had written for the New York Times exploring the confederation idea.

There is not a publicly-available recording of the event, and J Street did not follow it with any announcement of changed policies, but it seems to point to the fact that J Street seems to be showing belated signs of realization of the two-state solutions obsolescence.

In that same +972 article, J Streets founder, Jeremy Ben-Ami said that the confederation idea is a really creative extension of the two-state discussion thats getting past some of the limitations that may have prevented us from getting to a solution. So, one may assume that the discussion of the Confederation model by J Street is a kite-flying exercise, intended for evaluating the chances for a revival of the now-disgraced solution by employing the new formulation to give it a new lick of paint.

All three approaches discussed here are carefully engineered to protect the mainstays of current Israelits military, financial, and diplomatic advantages, its Jewish identity, and its inbuilt apartheid. Moreover, these various permutations of the confederation idea renew and modernize the political and linguistic mechanisms which protect the aforementioned advantages. In other words, no true move towards decolonization.

It would be wrong to declare them all the same, though.

The Two States, One Homeland plan is clearly identifying some of the most important characteristics of the colonial occupation as crucial for a future peaceful resolution, even if it does not cross the line towards a just resolution. Its work is more widely representative than any of the other proposals, and more carefully thought out and historicized. Its proposals offer Zionism the minimum it requires, while avoiding the minimum necessary to enlist Palestinians behind its vision. Instead, Palestinians are offered the best that can be done now, alongside vague promises about future advances. We are back to Oslo obfuscations, it seems.

The need for a legal and conceptual framework that would allow Israel to extend its control to the whole of Palestineis clear and urgent, and the blooming of con(federation) plans is the clearest evidence.

In the new reality of the normalization agenda aggressively pushed by Washington, the need for a legal and conceptual framework that would allow Israel to extend its control to the whole of Palestine, without continuously tussling with enormous legal hoopsthe likes of which brought down the Bennett government after less than two yearsis clear and urgent, and the blooming of con(federation) plans is the clearest evidence. It seems that the Israeli state, through its multitude of undercover bodies, is flying political kites to gauge the international environment. The use of such formulations has enormous potentialif the two-state solution allowed three decades of freedom from international pressure, then the new formulations may well give it at least three more decades to entrench its control over Palestine.

What is never discussed by any of the models here is the simple, logical, and just solution developed by the PLO many decades agoa single, secular, democratic state of all its citizens, in the whole of Palestine.

This campaign is now spreading fast on both sides of the Green Line, argued by the ODSC, a Palestinian campaign which includes also anti-Zionist Israeli Jews, and Jewish organizations such as the UK Jewish Network for Palestine, with its innovative Convivencia Alliance, supported by most Palestinian faith leaders. Such programs are out by definitionthey are, after all, democratic, anti-Zionist, requiring equal rights for all, an end to Apartheid, and the return of the refugees. Perish the thought.

It is exactly thisproposed solution of theseeminglyinsoluble settler-colonial occupation and its growing popularity that is deeply worrying for Zionism. After all, whatargument can one use against democracy, equality, justice, and equal rights for all? Against just peace based on universal human rights and numerous UN resolutions?

On the other hand, much like Bidens nonsensical chatter, the con(federation) plans are pure discourse, like the two-state solution always was. But such discourse may allow Zionism to bury past memes so deep, that its control of Palestine will be seen like peace-making, especially to those always ready to give Zionist apartheid yet another chance.

Haim Bresheeth-abnerHaim Bresheeth-abner is a Professorial Research Associate at SOAS, University of London. His recent book is An Army Like No Other: How the Israel Defense Forces Made a Nation, Verso, London, August 2020.

This movement needs a newsroom that can cover all of Palestine and the global Palestinian freedom movement.

The Israeli government and its economic, cultural, and political backers here in the U.S. have made a decades-long investment in silencing and delegitimizing Palestinian voices.

Were building a powerful challenge to those mainstream norms, and proving that listening to Palestinians is essential for moving the needle.

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The Long Con(federation): Understanding the latest attempts to legitimize Israeli colonization - Mondoweiss

Party in Israel Ends with One Death as Sinkhole Opened Up In the Middle of a Swimming Pool – Nature World News

Posted By on July 31, 2022

Two men were sucked into a sinkhole that appeared in the middle of a swimming pool at a gathering in Israel. Both one death and one injury were the results of the incident.

According to The Times of Israel, it took rescue efforts four hours to extract the man's body from the 43-foot-deep sinkhole on July 21. Klil Kimhi, 32, was later identified, but it is still unclear as to the cause of death. Investigations are underway to determine whether he was crushed to death, drowned, or perished in the fall.

In a video shared on social media, the pool floor in a private residence in Karmei Yosef, central Israel, is seen collapsing and buckling inwards, suckling in most of the pool water in a matter of seconds. Two men were dragged into the sinkhole by a vortex that swept them up.

One of the men, age 34, was able to escape, but Kimhi was later discovered dead. There were six people in the pool at the time, but all of them were unharmed.

As stated by the U.S. Geological Survey, while sinkholes can form in a variety of ways, they typically happen when the ground beneath the surface of the land crumbles into the groundwater. It is then washed away, leaving an open cavern with only a thin layer of ground covering it.

In regions with limestone, carbonate, or salt bed-derived rocks, sinkholes are common. construction techniques and groundwater pumping can alter the natural ground structure and water drainage patterns, which can lead to the formation of sinkholes.

The sinkhole becomes more dramatic as the chasm below the land surface grows; occasionally, entire cars or even entire houses can fall into the ground when the thin layer of surface eventually gives way. The states in the United Statesthat suffer the most damage from sinkholes are Florida, Texas, Missouri, Alabama, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Pennsylvania.

In Dover, Florida, in 2010, during a single freeze event, more than 100 sinkholes developed because farmers irrigated their crops exceedingly to protect them from the cold, which caused the groundwater levels to drop noticeably. The sinkholes obliterated houses, roads, and cultivated land in its entirety.

Read also: Cave Explorers Discover Thriving Ancient Forest in 600-Feet Sinkhole

As they searched for the missing man in Israel, search crews constructed a support structure to keep the swimming pool floor from further collapsing onto the crew. The fact that there might have been additional tunnels connected to the primary sinkhole culvert that could have collapsed as well and put the rescue teams in danger complicated the search.

Police in Israel has announced that they are investigating the death and will look into the licensing procedures related to the pool's construction. The owner of the residence has reportedly been questioned by local police on charges of negligent manslaughter. It stated that the owner did not request a permit before constructing the pool, Newsweekreports.

Related article: New York City Came Into a Standstill as Sinkholes Swallow Van, Halt Transportation Following Torrential Rain

2022 NatureWorldNews.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

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Party in Israel Ends with One Death as Sinkhole Opened Up In the Middle of a Swimming Pool - Nature World News

Far-right religious nationalists are edging closer to power in Israel – Arab News

Posted By on July 31, 2022

In Israels volatile political environment, debating and predicting the outcome of the November election is another way to pass the time during the hot summer days, when most peoples minds are on staying cool, navigating their way through an overcrowded airport for their first post-pandemic trip abroad, or surviving a cost-of-living crisis that is spiralling out of control.Still, even at this early stage of the election campaign, there is at least one alarmingly consistent phenomenon that stands out in the opinion polls: The rise of ultra-religious nationalism, led by unsavory characters who can only be described as bigots with strong fascist leanings.The Religious Zionist party, led by Bezalel Smotrich, which even before the most recent national election had incorporated Itamar Ben Gvirs Kahanist movement Otzma Yehudit, looks likely to more than double its seats in the next Knesset, from its current six to a possible 13.In the Israeli context, where the current prime minister commands a group of no more than 17 MPs out of 120, and the leader he replaced headed a grouping of a mere seven seats, such a result could have an immense impact on the direction of the country in the next few years. When it comes to the Religious Zionist party, this spells bad news for Israels democracy and for relations with Palestinians on both sides of the Green Line.These are early days and the public might be using the polls to send a message to other parties, mainly Likud, that it wants them to move further to the right, closer to Smotrich and Ben Gvirs positions.Nevertheless, it is also an extremely worrying sign that the racist and homophobic language of the latter has been legitimized, and people are unashamed not only to vote for them in what is a secret ballot, but also to openly and unreservedly express support for their repulsive ideas. To make things even worse, the polls have also highlighted that the partys showing at the ballot box would be stronger if Ben Gvir, who is regarded as the more extreme of the two, were its leader, although ideologically the difference between him and Smotrich is paper thin.Both components of the party are oozing with racism and bigotry. For instance, in 2016, Smotrich tweeted his support for segregating Jewish and Arab women in maternity wards. Its only natural my wife would not want to lie next to someone who just gave birth to a baby that might murder her baby in another 20 years, he wrote after his wife had shared a maternity ward with a Palestinian woman.If one follows his distorted logic, Smotritch should have ensured that his wife stayed in a single room, as who knows, the woman in the bed next to hers, whatever her religion, nationality or ethnicity, might give birth not only to a murderer, but perhaps a rapist, bank robber, fraudster or even a future prime minister who one day would be indicted for corruption (although Smotrich would have no problem sharing a coalition government with the latter).In any country that has any respect for democratic values, Smotrichs comments should be enough to disqualify him from ever becoming a public figure, let alone an elected one.

For now, the Religious Zionist party is incapable of winning elections, but it might be pivotal in forming the next coalition government.

Yossi Mekelberg

As it begins to enter mainstream politics, the far right is becoming more sophisticated in its messaging. It has learned, after the banning in the 1980s of the arch-bigot spiritual leader Meir Kahane, to conceal its motives, softening its direct racist slurs and its outspoken wish to destroy the independence of the High Court of Justice, which is seen as the last barrier to the imposition of the most extreme version of a Jewish state, where Arabs, and anyone holding liberal-left opinions would become at best second-class citizens.

For this strand of Zionism, the Green Line does not exist as far as Israeli sovereignty is concerned, and the Palestinians should either obey and accept it, or face the consequences.Like other nascent fascist movements on the march to demolish their countrys democratic structures and processes, before they come to power they are learning to talk in coded terms that are clear enough to their supporters, but do not cross the line into illegality. For example, a chant such as Death to Arabs has been replaced by Death to Terrorists, but in their minds these slogans are interchangeable. In their world of wink wink nudge nudge, their supporters understand the subtext perfectly.Ironically, Ben Gvir is the only current MP who is a convicted felon. While he constantly and baselessly accuses Arab-Palestinian MPs of supporting terrorism, it is he who has been convicted of supporting a terrorist organization and inciting racism for carrying a sign saying: Expel the Arab enemy, and a poster declaring that Rabbi Kahane was right, the Arab MPs are the fifth column.Moreover, he played a crucial role in the incitements against Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. A few weeks before Rabin was assassinated in November 1995, Ben Gvir boasted in one of his early television appearances, while brandishing a Cadillac emblem stolen from the prime ministers car: We got to his car and well get to him, too.As if this were not enough, Ben Gvir is an unashamed admirer of Baruch Goldstein, the terrorist who cold-bloodedly murdered 29 Muslim worshippers at the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron. Ben Gvir also never misses an opportunity to stoke tensions with the local Palestinian population, as he does in the Sheikh Jarrah district of Jerusalem.For now, the Religious Zionist party is incapable of winning elections, but it might be pivotal in forming the next coalition government. Just imagine politicians who subscribe to its ideology in charge of the Interior Ministry, or of justice, education or public security. Imagine the legislation they would demand to further the marginalization of Arab citizens, or the stepping up of their relentless efforts to politicize the justice or education systems, and to demonize those who believe in a liberal democracy.This is not scaremongering. This is a reflection of what Religious Zionist leaders have stated openly for years and, sadly, an indication of the direction that Israeli politics and society is taking.

Yossi Mekelberg is professor of international relations and an associate fellow of the MENA Program at Chatham House. He is a regular contributor to the international written and electronic media. Twitter: @YMekelberg

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

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Far-right religious nationalists are edging closer to power in Israel - Arab News

Israels Music Business Has the Ears of the Majors – Variety

Posted By on July 31, 2022

The estimated $55 million music market in Israel, like the Middle Eastern countrys comparatively small size, would quantify as the equivalent of a rounding error for a global music company. But its recorded music revenue growth was up 10.2% in 2021, per the IFPI, and the majors are taking notice.

In 2021, UMG opened a Tel Aviv office housing a recorded music division and an arm of Universal Music Publishing Group (headed by managing director Yoram Mokady and general manager Itamar Shafrir, respectively). Universal Music Israels A&R team has hit the ground running, signing local talents like Michael Ben David and Ozel, the latter who performed an industry showcase in May which brought out execs from the U.K. and tastemakers from Israeli radio still an influential media source in the country and the live industry.

In addition to developing Hebrew-language artists, the company has partnered with James Diener, who signed Maroon 5 to its first label deal at A&M Octone Records and whose Freesolo Management has represented Avril Lavigne and the Struts, and Ken Levitan, whose Nashville-based Vector Management is home to T Bone Burnett, Kesha and Kid Rock, to find a six-member boy band Israels take on BTS or One Direction.

Comprised of Jews and Arabs, the guys will sing in English under the banner As1One. The plan, Levitan told an Israeli television program, is to bring them to the U.S. or possibly the U.K. to write and record and hopefully come up with some global hits. As1One is looking at a summer 2023 launch.

Warner Music has also planted roots in Israel, announcing in May that Mariah Mochiach, a music biz veteran who, in her career, has looked after the repertoire of such labels as Beggars Group and Domino Recordings, would lead a Tel Aviv affiliate as GM. The company has a bit of a head start, having signed Noa Kirel (pictured at right) Israels answer to Ariana Grande and Noga Erez (pictured at left), who received a momentum-building co-sign from Katy Perry, to Atlantic Records U.S., although neither singer has yet broken out abroad.

The digital transformation of our industry has made it more global than ever, lowering the barriers to music discovery and making it easier for artists to connect with fans all over the world, says Mochiach. Israel is a market with a thriving local scene and a strong appetite for international music. Weve been involved in the market with partners for many years, but now seems the perfect moment to go one further and establish Warner Music Israel.

Certainly Haim Saban thinks so. The founder of the independent Saban Music Group, which signed the Israeli duo Static and Ben-El as well as 22-year-old heartthrob Mergui (an ex of Kirels), says, Israel is a very small country, only 10 million people, and the upside there is pretty limited.Although Saban recognizes that these local stars have to give up significant income in order to pound the pavement in the U.S. or internationally and obtaining a work visa presents its own set of challenges he sees the wisdom in setting your sights big. If youre going to put in the work, why not target the 8 billion people of the world?

A key element of Saban acts is the production of the music. For a two-year-old label (which is distributed through UMGs Virgin) to already have a recognizable sound can make all the difference, and as a result, Israeli producers like Jordi (who helmed Merguis Sucks to Know You (FU)) and Jonathan Goldstein are finding themselves fully booked for the foreseeable future. Meanwhile, in the states, Israeli-American Omer Fedi is racking up credits on massive hits like Lil Nas Xs Montero (Call Me By Your Name) and 24kGoldns In the Mood.

Noa Kirel is a good singer, but there is no Noa sound,' Saban posits. I wish Noa all the success in the world. If she gets the right material, she can be very successful. And Mergui, if hes successful, is giving her an incredible coverage with the release of his EP, where he tells the story of what happened between them.

Spoken like a true promotion vet, although when asked if he was aware that Merguis clap-back to Kirel, Sucks to Know You (FU), was released a year to the day after her Please Dont Suck, he feigned surprise. I did not know that! I honestly dont think we planned it that way.

The key factor, says Warners Mochiach, is that these artists are also fluent in English, which is an advantage when it comes to doing international promotion. Israeli artists ambition, creativity and professionalism puts them in a good position to find a place on the global stage.

Likewise, Saban adds, the major labels have recognized that theyre not in Israel just to sell Justin Bieber and Drake records. Theyre there because they think there is a pool of talent. And they are right.

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Israels Music Business Has the Ears of the Majors - Variety

An ancient Israeli law leaves thousands of women ‘chained’ to their wayward husbands – ABC News

Posted By on July 31, 2022

Orly Vital spent more than a decade of her adult life trapped in a marriage she wanted to leave.

Spousal laws in Israel meant the 44-year-old ultra-Orthodox Jew couldn't divorce her husband without his permission.

Ms Vital said that while he was a controlling man, she did not expect her husband wouldrefuse to free her.

"I felt handcuffed," she said."I felt that someone else controlled my life and forced me to do things that I didn't like to do.

"I was trapped."

Israel does not allow civil marriages for its citizens.

All Jews, even secular, can only have a religious marriage governed by religious laws.

The ancient laws state that when a marriage breaks down, both parties must willingly sign a document, called a "get", agreeing to sever all marriage ties.

Many Israeli women like Ms Vital become chained to dead marriages each year, when their partnersrefuse to give them the get.

"No-one can feel or understand the situation that you're living in," she said.

"I continued my life as normal with a smile, because I'm optimistic.

"But in my heart, it was very hard because my freedom had been taken away from me."

The Yad La'isha Legal Aid Centre was set up to help shackled women break their marriage bonds.

The organisation estimates that every year, up to 2,400 Israelis become "agunot", which means chained wife, or "mesuravotget", awoman refused a divorce.

Pnina Omer works at the centre, pressuring what she calls "get-refusers" through legal channels.

"For women, it's really tough, a struggle, to get out of a marriage if her husband will not cooperate," she said.

"We can close his bank account, not let him leave the country, get him fired from his work, shame him on the internet.

"And we always hope this pressure will help him to cooperate."

The centre's work is slow and laborious, but the people theredomanage to break the chains.

They estimate60 women each year gain their freedom due to Yad La'isha's representation.

In countries like Australia, no-faultdivorces allow a couple to split up even if one spouse does not want the relationship to end.

As long as the couple has lived separately for 12 months and the family court is satisfied the marriage has broken down irretrievably, a divorce is granted.

The introduction of no-fault divorces in Australia in 1975 allowed many people to flee domestic abuse and toxic marriages.

But Israelis don't have this legal protection.

In disputed circumstances, women can raise their plight with rabbi judges, who govern Jewish law matters in rabbinical courts.

The rabbinical judges can rule a person should give their partner a divorce.

But crucially, they cannotforce it to happen.

Some men in Israel have chosen to go to jail as punishment for refusing the court's wishes, rather than free their wives from the marriage.

Rabbi Daniel Sperber said many peopleended up in difficult situationsbecause of the Jewish law.

"Let's say the husband says, 'I don't care, I don't need to live with her, but I'll never let her have another man.'That is a very tragic situation," he said.

"So the women become widows within their own lifetime and their only way out is, I guess, if the husband dies."

Seven years after Orly Vital first approached the rabbinical court, it ruled her husband should give his wife the get.

But instead, Ms Vital's husband fled and went into hiding.

The Yad La'isha Legal Aid Centre employed a private investigator to track down Ms Vital's husband but it took another seven years to find him.

When he was detained, he was jailed for several months where he still refused to give his wife the get.

Earlier this year, he finally relented.

She was free.

But it took Ms Vital 14 years to get her divorce, and her life ground to a haltduring that time.

She said her religious beliefs restricted her from having contact with other men, while she was still technically married.

"As [an ultra-Orthodox Jewish] woman there are rules, I can't just act freely," she said.

"I wanted so much to date someone, but it was not possible.

"Even having a coffee with someone, I was not free to do."

With dating and remarriage out of the question, she was also barred from having morechildren, a loss she grieves deeply.

Women's rights advocates have been pressuring Israeli politicians to legalise civil marriage to avoid women, or men, being held hostage by their partners.

But there is not widespread support within Israel's parliament to legalise civil marriages.

"It's crazy. This is the 21st century," Pnina Omer said.

"As a religious, feminist, Orthodox woman, I feel so bad about this.

"And I feel that it's my responsibility to fight for these women's freedom, but also to fight for change."

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An ancient Israeli law leaves thousands of women 'chained' to their wayward husbands - ABC News

OUT AND ABOUT: Visit to Israel brings the Bible to life – Northwest Georgia News

Posted By on July 31, 2022

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The Real Story behind the Spy who Infiltrated Argentina’s Jewish Community – aish.com Jewish Society, History, Modern, Featured, Israel – Aish.com

Posted By on July 31, 2022

Amazon Primes Yosi, the Regretful Spy unmasks the dangerous consequences of irrational antisemitism, and the non-Jewish spy who came to regret his role in the terrorist attacks on Jews.

Based on a true story, Amazon Primes hit series Yosi, the Regretful Spy focuses on Yosi, aka Jose Perez, who was a secret agent sent by the Argentinian government to infiltrate the Argentinian Jewish community. The show has been greenlighted for a second season.

For twenty years, Perez lived as a Jew, hiding his true origins and seemingly falling in love with Jewish culture and life. As Yosi, he married a Jewish woman and eventually converted to Judaism. He was really a very good candidate to be a Jew, Rabbi Mauricio Balter, the rabbi who believed he was converting Yosi in 1988, recently told The Jerusalem Post. Now I understand that he was a good actor also.

Yosi believed that reconnaissance he provided to Argentinian intelligence officials contributed to the worst terrorist attacks in Argentinian history: the 1992 bombing of the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires, and the the 1994 bombing of a Jewish Community Center in Buenos Aires. Both attacks killed and maimed hundreds of people.

Jews have lived in Argentina for centuries. Historians have traced conversos, or secret Jews, who settled in the Spanish colony following the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492. Life was difficult for Argentinas secret Jews. The Inquisition only came to an official end in 1810 when Argentina gained independence from Spain.

Jews began to move to the new country, seeking religious freedom. In the late 1800s, the trickle of Jews moving to Argentina became, in the words of historian Ricardo Feierstein, a downpour. Millions of immigrants, including tens of thousands of Eastern European Jews, settled in Argentina. The capital city Buenos Aires became a melting pot. Jewish neighborhoods were filled with synagogues, Jewish schools, and Yiddish theaters.

Agricultural Cooperative Barn Hirsch of Rivera, Province of Buenos Aires.

By 1914, Buenos Aires ranked as the second largest city on the eastern seaboard of the Americas, after New York. About 150,000 Jews lived in Argentina at the time.

Among the thousands of Jews moving to Argentina were 824 Russian Jews who sailed to Argentina in 1889 on the ship S. S. Weser, and settled in northeastern Argentina, determined to become farmers. With the help of Jewish philanthropist Baron Maurice de Hirsch, they established the Jewish Colonization Association, bought over 600,000 hectares of land, and established the town of Moisevills. At its peak, over 2,000 Jews lived in Moisevills, working as ranchers and farmers. The town still exists today, though its population has dropped precipitously and few Jews remain.

This experiment in Jewish self-governance was to have tragic consequences for Argentinian Jews, as the series Yosi, the Regretful Spy makes clear.

With the growing Jewish community came increasing antisemitism. During the Tragic Week (Semana Tragica) of strikes and communal violence that rocked Buenos Aires in January, 1919, many far-right political groups and sympathizers took their anger out on Jews, openly calling for pogroms against Argentinas Jewish community. Hundreds of Jews homes were attacked and looted, and Jews were pulled out of their homes and viciously beaten in the streets.

Gustavo Bassani as Yosi in Amazon Primes Yosi, the Regretful Spy, walks in the rubble after the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association attack.

Nazi sympathizers had long been prominent in Argentina. In 1946 the country elected Juan Peron as President. He was openly sympathetic to the Nazis who were fleeing justice in Europe, and opened Argentina to many former Nazi war criminals. At the same time Peron curtailed Jewish immigration to his country.

During the period of military rule in Argentina, from 1976 to 1983, many of the pro-democracy activists who were kidnapped and tortured by the military junta were Jews. Its estimated that anywhere between 1,000 and 9,000 Argentinian Jews were murdered during this time.

One of Argentinas persistent anti-Jewish myths is the so-called Andinia Plan. Long a staple of far-right and neo-Nazi groups in Argentina, this false theory harks back to the days when Jewish ranchers organized to buy farmland in Argentina in the 1800s. The Andinia Plan is a hoax: supposedly a top-secret plan hatched by Argentinian Jews to seize the countrys Patagonia region and establish a Jewish state or colony there. This dangerous slur against Argentinas Jews has helped foment antisemitism across Argentina and the wider Spanish-speaking world for generations.

In 1985, Jose Perez, a non-Jew, was assigned to infiltrate Argentinas Jewish coounity. His first assignment was to substantiate the Andinia Plan. Adopting the Hebrew name Yosi, Perez got to know local Jews, eventually embracing a Jewish life he created as a cover. As he familiarized himself with Argentinian Jewish life, he soon realized the absurdity of the Andinia conspiracy theory.

In the TV series, Yosi shows his intelligence officer superiors a video he took of local Jewish community leaders laughing about the Andinia hoax. One Jewish character chuckles, Its an antisemitic myth. Its been going on for decades. Its old.

When Yosi shows this video to his superiors, they insist on clinging to the discredited conspiracy theory. Dont be fooled, Jose, they tell him. They tell the myth to protect themselves, to make it look absurd. But the plan is real. It exists and its complex Countering prejudice with reason can be futile.

On March 17, 1992, a suicide bomber drove a pickup truck loaded with explosives to the door of the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires and detonated the truck. The embassys building was completely destroyed. Twenty-nine people were killed and 242 were injured.

A man walks over the rubble after a bomb exploded at the Argentinian Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) in Buenos Aires, Argentina, July 18, 1994.

Two years later, on July 18, 1994, another explosive-laden truck was driven to a Jewish target, this time to the Associacion Mutual Israelita Argentina (AMIA), a popular Jewish Community Center in Buenos Aires. The driver detonated his truck, killing 87 people and wounding over 300. A recent Israeli government report found that the bombing was the work of Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Lebanese terrorist organization. The perpetrators, the report concludes, are living in freedom in Lebanon today.

While Argentinian government forces werent behind the attacks, there have been persistent suspicions that Argentinas leaders helped obscure Irans involvement in the attacks. In 2005, Argentinas Public Prosecutor Alberto Nisman - whod been the main investigator in the AMIA attack - announced that he intended to bring criminal charges against then-President Cristina Kirchner and former Foreign Minister Hector Timerman for covering up evidence in the AMIA bombing and for secretly dealing with Iran in violation of international sanctions.

Just hours before he was due to appear in Argentinas congress to explain the charges, Nisman was murdered in his home.

The aftermath of the bombing at the Argentinian Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) in Buenos Aires, Argentina, July 18, 1994. (AFP)

By this time, after posing as a Jew for years, Jose Perez was thoroughly disillusioned with the antisemitism he observed inside the Argentinian intelligence establishment. When the bombings occurred, and it seemed that Argentinian officials were helping to cover up Irans involvement in the attacks, he felt profound regret. He eventually left the intelligence service and offered all he knew to Alberto Nismans office. Fearing for his life, Perez entered a witness protection program and left Argentina.

In 2000, he reached out to two Jewish Argentinean journalists, Miriam Lewin and Horacio Lutzky, and told them he wanted to tell them his story. He was convinced that Argentinian officials were helping to cover up the bombing ot the Israeli embassy and the AMIA. I am not who you think I am, he told Horacio Lutzky, whom hed seen around Argentinas Jewish areas. Im not Jewish. Im a spy, a special agent infiltrated into the community.

During his mission, Yosi provided details of movements, identities, lists of names, schedules, meetings and sketches of the interior of community buildings to the federal police, explains Miriam Lewin. He was dismayed to see that in the aftermath of the AMIA bombing, the federal police didnt prioritize finding the culprits and continued to demand that he spy on the Jewish community instead of looking for clues to the bombers identity.

Daniel Burman, the Jewish Argentinian director who created Yosi, the Regretful Spy, experienced both the 1992 and 1994 terrorist attacks first hand. On March 17, 1992, he was walking to his parents house in Buenos Aires. Suddenly I heard the howling of sirens, he recalled. When the AMIA building was bombed two years later, he was even closer.

I live only five blocks away from the AMIA, Burman told The Times of Israel. I saw people walking in chaos and all the lights were out in the area.

He long thought about making a film or a television series about these attacks, but never felt that the time was right. Then, in 2017, he entered a bookstore and realized he had the perfect vehicle to tell the story of the bombings. Miriam Lewins and Horacio Lutzkys new book about Perez had just come out. Iosi. El espia arrepentido (Yosi, the Regretful Spy) told Perezs story, from his recruitment to spy on the Jewish community, to his decision to go to the federal prosecutors office and enter the witness protection program. It was a heartbreaking read.

I called the authors and told them I need their story because it was waiting for me, Daniel Burman explained. Once I started to film, I realized that this was the project of my life.

Today, Perez divides his time between an undisclosed location in Argentina and a foreign country. We do not know his whereabouts, just that he is safe, explains Miriam Lewin, who interviewed him extensively for her book. But his life is destroyed. He feels lonely and disappointed - and he still wants to help bring justice for the families of the dead.

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The Real Story behind the Spy who Infiltrated Argentina's Jewish Community - aish.com Jewish Society, History, Modern, Featured, Israel - Aish.com

Israel’s Jewish identity under the spotlight ahead of elections – Ynetnews

Posted By on July 31, 2022

The focal point of the November 1 national ballot, which will undoubtedly come up time and time again in election campaigns and debates, will be the Jewish identity of Israel.

Recently, a random taxi driver told me, "This year I didn't put the Israeli flag on my car on Independence Day because I feel that the state is escaping me, no longer mine, no longer a state of Jews."

3 View gallery

People at campaign rally for Ayelet Shaked's new party The Zionist Spirit

(Photo: Yair Sagi)

A significant share of the Jewish public fears the state's Jewish majority, and thus its Jewish identity, is growing weaker by the day. The elections will be a platform through which this concern is set to be addressed.

Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu launched his campaign with a video message, saying he intends to maintain the purity of the national identity of the country ... and also lower the cost of living, but added that in most democracies elections aren't won by economic incentives alone.

According to Netanyahu and his advisors, Likud will prevail on the back of the deepening rift between Jewish and Arab Israelis, which ironically widened during the year when the government coalition included an Arab party for the first time in history.

The former prime minister hopes to ride this crusade all the way to the Knesset's throne.

It can be easily understood why Israel's economic situation won't set the tone of the upcoming elections - as worrying as it is.

The financial accomplishments and failures of the Israeli economy in 2021-2022 are Netanyahu's responsibility much more than they are of Prime Minister Yair Lapid or his predecessor Naftali Bennett. The strengths and weaknesses of our economy are the outcome of lengthy domestic and global processes, which began long before 2021 when the Bennett coalition was formed.

While the public unrest surrounding astronomic housing prices is indeed the most significant social crisis the next government is facing, and it will find its place in the election campaigns, it doesn't act as an issue that benefits or undermines any political camp. Because essentially - everyone is to blame.

Not one of the governments Israel has had in the past few years can boast to have improved the situation, with the average house price rising by 120% between 2008 to 2021.

However, in the attempt to present their opponents as willing to jeopardize the exclusive Jewish identity for power, the Likud and Netanyahu will face a political persona very different from that of Bennett.

3 View gallery

Prime Minister Yair Lapid

(Photo: Yoav Dudkevitch, Yaron Brenner)

Lapid, who a decade prior established the Yesh Atid party and successfully led it through several elections, has a team of loyal voters from the middle class and is very much worthy of heading an interim Israeli government.

Just from listening to Lapid's speech during the swearing-in ceremony, one could easily have noticed the frequent use of the phrase "the Jewish state". Lapid, as the true centrist, represents "the Jewish state" in the nationalist sense, not the religious one.

The Likud will certainly struggle to present Lapid as one who is willing to sacrifice Israel's identity for power - something they could accuse Bennett of quite easily given the former premier's affiliations with the national-religious Yamina party.

All Lapid has to do from now until the election day is not to mess up, and certainly not on camera. He must not abandon the progress made vis--vis the Palestinians, consult with professionals on finding solutions for the housing crisis and proudly stand up for the sectors he so proudly represents.

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Israel's Jewish identity under the spotlight ahead of elections - Ynetnews

Dozens gather at Jewish Day of Action for Reproductive Justice to protest proposed abortion ban – WFYI

Posted By on July 31, 2022

Dozens of Jewish people gathered at the Indiana Statehouse Friday to protest against a bill that would largely ban abortion in the state.

The rally organized by the National Council of Jewish Women, ADL Midwest and Women for Change targeted SB 1 (ss), which bans abortions except in restricted cases of rape and incest and when the life of the pregnant person is at risk. The event followed larger protests held earlier in the week by the ACLU of Indiana, Planned Parenthood, and Indiana Right to Life.

Abortion is considered essential healthcare under Jewish law, and is required if the pregnant persons life or health is at risk. Protesters and speakers Friday said the bill threatens Jewish religious freedom, and displayed signs reading Abortion bans are against my religion and Abortion access is a Jewish value.

Rebecca Geyer, a former president of the NCJWs Indianapolis section, says most Jewish people believe life begins once a child is born and takes their first breath, not at conception. Until it is born, the fetus is considered to be a physical part of the pregnant persons body and is not alive.

Judaism is about giving people individual choice with regard to this issue. We really do prioritize a woman's health and our belief about when life begins is different than maybe other faiths, Geyer said. But we are not an organization or a religion that is going to impose our views upon others, we just feel it's important to have reproductive access for all.

Jordana Chernow-Reader, a rabbi at Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation, spoke at Fridays rally and emphasized that the well-being of the pregnant persons life comes first, including both physical and mental health.

We really firmly believe that it's her choice, that she is empowered to make whatever decision she wants to make over her own life and over her own body, Chernow-Reader said.

Jamie Burnett attended Fridays protest after hearing about it at her synagogue and from her mother, who was also in attendance.

I'm pro-choice and just upset about the fact that at some point, my daughter might not be able to have the right to go get an abortion if she needs one, that it's going to disproportionately affect so many women of color, Burnett said. So I just feel like I need to use my voice.

Burnett added that she thinks the proposed legislation disregards what most Hoosiers want, and is influenced by pro-life groups with Christian values.

Its such a disconnect, that it's basically imposing Christian values on Jewish people, she said.

The Senate is expected to vote on the bill Saturday, and more protests are expected to take place. If the Senate passes the bill, it will then move through the House.

Contact WFYI criminal justice reporter Katrina Pross at kpross@wfyi.org. Follow on Twitter: @katrina_pross.

Pross is a Corps Member of Report for America, an initiative of The GroundTruth Project.

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Dozens gather at Jewish Day of Action for Reproductive Justice to protest proposed abortion ban - WFYI

Indian envoy asks diaspora youth to connect to their roots,… – The American Bazaar

Posted By on July 31, 2022

Suggests that gurdawaras in US could help new immigrants with basic consular services

By Surekha Vijh

Indian Ambassador Taranjit Singh Sandhu has advised Indian diaspora youth in the United States to connect with their roots and culture by visiting historic sites as also learn about Indian success stories in sectors like IT.

Sandhu made the suggestion during a meeting on July 22 with members of the World United Guru Nanak Foundation (WUGNF) USA, who had met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi on the occasion of Sadbhavna Diwas and celebration of Guru Teg Bahadurs 400th birth centenary.

Read: GiveIndia and Indiaspora announce strategic philanthropy partnership (July 8, 2022)

The delegation members expressed their deep appreciation for the phenomenal work being done by Sandhu in promoting US-India relations and said he makes all Sikhs proud and represents what every Indian can achieve through their hard work and competence.

Sandhu expressed the importance of education and knowledge partnership in India-US bilateral relations and recalled the work done by great Sikh leaders in promoting education in India.

The ambassador said that he looked forward to India Diaspora youth being connected to their roots and culture and suggested they visit historic and religious places like the Golden Temple.

Read: Indian diaspora luminaries celebrate 75 years of US-India relations (April 15, 2022)

They should also visit such places as Hyderabad and Bangalore, where diaspora youth can learn about the Indian success stories in the IT sector, he said promising the embassys all possible support for their travel and safe stay in India.

This will open their eyes and expose to them the reality of the negative propaganda being done by those handful of anti-India elements who are supported by inimical forces, Sandhu said.

Sandhu also suggested that Gurdawaras could work in coordination with the embassy to provide help in consular services like filling up the application forms and understanding the rules, regulations and procedures.

Since many people who come from Punjab have difficulty filling up the forms and understanding the language and other basic things required in the new country, he said. Such a service in the true spirit of Sikh tradition would be of great help for diaspora.

Read: Indiaspora honors Indian Americans in public service at Diwali celebration (October 27, 2021)

Gurdawaras can have computers and office space to help all, especially the new immigrants, while they partake in seva, (service) and langar (community meals).

WUGNF general secretary Dr Surinder Singh committed to help in these initiatives to help Indian diaspora and exposing the inimical forces targeting India.

Recalling their meeting with Modi, WUGNF president Gurcharan Singh said, that the Prime Minister had called the Sikh tradition a living example of Ek Bharat, Shreshtha Bharat one India, great India and that the Sikh community has become synonymous with the national spirit of courage, prowess and diligence.

Modi recalled that the Sikh Gurus spent their entire lives uniting the nation and left their imprints all over India, from Gujarat to Bihar, Singh added.

Indias history is incomplete without the mention of Maharaja Ranjit Singhs contributions, Sikh struggles against the British and Jallianwala Bagh tragedy, Modi said saluting the Sikh spirit of service and enterprise.

Read: Indian Ambassador in US Taranjit Sandhu interacts with White House fellows (July 2, 2021)

Indias rising stature made diaspora the proudest and opened new horizons for them as the world viewed them with greater respect, he said.

Gurcharan Singh said he had requested Modi to open a Sadbhavna center in each country to bring all communities close. This would enable them to celebrate Indian festivals, strengthen language, culture, traditions and rituals.

The delegation included WUGNF chairman Amar Malhi and a visiting Indian industrialist Amarjit Singh from Delhi.

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Indian envoy asks diaspora youth to connect to their roots,... - The American Bazaar


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