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Married in the US; single in the EU – Rochester BeaconRochester Beacon – Rochester Beacon

Posted By on July 14, 2022

My wife, Suzanne, and I have been happily married for 55 years, and look forward to many more. Except, perhaps, in Portugal and throughout the European Union, wheredue to a bureaucrats whim (and wink)I am now single.

How this came to be is part of a larger story about Jews around the world finally reclaimingafter nearly 500 years of exiletheir Portuguese citizenship.

Ever since I was little, I wondered about where my family came from. I knew my dads family was from the Netherlands, Alsace-Lorraine, and Germany, and my moms was from Poland. But where were their roots?

On a trip to Portugal, a friend there told me shed written a book for the Portuguese Ministry of Culture about the history, starting in 1400, of the Jews of Portugal. About the same time, my wife gave me a subscription to Ancestry.com and through that I learned that on my paternal side some of my ancestors were, in fact, Portuguese Jews. Further research showed that around the time of the Portuguese Inquisition, they all left for other parts of Europe.

Some history: The Spanish Inquisition of 1492 had forced Jews living in Spain either to convert to Christianity or leave. Some moved to Portugal, but in 1536, the Portuguese Inquisitionofficially known as the General Council of the Holy Office of the Inquisition in Portugalattempted to root out Jews who had converted but who were suspected of secretly practicing Judaism. Victims numbered an estimated 40,000, many by being burned alive. Many Jews fled the country, joining a growing diaspora in Europe and throughout the world.

The information about my ancestral connection to Portugal took on new relevance when, in 2015, the Portuguese government approved the Law of Return allowing descendants of Jews who were expelled in the Inquisition to apply for citizenship.

I liked that idea: It would connect me in a real way to my familys history andif for political reasons the need ever arosewould give us a place outside the U.S. to resettle.

Under the Law of Return, applicants must prove they belong to a Sephardic (Jewish) community of Portuguese origin with ties to Portugal. I wasnt sure if I fit that description. My Portuguese friends were not optimistic; the red tape, they warned, might be insurmountable.

But I began building my Portuguese portfoliowhich wasnt difficult because I discovered an affinity for Portugal and Portuguese culture. Id already become an officer of the Center for Music Connections, a Portuguese-American cultural exchange program focused on a traditional Portuguese music genre called fado. In that role, I brought Ana Lains, a famous fado singer, to Rochester to perform in Eastmans World Music Series and invited the local Portuguese-American community to attend. Later, my wife and I were invited to Washington, D.C., for dinner and a concert at the home of Domingos Fezas Vital, the Portuguese ambassador. After some time, I took the leap and applied for citizenship. I had no idea it would take well over two years.

Portuguese government officials asked for everything: an FBI report that I was not a criminal (I wasnt); a similar document from the Ministry of Justice in Belgium, where I had lived for eight years; a birth certificate showing my parentage; a family tree; letters from rabbis; and a certificate from either of two Sephardic communitiesin Lisbon or Portoshowing my affiliation. I chose the community in Portoa coastal town in northern Portugalbecause it was smaller and, I figured, easier to deal with.

All documents had to be notarized and translated into Portuguese, which I was able to do thanks to the kindness of a Portuguese-American I met in Rochester. There were required fees, payable in euros, many mailings back and forth for this or that missing document, and an in-person visit to the Portuguese consulate in Washington.

One day in October 2021, a certificado from Porto arrived in the mail verifying my claims in support of Portuguese citizenship. But that was just the start of the red tape. I now had to obtain a citizen card as proof and get my EU passport. The Portuguese consulate in New York City was the only place to do that in the U.S., but it was nearly impossible to get an appointment. I read it was easier to just go to Lisbon and do it there. So, with the pandemic quieting down, I decided to go for it. Online, I set up an appointment at the Ministry of Justice in Lisbon. But language still presented a problem: Despite having taken 12 weeks of online Portuguese lessons, I spoke like a three-year-old, so I arranged for a Portuguese friend, Carlos, to meet me at the ministry office.

On the appointed day, my wife and I met Carlos. To get to the little office building, we had to walk through a fish market. A woman greeted us coldly and began looking through my papers.

Was I married? she asked.

Yes, almost 55 years, I answered.

Where is your wedding certificate?

Uh, home in Rochester, on my desk.

And then she beamed a big smile and gave me a wink.

Well, Im afraid here in Portugal and the EU, youll have to be single!

She then took my photo, checked my height, weighed me, and said my papers would be ready the next dayat a different office miles away.

The line at the other office was out the door and around the block. While waiting, though, we met some interesting people, among them a Canadian couple whose son played in the National Hockey League and a heart surgeon from Harvard. I later learned thousands of people from around the world have responded to Portugals Law of Return and become citizens. I wonder, though, how many of them, like me, are married in the U.S. and single in the EU.

Sanford J. Mayer M.D. is a pediatrician. Over the course of his career, he worked at St. Marys Hospital, in a private practice in Brighton, and at Rochester Institute of Technology as a college health physician and medical director. Now retired, he mentors medical students in their pediatric clerkship at Golisano Childrens Hospital.

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Married in the US; single in the EU - Rochester BeaconRochester Beacon - Rochester Beacon

Civil Rights and Youth Organizations Send Letters to Texas School Districts Urging Them to Ensure Dress Codes Are Not Discriminatory – NAACP Legal…

Posted By on July 14, 2022

Read a PDF of our statement here.

Today, seventeen civil rights groups and youth organizations sent letters to every Texas school superintendent urging them to ensure their districts dress codes and related polices are not fostering unlawful discrimination that unfairly denies students an equal opportunity to get an education based on their race, gender, or religion.

The state and national organizations, including the Legal Defense Fund (LDF) and ACLU of Texas, note in the letters that in recent years, certain dress code rules such as requiring boys to wear short hair have harmed students across Texas, particularly Black, Indigenous, and LGBTQ+ youth. The letters ask superintendents to update student handbooks this summer to remove any gender-based or discriminatory rules from dress codes.

Some Texas school districts still have dress codes that treat boys and girls differently or are applied in a manner that target students of color who wear their hair in ways that pay homage to their racial or cultural heritage. After LDF and co-counsel Akin Gump won a preliminary injunction barring the Barbers Hill Independent School District from enforcing such a dress code against its client in 2020, many school districts changed their policies to eliminate discriminatory provisions.

We have repeatedly seen how outdated dress code rules harm Texas students, the letters note. Mathis Independent School District (ISD), near Corpus Christi, punished two Catholic students for growing out their hair as a promise to God. In Troy ISD, near Temple, Texas, an 11-year-old student was suspended for 10 days for wearing long hair to honor his Black and Indigenous heritage. And Clyde CISD, near Abilene, Texas, made national news after suspending a gay student for decorating his nails. Troy ISD, Clyde CISD, and dozens of school districts across the state have now updated their dress code policies to remove gender-based language, and all districts should do the same.

The letters continue: No school district should put its federal funding or taxpayer dollars at risk by engaging in unlawful discrimination. Instead, school districts should ensure that every student can thrive and succeed at school.

Read a full copy of the letters here. They are signed by:

The Legal Defense Fund (LDF)The ACLU of TexasTexas AppleseedTexas Civil Rights ProjectChildrens Defense Fund TexasJuvenile and Childrens Advocacy ProjectTexas Freedom Network (TFN)Lambda LegalEquality TexasTransgender Education Network of Texas (TENT)National Womens Law Center (NWLC)Antidefamation LeagueIntercultural Development Research Association (IDRA)NAACP Texas State ConferenceNative American Rights Fund (NARF)Organizing Network for Education (ONE) HoustonYoung Leaders Strong City

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Founded in 1940, the Legal Defense Fund (LDF) is the nations first civil rights law organization. LDFs Thurgood Marshall Institute is a multi-disciplinary and collaborative hub within LDF that launches targeted campaigns and undertakes innovative research to shape the civil rights narrative. In media attributions, please refer to us as the Legal Defense Fund or LDF. Please note that LDF has been completely separate from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) since 1957although LDF was originally founded by the NAACP and shares its commitment to equal rights.

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Civil Rights and Youth Organizations Send Letters to Texas School Districts Urging Them to Ensure Dress Codes Are Not Discriminatory - NAACP Legal...

Secret Service worker sent home after attacking woman in Israel

Posted By on July 14, 2022

A Secret Service worker in Israel ahead of President Bidens visit to the Middle East was sent home from Jerusalem after physically assaulting a woman outside a bar, CNN reported Wednesday.

The Secret Service confirmed to The Post that the agency was informed late Monday that an employee was allegedly involved in a physical encounter.

The employee was briefly detained and questioned by Israeli police, who released him without charges. The employee has returned to the United States, the agency said in a statement, adding that the alleged assault was not sexual in nature.

The employees access to Secret Service systems and facilities has also been suspended pending further investigation.

Further details about the encounter, including how it started, were not immediately clear. According to CNN, the employee was a member of the Secret Services Counter Assault Team.

Biden arrived in Jerusalem Wednesday on the first leg of a four-day trip to the region. In the coming days, the president is scheduled to travel to the West Bank before going on to Saudi Arabia to meet with King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman.

Mondays incident is not the first time the Biden administration has been forced to send Secret Service officers back to the US from a foreign trip.

In May, two employees an agent and an armed physical security specialist were sent home after an alcohol-fueled confrontation with a local cab driver ahead of Bidens trip to South Korea. The incident reportedly took place outside the hotel Biden later stayed at in Seoul.

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Secret Service worker sent home after attacking woman in Israel

The Jerusalem US-Israel Strategic Partnership Joint Declaration – The White House

Posted By on July 14, 2022

The leaders of the United States and Israel, President Biden and Prime Minister Lapid, met in Jerusalem on 14 July 2022, and adopted the following Joint Declaration on the US-Israel Strategic Partnership:

The United States and Israel reaffirm the unbreakable bonds between our two countries and the enduring commitment of the United States to Israels security. Our countries further reaffirm that the strategic U.S.-Israel partnership is based on a bedrock of shared values, shared interests, and true friendship. Furthermore, the United States and Israel affirm that among the values the countries share is an unwavering commitment to democracy, the rule of law, and the calling of Tikkun Olam, repairing the world. The leaders express appreciation to former Prime Minister Bennett, who led the most diverse government in Israels history, and under whose leadership this extraordinary partnership has continued to grow stronger.

Consistent with the longstanding security relationship between the United States and Israel and the unshakeable U.S. commitment to Israels security, and especially to the maintenance of its qualitative military edge, the United States reiterates its steadfast commitment to preserve and strengthen Israels capability to deter its enemies and to defend itself by itself against any threat or combination of threats. The United States further reiterates that these commitments are bipartisan and sacrosanct, and that they are not only moral commitments, but also strategic commitments that are vitally important to the national security of the United States itself.

The United States stresses that integral to this pledge is the commitment never to allow Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon, and that it is prepared to use all elements of its national power to ensure that outcome. The United States further affirms the commitment to work together with other partners to confront Irans aggression and destabilizing activities, whether advanced directly or through proxies and terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah, Hamas, and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

The United States and Israel note that nothing better reflects the steadfast and bipartisan support of the United States to Israels security than the unprecedented Memoranda of Understanding on security assistance signed by successive U.S. administrations over the last few decades, and that these arrangements demonstrate in word and deed that the United States considers Israels security essential to U.S. interests and an anchor of regional stability.

The United States strongly supports implementing the terms of the current historic $38 billion Memorandum of Understanding in full, which honors the United States enduring commitment to Israels security, as well as its conviction that a follow-on MOU should address emerging threats and new realities. In addition, the United States is committed to seeking additional missile defense assistance in excess of MOU levels, in exceptional circumstances such as the hostilities with Hamas over eleven days in May 2021. Israel appreciates the U.S. commitment to the MOU and for providing an additional $1 billion over MOU levels in supplemental missile defense funding following the 2021 conflict. Further, the countries express enthusiasm to move forward the U.S.-Israel defense partnership through cooperation in cutting-edge defense technologies such as high energy laser weapons systems to defend the skies of Israel and in the future those of other U.S. and Israel security partners.

Israel thanks the United States for its ongoing and extensive support for deepening and broadening the historic Abraham Accords. The countries affirm that Israels peace and normalization agreements with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Morocco constitute a critical addition to Israels strategic peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan, all of which are important to the future of the Middle East region and to the cause of regional security, prosperity, and peace. The countries note that the historic Negev Summit, initiated and hosted by Prime Minister Lapid, was a landmark event in joint U.S.-Israeli efforts to build a new regional framework that is changing the face of the Middle East.

The United States and Israel welcome in this regard the meeting held in Manama, Bahrain on June 27th, forming the Negev Forum on regional cooperation. The United States welcomes these developments and is committed to continue playing an active role, including in the context of President Bidens upcoming visit to Saudi Arabia, in building a robust regional architecture; to deepen the ties between Israel and all of its regional partners; to advance Israels regional integration over time; and to expand the circle of peace to include ever more Arab and Muslim States.

The United States and Israel also welcome the opportunity to participate in a quadrilateral (hybrid) meeting, together with the leaders of India and the United Arab Emirates, in the context of the I2U2 initiative, bringing together these four countries to advance cooperation in economy and strategic infrastructure, and demonstrating the importance of this new partnership, first launched by their Foreign Ministers in October 2021.

The United States and Israel reiterate their concerns regarding the ongoing attacks against Ukraine, their commitment to Ukraines sovereignty and territorial integrity, and affirmed the importance of continued humanitarian assistance to the people of Ukraine.

The United States and Israel affirm that they will continue to work together to combat all efforts to boycott or de-legitimize Israel, to deny its right to self-defense, or to unfairly single it out in any forum, including at the United Nations or the International Criminal Court. While fullyrespecting the right to freedom of expression, they firmly reject the BDS campaign. The two countries will use the tools at their disposal to fight every scourge and source of antisemitism and to respond whenever legitimate criticism crosses over into bigotry and hatred or attempts to undermine Israels rightful and legitimate place among the family of nations. In this context, they express their deep concern over the global surge in antisemitism and reassert their commitment to counter this ancient hatred in all of its manifestations. The United States is proud to stand with the Jewish and democratic State of Israel, and with its people, whose uncommon courage, resilience, and spirit of innovation are an inspiration to so many worldwide.

The United States and Israel commit to continuing to discuss the challenges and opportunities in Israeli-Palestinian relations. The countries condemn the deplorable series of terrorist attacks against Israeli citizens in recent months and affirm the need to confront radical forces, such as Hamas, seeking to inflame tension and instigate violence and terrorism. President Biden reaffirms his longstanding and consistent support of a two-state solution and for advancing toward a reality in which Israelis and Palestinians alike can enjoy equal measures of security, freedom and prosperity. The United States stands ready to work with Israel, the Palestinian Authority, and regional stakeholders toward that goal. The leaders also affirm their shared commitment to initiatives that strengthen the Palestinian economy and improve the quality of life of Palestinians.

The United States and Israel enjoy extensive bilateral cooperation and dialogue between their two countries in many critical spheres from groundbreaking collaboration in science and technology, to unique intelligence sharing and joint military exercises, to shared efforts in confronting pressing global challenges such as climate change, food security, and healthcare. To complement the extensive existing scientific and technological cooperation between their two countries, and to bring their cooperation to a new height, the leaders launched a new U.S.-Israel Strategic High-Level Dialogue on Technology to form a U.S.-Israel technological partnership in critical and emerging technologies, as well as in areas of global concern: pandemic preparedness, climate change, artificial intelligence, and trusted technology. This new technological partnership will be designed to boost the countries mutual innovation ecosystems and address geostrategic challenges.

In this same spirit, the United States and Israel affirm their commitment to continue their shared and accelerated efforts to enable Israeli passport holders to be included in the U.S. Visa Waiver Program as soon as possible, as well as their support for increased collaboration on operational cyber exchange and on combatting cybercrime. The leaders state that all of these initiatives, and countless other joint endeavors, undertaken between their peoples at every level of government and civil society demonstrate that the U.S.-Israel strategic partnership is indispensable and makes an outsized contribution not only to the good of American and Israeli citizens but also to the good of the Middle East and of the world.

With this record of remarkable achievement and with a sense of the incredible promise that the unparalleled U.S.-Israel relationship holds for the future, the United States and Israel warmly welcome entering the 75th year of this extraordinary partnership.

Signed at Jerusalem on the 14th day of the July, 2022, which corresponds to the 15th day of Tamuz, 5782, in the Hebrew calendar, in duplicate in the English language.

Joseph R.Biden Jr.

President of the United States of America

Yair Lapid

Prime Minister of the State of Israel

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The Jerusalem US-Israel Strategic Partnership Joint Declaration - The White House

Bidens Jerusalem visit is a recalibration of the US-Israel relationship – Vox.com

Posted By on July 14, 2022

JERUSALEM After President Joe Biden stepped off the plane at Israels Ben Gurion Airport, Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid greeted him with a memory from eight years ago.

You told me [then] that if you had my hair, you would be president of the United States, Lapid recalled. I said to you that, if I had your height, I would be Israels prime minister.

During the tarmac welcoming ceremony, Lapid described Biden as a great Zionist and one of the best friends Israel has ever known. At a Thursday press conference, the two men swapped kind words and even cracked a joke or two.

This warm reception for a Democratic president in Jerusalem is more than a little unusual, at least as far as recent history goes. During Benjamin Netanyahus long tenure, from 2009 to 2021, the right-wing Israeli prime minister acted almost like a partisan agent, working with Republicans to undermine Barack Obamas Middle East policy and embracing Donald Trump in a way few other democratic leaders would.

Netanyahu turned [Israel] into a wholly owned subsidiary of Trump and the GOP: the geopolitical equivalent of anti-vaxxers, says Daniel Seidemann, a Jerusalem-based lawyer and leading expert on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Lapids immediate predecessor, Naftali Bennett, attempted to undo what Netanyahu had wrought, journeying to Washington for a friendly meeting with the president. But Bennett, the leader of a right-wing faction, was not a natural Biden ally. The centrist Lapid is: He and Biden are the first president-prime minister pair to truly support a Palestinian state in nearly 15 years.

But the affinities between Biden and Lapid run deeper than policy. Both leaders represent a kind of consensus-based politics, seeing their central tasks as saving their countrys democracy from the ravages of political polarization. They both believe their nations are made up of fundamentally decent people who have been cynically divided by their authoritarian-minded predecessors Trump and Netanyahu, respectively. They see their primary responsibility as not only keeping the far-right menace out of office but undoing the damage its done to the polity itself.

Whether they can deliver on this lofty aim is far from clear. Biden and Lapid are in weak political positions ahead of critical fall elections in both countries, which could well lead to a Republican-controlled Congress and Netanyahus return to the premiership. And there are good reasons to think that the crises of Israeli and American democracy run far deeper than Biden and Lapid suggest: rising from fundamental forces that no one leader could hope to tame.

According to the Israeli and American governments, Bidens visit to Israel is an occasion to announce a new strategic partnership document. In reality, the announcements are not the kind of game changers that would merit a presidential visit on their own.

Its possible to see Bidens Israel visit as merely a pit stop on his way to Saudi Arabia. Biden wants to enlist the oil-producing kingdoms help in taming inflation, his biggest political and economic liability, and is seeking to repair relations with a human-rights-abusing government he once vowed to turn into a pariah. The Israel visit seems, at least in part, an attempt to avoid the appearance of snubbing Americas closest Middle East ally before the president reaches his true destination.

But its also possible to see Bidens stop in Jerusalem as an attempt at resetting a relationship, just as much as his visit to Jeddah: not just between the United States and Israel, but between Israel and the Democratic Party.

For most of modern American history, support for Israel was a thoroughly bipartisan issue, with both Democrats and Republicans generally taking the Israeli side in the conflict with the Palestinians. But beginning around 2015, the Democratic preference for Israel began to decline and ultimately eroded entirely. Today, Gallup data shows that roughly as many Democrats take the Palestinian side as Israels.

There are deep reasons for this development, including the leftward drift of the Democratic Party and the increasingly entrenched occupation of Palestinian lands. But a significant amount of blame rests with two men: Netanyahu and Trump.

During the Obama administration, Israels prime minister frequently clashed with his American counterpart on issues like West Bank settlement expansion, which Obama tried to freeze and Netanyahu accelerated. In 2012, Netanyahu all but openly endorsed Mitt Romney for president. In 2015, he coordinated with congressional Republicans to give a highly unusual speech to Congress opposing the Iran nuclear deal effectively whipping votes against Obamas signature Middle East policy accomplishment.

The anti-Obama activity, especially the Iran speech, infuriated both Democratic elites and rank-and-file voters. But the real coup de grace came in the next administration, when Netanyahu embraced Trump going so far as to put up giant campaign posters in Israel with his face on them. Trump, for his part, publicly embraced Netanyahus right-wing vision for Israel appointing a pro-settlement ideologue ambassador to Israel, moving the US embassy to Jerusalem, abandoning the Iran nuclear deal, and proposing a peace plan that gave the Israeli right everything it wanted.

None of this would have happened under a Democratic president. Much of it would have been unthinkable among prior Republicans. But Netanyahu correctly assessed that he and Trump were alike: both disdainful of Arab Muslims, both unconcerned with human rights, and both willing to run roughshod over their countrys democratic institutions in pursuit of power.

Under Netanyahu and Trump, the US-Israel relationship became a perversion of the classic idea of an alliance grounded in shared democratic values. The values they now shared were both anti-Democratic and anti-democratic: hostile to a political party and the foundations of a free political system.

A few months after Biden took office in 2021, Lapid managed to stitch together a broad coalition of parties opposed to Netanyahu after four successive elections yielded inconclusive results. For the first year, he agreed not to serve as prime minister despite his centrist Yesh Atid party holding the most seats in the Knesset (Israels parliament) of any coalition party. Instead, he allowed Naftali Bennett, leader of the right-wing Yamina party, to take the top spot at the outset to guarantee his participation in an alliance with the center and left.

The change in leadership in both Washington and Jerusalem created an opportunity for a recalibration of the US-Israel relationship. But Bennett, a right-winger at least as opposed to a Palestinian state as Netanyahu, was not an ideal messenger for a rapprochement with the American center left.

Ironically, the coalitions collapse three weeks ago may end up making the US-Israel relationship a bit smoother (at least temporarily). The agreement between Bennett and Lapid dictates that, in the event of a collapse, the latter will serve as prime minister till new elections can be held. So for now through the November 1 election, and possibly longer, a centrist supporter of the two-state solution will serve as Israels prime minister the first time this has been the case since Ehud Olmert left office in early 2009.

But Biden and Lapid share more than political positions: They have both developed a similar diagnosis about whats gone wrong in their respective countries and how to fix it.

In Bidens inaugural address, he told Americans that this is our historic moment of crisis and challenge, and unity is the path forward. Meeting this challenge, he argued, meant ending this uncivil war that pits red against blue, rural versus urban, conservative versus liberal. It also meant confronting the political actors responsible for dividing America: those who practice the politics of demonization and spread lies for power and for profit.

In Lapids first televised address as prime minister, on July 2, he struck a similar note. The great Israeli question is actually why, in a period in which we have wide national agreement on all the important topics, the levels of hate and anxiety within Israeli society are so high, he said. Like Biden, Lapid blamed his countrys intense divisions on political figures who stoked division for partisan gain:

In Israel, extremism doesnt come from the streets to politics. Its the opposite. It flows like lava from politics to the streets. The political sphere has become more and more extreme, violent and vicious, and its dragging Israeli society along with it. This we must stop. This is our challenge.

Both leaders, in short, believe that their democracies are in crisis: that their predecessors ginned up internal conflict for political gain, demonizing minorities and political enemies, and pushing the political system to a breaking point. They see their central tasks as stitching a broken country back together, uniting a citizenry that, in their minds, has more in common than that which divides it.

Their quests, if successful, would not only safeguard democracy at home but also ground the US-Israel alliance in truly shared democratic values. But that is a very big if.

Both Biden and Lapid are facing difficult elections in November. Polling data suggests Democrats are very likely to lose control of at least one house of Congress and possibly both, with a Trump candidacy looming in 2024. Israeli polls reveal an electorate as profoundly divided between pro- and anti-Netanyahu parties as ever, one that could very plausibly return the former leader to power if a few things break his way.

For all the blame Biden and Lapid have heaped on their polarizing predecessors, there is little acknowledgment that theres also a demand-side issue many citizens have heard what Trump and Bibi have to say and continue to find it appealing. Biden and Lapids core theory that a centrist consensus lurks beneath the surface of intense polarization, ready to be brought out by a daring politician seems questionable at best.

Perhaps this should not be very surprising. The success of anti-democratic demagoguery in the United States and Israel is part of a global trend, one that encompasses countries as diverse as India, Hungary, the Philippines, and Brazil. No one has found a silver bullet that pro-democratic leaders can use to manufacture a new consensus that can exclude these forces from power; the roots of their support run too deep. Expecting Biden and Lapids coalition to solve such a problem after roughly a year in power is expecting a miracle.

Yet thats what Biden and Lapid have promised, to their own citizens and to each other. They aspire to rebuild a democratic foundation not only for the US and Israel, but for the US-Israel alliance. The bricks might be crumbling even before theyve been put in place.

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Bidens Jerusalem visit is a recalibration of the US-Israel relationship - Vox.com

Biden meets with Herzog, Netanyahu at Presidents Residence in Jerusalem – The Times of Israel

Posted By on July 14, 2022

Diplomacy wont stop Iran from going nuclear, Lapid tells Biden in press conference

Words and diplomacy will not stop Iran from achieving nuclear weapons, Prime Minister Yair Lapid says during his press conference with US President Joe Biden at Jerusalems Waldorf Astoria Hotel, after the two leaders sign the Jerusalem Declaration.

The only thing that will stop Iran is knowing that if they continue to develop their nuclear program the free world will use force. The only way to stop them is to put a credible military threat on the table, he says.

It should not be a bluff, but the real thing, Lapid continues. The Iranian regime must know that if they continue to deceive the world, they will pay a heavy price.

The fact that I am standing here today did not happen by itself, says Lapid. We learned the lesson, Mr. President. At all times, Israel must be strong, free and safe, with a powerful army that can defend our citizens.

Prime Minister Yair Lapid speaks at a press conference with US President Joe Biden, in Jerusalem, July 14, 2022. (GPO screenshot)

Referencing the biblical Joshua and Martin Luther King, Lapid says, The principle is the same: If you want your independence, your hands must defend you, and your legs must pray for you. You must march fearlessly towards the river.

Lapid also asks Biden to send a message to the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman and Iraq: Our hand is outstretched for peace. We are ready to share our technology and experience, ready for our people to meet and learn about one another, ready for our scientists to collaborate and our businesses to cooperate.

We send with you, to all the nations of the region, including of course the Palestinians, a message of peace.

He also calls Bidens flight to Saudi Arabia from Israel important for Israel and for the region. For our security and for the future prosperity of the Middle East.

The prime minister points at Russias unjustified invasion of Ukraine, terrorism, and the Iranian nuclear threat as reminders that in order to protect freedom, sometimes force must be used.

Lapid draws a parallel between the 9/11 terror attacks and Hamas rocket fire on Sderot, painting them as attacks on democracy that instill fear in terrorists and their supporters.

What scares them the most is that their citizens, their people, can see us. They can see our quality of life. The dynamism and creativity of our economy. The rights of women and the LGBTQ community. Freedom of religion and freedom of speech.

Its what makes the Iranian regime develop its nuclear program, Hezbollah aim its missiles at us and terrorist organizations worldwide send suicide bombers, he continues. They want to destroy the only Jewish state in the world. We will never let that happen.

Lapid finishes by thanking Biden for Americas friendship and commitment to Israel, calling it one of the cornerstones of Israels national security.

Throughout all your years in public service, you were one of the chief architects of this relationship, for that you have the everlasting gratitude of the people of Zion.

Asked by a reporter whether he still supports the concept of a two-state solution with the Palestinians, Lapid says: A two-state solution is a guarantee for a strong democratic Israel with a Jewish majority.

However, he ignores a second question regarding whether hell advance the issue if he is elected prime minister in the November election.

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Biden meets with Herzog, Netanyahu at Presidents Residence in Jerusalem - The Times of Israel

Secretary Blinken’s Travel to Israel, the West Bank, and Saudi Arabia – United States Department of State – Department of State

Posted By on July 14, 2022

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Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken will accompany President Biden to Israel, the West Bank, and Saudi Arabia July 13-16 to consult with Israeli, Palestinian, Gulf and regional partners on a range of priorities, including deepening U.S. ties across the region, regional security, support for a two-state solution, and countering shared threats, including those posed by Iran. Following meetings in Jerusalem and Bethlehem, President Biden and Secretary Blinken will continue to Jeddah for the Summit of the Gulf Cooperation Council along with Egypt, Iraq, and Jordan to discuss integration efforts to support regional stability and prosperity as well as other shared interests.

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Secretary Blinken's Travel to Israel, the West Bank, and Saudi Arabia - United States Department of State - Department of State

Israel works with Arab allies to down drones, in sign of growing ties – The Indian Express

Posted By on July 14, 2022

In the skies east of Israel, a few minutes before 2 a.m., four Israeli pilots scanned the horizon for two unmanned aircraft that were heading toward Israel from Iran. Suddenly, the pilots saw them two triangular drones, each roughly 8 yards wide, speeding westward.

Positive identification, one pilot told his commanders by radio. I will shoot.

Seconds later, both Iranian drones had crashed to the ground, shot down by two Israeli fighter jets in two locations above Arab territory.

The secret episode, which occurred March 15, 2021, was one of the first successful examples of a fledgling military relationship among Israel, certain Arab partners and the United States a project that President Joe Biden is trying to cement into a more formal network during his visit this week to the Middle East.

Corroborated by two senior Israeli officials and recordings of the pilots communications, the episode exemplified how Israel, once isolated in the Middle East because of Arab solidarity with the Palestinians, is now working increasingly closely with several Arab militaries. It also illustrated how shared fears of Iran now supersede concerns in some Arab governments about the failure to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Over the past decade, Iran and its proxies in Yemen, Lebanon, Syria and Iraq have increasingly used drones to attack Israel, U.S. forces in the Middle East and Sunni Arab states, including against oil facilities in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia this year.

While the biggest long-term threat from Iran is its nuclear program, Tehrans opponents are concerned by the drones because their small size and relatively slow speed make them hard to detect and intercept and because they are already causing damage.

Announced last month by Israel, the new initiative, the Middle East Air Defense project, is an attempt to shore up the regions defenses against drones. The idea is to allow its participants to alert one another instantly about incoming drone attacks, through the coordination of the U.S. Central Command. Israel has already warned some Arab countries about an imminent drone strike, a senior Israeli defense official said.

In the future, Israel hopes participants will be connected to the same radar system, eliminating the need to send one another warnings. Everybody will see the same feed on their screen, said Brig. Gen. Ran Kochav, chief spokesperson for the Israeli army, and a former commander of Israels air defense.

Some of the coordination is already happening. In the March episode, Israel was able to successfully request permission from a nearby Arab country to enter its airspace and intercept the drones before they crossed Israels borders.

Israeli officials declined to identify that country, in order to avoid causing it embarrassment for allowing another air force to operate above its sovereign territory. But it is likely to be Jordan, the only friendly country on Israels eastern border.

This secrecy highlights how the efforts to create a more formal network are still at a tentative phase. Israeli officials hope Biden will make his own formal announcement about the project during his visit this week. But Arab participants are reluctant to confirm their involvement, let alone advertise their participation in a fully fledged military alliance with Israel.

There is a deal of cooperation, and it is here to stay, said Abdulkhaleq Abdulla, a Dubai-based expert on Gulf politics and diplomacy. But it is way short of developing into a unified system.

Bilateral military coordination among Israel, Bahrain and the UAE and possibly even Saudi Arabia, which currently has no formal ties with Israel is feasible, Abdulla said.

But I dont think anybody is in the mood for a regional alliance, he added.

Nevertheless, the fact that such a concept is even being discussed highlights the dividend derived from three diplomatic deals that Israel sealed with Bahrain, Morocco and the UAE in 2020, with the support of the Trump administration.

Prompted in part by mutual anxiety about Iran, the deals allowed those countries to markedly increase trade and investment. They also encouraged Egypt and Jordan which established relations with Israel decades ago but never cemented them properly to work more closely with their neighbor.

But the most eye-catching outcome has been the growing military relationship among the new partners.

The Israeli Defense Ministry has signed public agreements with its Bahraini and Moroccan counterparts, making it easier for the three countries to coordinate and share military equipment.

In a move that would have been unthinkable three years ago, Israel has stationed a military liaison in Bahrain, as part of a separate regional initiative to combat piracy. The Israeli and Bahraini navies trained together in the Persian Gulf in November, alongside the U.S. Navy.

The chief of the Emirati air force also attended an Israeli military exercise in October, and Israeli officials hope the Emirates may eventually participate in an annual air training exercise in Israel alongside several Western air forces.

Of these growing military ties, officials and analysts say the anti-drone project is so far the most concrete, and is driven by a real desire for better coordination.

While Israels new Arab partners do not see Irans nuclear program as being as dire a threat as Israel does, all of them are concerned by drones, said Maj. Gen. Amos Yadlin, a retired senior air force officer and former head of Israeli military intelligence.

A Middle East NATO makes little sense, Yadlin said. We dont think that Israelis would go and fight with the Saudis in Yemen, and we dont think the Emiratis will come and fight with Israel in Gaza.

But a joint drone defense system, limited in scope, represents the regional needs and requirements of all the parties, he added.

Iran began to use drones about a decade ago, investing vast sums of money to design and construct its own models instead of buying them from China, said Alon Unger, a former drone operator for the Israeli air force who runs an annual drone convention in Israel.

The drones have a lot of utility for Iran. They can carry weapons to cause damage directly, they can be used for surveillance and they can also carry small payloads, delivering things like guns and explosives to Iranian proxies who would otherwise be out of Tehrans reach.

In 2019, an Iranian drone launched from Syria, an Iranian ally, was brought down over Israel, just north of the occupied West Bank. Investigators later discovered it had been carrying a tranche of explosives that Israeli officials concluded were intended for Palestinian militants in the West Bank.

Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militia in Lebanon, fired three drones toward Israeli gas rigs this month in an area of the eastern Mediterranean claimed by Lebanon. Israeli officials said that the drones, which were quickly intercepted, did not carry arms of any kind and that they were launched only to show that Hezbollah is able to reach a point considered strategic and sensitive.

The Iranian drones present Israel with a new technological challenge. The Israeli defense establishment has sophisticated air-defense mechanisms capable of intercepting rockets fired by enemies in Gaza, Lebanon and Syria. Israel also has a complex system of sensors able to detect tunnels that Palestinian and Lebanese militants sometimes dig under Israels borders.

But those defenses are relatively inefficient against the drone.

A drone is a relatively slow aircraft with a low radar profile, Unger said. It is difficult to identify its launch or its course, or to shoot them down using fast warplanes, which were built to contend with enemy fighters in aerial combat.

An Iranian drone attack on Aramco, the Saudi national oil company, in September 2019, heightened a sense of alarm about the growing drone threat not only in Israel, but in the United States and across the Sunni Arab world.

That helped galvanize U.S. and Israeli efforts to create a regional anti-drone cooperation program. Contact and cooperation already existed on a small, clandestine level between Israel and some Arab countries, officials say. But the sealing of the landmark diplomatic rapprochements in 2020, collectively known as the Abraham Accords, allowed for deeper military relationships that were gradually made public in recent months.

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Israel works with Arab allies to down drones, in sign of growing ties - The Indian Express

Earliest Known Images of Two Biblical Heroines Unearthed in Israel – Smithsonian Magazine

Posted By on July 14, 2022

The Israelite commander Barak depicted in the Huqoq synagogue mosaic Photo by Jim Haberman

In the Old TestamentsBook of Judges, two womenDeborah andJaelhelp defeat the Canaanite general Sisera. Now, archaeologists in Israels Lower Galilee have unearthed 1,600-year-old mosaics depicting their stories, according to a statement from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Led by archaeologist Jodi Magness, the team discovered the ancient art inHuqoq, at the site of a Jewish synagogue built between the fourth and fifth centuries.

This is extremely rare, Magness tells Religion News Services Kathryn Post. I dont know of any other ancient depictions of these heroines.

The biblical stories portrayed in the mosaics begin when Deborah summons the leader Barak to fight the Canaanites. Barak and his army succeed, defeating all of the Caaanites but Sisera, who flees the scene to escape being captured by Israelite forces. He seeks refuge in the tent of Jael. Shefeeds him until he falls asleep; then, she picks up a hammer and drives a tent peg into his head, killing him.

The mosaics are divided into three parts, per the statement. The uppermost part depicts Deborah under a palm tree, gazing at the warrior Barak. The next image, only partially preserved, displays Sisera seated, while the lowest section shows Sisera bleeding on the ground with Jael above him. In addition to the mosaic, the floor also revealed a Hebrew inscription inside a wreath, along with images of four animals eating grapes.

The work is part of the Huquq Excavation Project, which is now in its 10th season. The team first discovered mosaics at this site in 2012, and apart from pandemic-related disruptions, they have returned every summer since, according to the statement.

Elsewhere in the ancient synagogue, other mosaics depict scenes from the Book of Judges, Magness tells Religion News Service. Because existing rabbinic literature from the time doesnt describe the designs inside synagogues, the archaeological record is critical.

The value of our discoveries, the value of archaeology, is that it helps fill in the gaps in our information about, in this case, Jews and Judaism in this particular period, Magness adds. It shows that there was a very rich and diverse range of views among Jews.

Over the years, the researchers have unearthed mosaics of Moses spies exploring Canaan, a depiction of Noahs Ark, and the parting of the Red Sea, among others. The team also found an image of Alexander the Great, which they say is the first non-biblical story ever found decorating an ancient synagogue.

While the mosaics have been removed from the site, excavations are scheduled to continue next summer.

The Huquq Excavation Project is in its 10th season after recent seasons were paused due to COVID-19. Located in Israels Galilee, the team first discovered mosaics in 2012, and have continued to expose the synagogues main hall and aisles. National Geographic reports that each action to uncover the finds must be meticulously recorded. Data is then entered into a computer database via iPad, which can then assemble a visualization in three dimensions.

The mosaics have been removed from the site for conservation, and the excavated areas have been backfilled, states the press release. Further excavations are scheduled to continue in summer 2023.

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Earliest Known Images of Two Biblical Heroines Unearthed in Israel - Smithsonian Magazine

Israels high-tech crisis is changing the work chain – which industries are set to benefit? – CTech

Posted By on July 14, 2022

Until a few months ago, the Israeli high-tech industry attracted workers from all over the economy. Instead of working as waiters, students filled programmers' jobs with salaries of tens of thousands of shekels a month. Hundreds of workers from various fields have converted. The transition itself was welcome for the development of the high-tech world and the economy in Israel. Still, it caused severe labor shortages in all other areas of the economy during a problematic period anyway.

The competition created by high-tech companies has not allowed the small companies to face them - both in the private and public sectors. To improve the conditions of their employees, the same companies increase the employees' wages and, as a result, are required to raise the price of the product they sell - and here, only one tier is dragged following the development of high-tech. Of course, we will not forget the economy around, food orders, renting apartments high-tech pulled the whole market up and caused a rise in prices that hit the weaker sections at the end of the day.

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Ethan Biran is the CEO of Mynextworker

(Photo: Tamir Bergig)

Looking at the current situation in the economy, there is a shortage of workers for tens of thousands of jobs in various areas of the economy - in particular the areas of restaurants and sales. One of the interesting things happening in the shadow of the high-tech crisis, the huge layoffs, and inflation is that the demand for jobs in certain areas is rising significantly. Last week, we observed a 400% increase in job applications in waitresses in the Tel Aviv area and a general increase of 35% in job applications. The data also show a significant decrease of about 80% in the non-arrival of candidates for job interviews - one of the main problems small businesses have faced in recent years.

These surprising figures, which seem a bit puzzling in the light of the frightening headlines about the workers' crisis, are a direct result of the ongoing crisis in high-tech. When workers are fired from high-tech jobs, they return to their jobs as lawyers, accountants, and economists - the whole chain that has been pulled up thanks to the rise of high-techs rapidly declining deterioration. Employees are looking for stability and less adventure, so they return to what they were familiar with.

This situation gives some breathing space to the exhausted business owners who have been chasing employees unprecedentedly for the past two years. This brings up another point: there was a situation here that we had not seen before. Employees were given privileges, "controlled" employers, and bargained on all terms. This is another correction that came with the high-tech crisis: today, it is no longer precisely like that. People return to work; wage conditions return to reasonable and proper proportion.

I sometimes hear from friends who run businesses, even successful companies, that they work very hard, take risks, and at the end of the month, all this big business, built for years and demanding from its owners a huge sacrifice, hardly earns.

The state should strive to have as many independent business owners as possible, support them and not create more obstacles. Otherwise, it is unclear who will want to run a business - and these businesses are the catalysts for the country's economy. We are at a dramatic point: after an ongoing crisis and upheaval due to the coronavirus pandemic, just as business began to "breathe some air," another difficult period is coming for the economy. In the meantime, it seems that the only way to deal with the situation is for employees to take a step back from the inflated wage demand and frequent job changes and understand that stability is needed. It will also help them to be able to earn more and develop themselves to the maximum.

Although the high-tech crisis has caused many to lose their jobs, it has already seen an increase in the employment rate. The percentage of unemployed in the country has dropped to 3%, and jobs left behind due to rising high-tech, including those in the areas of restaurants and sales, are filling up surprisingly fast and perhaps even putting things back to their natural place.

Ethan Biran is the CEO of Mynextworker, an online platform that helps small businesses attract the right applicants and make better hires.

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Israels high-tech crisis is changing the work chain - which industries are set to benefit? - CTech


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