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Ladino’s gives sneak peek of Mediterranean cuisine ahead of grand opening – mySA

Posted By on April 29, 2022

Ladino, the upcoming Mediterranean grill house at Pearl, is months out from opening, but San Antonians were able to get a first taste of the food and atmosphere set to debut in the mixed-used development later this year. The restaurant hosted a ticketed preview night on Wednesday, April 20 to help the city get better acquainted with the menu ahead of the opening.

The Mediterranean grill house will be led by Executive Chef Berty Richter and offer a mix of Middle Eastern and Balkan cuisine. The menu will include specialities from the region including cold and hot meze, mains like lamb shoulder and fish options, an array of dips, and other regional specialties.

The restaurant name is a nod to Richter's Turkish mother and his family's roots in Italy, Bulgaria, and Greece. Ladino is a Judeo-Spanish language that dates back to the mid-1500s when Jewish people migrated from Spain. It's a mix of Castellano, French, Italian, Greek, Turkish, and Hebrew. Previous promotions of the restaurant explained that though the language is "slowly on the path to extinction," it is still spoken by some Sephardic Jews living in the Balkans, Greece, Turkey, and Israel.

Ladino will be housed in what was once Il Sogno Osteria, which closed in 2018. While construction is underway on Ladino's future home, guests gathered at Hotel Emma's Elephant Room on Wednesday got a first taste of the menu in a supper club-like setting. They also had the chance to meet Chef Richter. Before the eating began, Richter set the tone for the evening. He encouraged fun, conversation, and lots of dipping.

Ladino hosted a ticketed preview night ahead of the opening at Pearl on Wednesday, April 20.

"You're encouraged to have fun, this food is meant to be shared by everybody it's meant to be eaten with a piece of pita torn by your hands. Let's try to have fun with it," he told the dining room. "Get dirty, get messy, have fun with it, enjoy it. This food is meant to encourage conversation and happiness. When you come to our restaurant, I want you guys to be able to dance your way to the table."

Ladino hosted a ticketed preview night ahead of the opening at Pearl on Wednesday, April 20.

Dips were set first and everyone tried their best to resist the temptation that was the freshly made, perfect pita as to not ruin their dinner. My resistance was futile as I tore away bit after bit of the dreamlike bread and sopped up the spicy whipped feta. I pulled myself away from the feta for a few moments to try the spiced green tahini dip with a bit of schug. It was a spicy mixture my table neighbors were raving about and although tasty, the spicy whipped feta stole the show.

Ladino hosted a ticketed preview night ahead of the opening at Pearl on Wednesday, April 20.

We also tried cold and hot meze which included citrus salad, enginaras y prassa with sunchokes and leeks, saganaki, and shishbarak. The saganaki, a fried bit of kefalotyri cheese, was a lemony, briny standout (which I also added dips to).

Lamp shoulder, albacore shishlik, and chicken halloumi kebabs rounded out the night with a whipped kaymak, a clotted cream made of milk fat.

Ladino hosted a ticketed preview night ahead of the opening at Pearl on Wednesday, April 20.

By the time the mains were brought out, strangers had forged friendships over the new tastes and had gotten comfortable reaching over for a dip, were suggesting protein and dips pairings, and splitting the last bits of pita, just as Chef Richter intended.

Ladino hosted a ticketed preview night ahead of the opening at Pearl on Wednesday, April 20.

Ladino is slated to open in the summer at 200 E. Grayson, Suite 100.

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Ladino's gives sneak peek of Mediterranean cuisine ahead of grand opening - mySA

Rights experts call for action to address rising violence in Israel and occupied Palestinian territory – UN News

Posted By on April 29, 2022

OHCHR Spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani stressed that the use of force in law enforcement operations is strictly limited and governed by international norms and standards.

The use of force by Israeli police resulting in widespread injuries among worshippers and staff in and around the Al Aqsa Mosque compound must be promptly, impartially, independently and transparently investigated, she told journalists in Geneva.

Those responsible for any violations should be held to account, and policies and procedures on the use of force reviewed with a view to avoid any further violations.

Last weekend, roughly 180 Palestinians, including at least 27 children, were injured by Israeli forces during tensions around the Al Aqsa Mosque compound, a site that is important to both Muslims and Jews.

OHCHR said the conduct of Israeli security forces, as captured in video, raised serious concerns of the widespread, unnecessary and indiscriminate use of force.

A number of Palestinians, including elderly, women, children and at least one journalist, who did not appear to pose any threat to the Israeli security forces in any manner, were beaten with batons or shot with sponge-tipped bullets from close range, said Ms. Shamdashani.

The Israeli police also reportedly arrested more than 470 people in Jerusalem over the past weekend.

While all reportedly have been released, most were prohibited from entering the Al Aqsa Mosque compound, or the Old City of Jerusalem, in the coming weeks as a condition of release.

The latest developments occurred on Thursday morning, when Israeli police reportedly raided the yards of the Al Aqsa Mosque compound to push Palestinians out of the area.

Dozens were reportedly confined to the Al Qibli mosque, also on the compound, and six people were injured by sponge-tipped bullets.

More violence was reported overnight and into Friday morning, with a journalist, an elderly person, and a paramedic among those injured by Israeli forces.

Ms. Shamdasani said the tension in Jerusalem is also impacting other areas. This week, Palestinian armed groups launched six rockets and one mortar shell towards Israel.

In response, Israel struck several armed groups military sites across the Gaza Strip. No casualties were reported in either location.

These developments follow weeks of violence in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and in Israel. In the most serious attacks in Israel in many years, 12 Israelis and two foreigners were killed in incidents in Beersheba, Bnei Brak, Hadera and Tel Aviv.

Ms. Shamdasani said Israelsintensifiedmilitary operations in the West Bank, particularly in Jenin, and the use of firearms by Palestinian militants, place Palestinians there at high risk.

Israeli security forces have killed 19Palestinians so far this month,including threeboys and three women. Scores more have been injured.Raids and arrest operations across the West Bank have also intensified, raising serious concerns of excessive use of force, as well as ill-treatmentand arbitrary arrests of family members of wanted people.

Some of the killings, including in particular Israeli security forces shooting at a Palestinian woman in Husan on 10 April, raise serious concerns of excessive use of force and arbitrary deprivation of life, said Ms. Shamdasani.

We echo the call of the UN Secretary-General for calm and urge investigations where people have been killed or injured.

Meanwhile, an independent UN human rights expert has called on the international community to urgently implement both short- and long-term steps to address the mounting violence.

The past few weeks have seen a rising level of violence associated with Israels 55-year-old occupation of Palestine, said Michael Lynk, UN Special Rapporteur for the situation of human rights in the occupied Palestinian territory.

International inaction in the face of these new levels of violence will only encourage more of the same.

Mr. Lynk stated "the level of violence required by Israel to maintain its occupation has been steadily increasing over the past 16 months."

Last yearmarked the highest number of Palestinian deaths resulting from confrontations with Israelis since 2014, he said, whilethe number of Palestinian children killed as a result of Israeli violence was the most since the same period.

Mr. Lynk reported that in 2021, incidents of settler violence towards Palestinians or their property was the highest since statistics were first collected in 2017. Last year also saw the highest number of Palestinian homes demolished as a result of Israeli orders since 2016.

The rights expert outlined measures the international community should take, such as directing Israel to end the 15-year Gaza blockade; halting all settlements in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem; and removing checkpoints, permit restrictions and other barriers to Palestinian freedom of movement.

The Special Rapporteur also called for the international community to embark upon a rights-based peace process between Israel and Palestine, centred on international law and UN resolutions.

The end goal must be the rapid and complete end of the occupation, and the realization of Palestinian self-determination, he said.

Only by providing a horizon of hope, through the international communitys meaningful demand that the occupation must fully end with all deliberate speed, can this alarming rise in violence be reversed.

Special Rapporteurs like Mr. Lynk receive their mandates from the UN Human Rights Council, which is based in Geneva.

They operate in their individual capacity and are neither UN staff, nor are they paid for their work.

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Rights experts call for action to address rising violence in Israel and occupied Palestinian territory - UN News

Israel’s Middle East allies have changed the equation with Hamas – Haaretz

Posted By on April 29, 2022

Israel, as we know, does not negotiate with terrorists. But terms and conditions may apply. If, for instance, the country must put an end to rocket launches or explosive balloons, or if it needs to wrap up a military operation with a decisive victory and of course if it wants the bodies of Israeli soldiers or captives held in Gaza, then it can negotiate.

These would not be, God forbid, direct negotiations, in which Israeli army officers meet face-to-face with leaders of the organization, but through intermediaries. The rules of the game that have been created between Israel and Hamas have clearly dictated how these negotiations are to be legitimized. These rules developed over time, became more flexible, more intricate, until its no longer entirely clear why they havent just set up a direct line between the office of Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh or Gazas Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar and the offices of Israels prime minister, defense minister and IDF chief of staff.

Israel used to have an ironclad rule: quiet will be met with quiet. But there never was total quiet, and any incident automatically sparked a response in the form of aerial bombardment, sometimes in order to destroy a source of the launch, others to assassinate a senior figure or just to send a message. Sometimes it took the form of an extensive operation, lasting days. That was how the balance of deterrence worked, based on the assumption that Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the rest of the Palestinian organizations knew what was waiting for them, and only needed a reminder from time to time to maintain the sense of dread.

These negotiations mutated ahead of the holidays, and a new strain was born. It can be called preventative negotiations. Its ostensible purpose is to warn of and threaten the terrible blow that would strike Gaza if its missiles were launched at Jerusalem. On the face of it, according to the doctrine of deterrence, such negotiations are unnecessary. After all, Gaza needs no reminder of the destructive outcome of the fighting last May. The inhabitants of the Strip should have taken to heart the sharply worded remarks by then-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: We have changed the equation, not only for the days of the operation and during the operation, but for the future as well. If Hamas thinks that we will tolerate a drizzle of rockets, it is wrong. We will respond with a new level of force to every instance of aggression against the Gaza border and communities anywhere else in Israel. The way it was in the past is not the way it will be in the future.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett adopted the slogan, but changed it slightly. It appears he decided that the way it was in the past should not be the way it is. In March, when the dates of Passover and Ramadan were already determined, he met with Egyptian President Abel Fattah al-Sissi and with the ruler of the United Arab Emirates Mohammed bin Zayed, and laid out the need to rein in Hamas. Egypt took it upon itself to conduct talks with Hamas and, according to reports in the Arab media, presented Hamas with the options it had. The Bennett government is at its weakest. You only have two options. You can escalate the situation and cause this government to strongly attack in order to withstand criticism from the right and survive politically, or you can calm things down and mark up achievements in the economic and diplomatic spheres, Egyptian intelligence officials explained to Hamas leaders.

To show their seriousness, the Egyptians warned that if the situation did not remain calm, it could take a toll on the reconstruction of Gaza. Among other things, the flow of construction materials to Gaza would cease and work permits would not be issued for Egyptian laborers and engineers working on the reconstruction. Egypt demanded that Hamas and Islamic Jihad release a joint declaration stating that they do not seek an escalation. The organizations rejected this demand, but they did clarify that, depending on Israels actions on the Temple Mount, they did not intend to escalate hostilities.

At the same time, the Egyptian negotiators, including the Egyptian presidents son Mahmoud al-Sissi, explained to their Israeli interlocutors that Israel must give Hamas something to prevent a skirmish for example, releasing some 400 Palestinians arrested during clashes on the Temple Mount. Hamas had other demands, such as stopping military actions in the Jenin refugee camp; from its perspective there is no difference between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, or between Jerusalem and Gaza.

The Egyptians convey these messages to Israel, as well as a description of the actions Hamas is taking to prevent rocket fire from rival groups. Among other things, it was reported that Hamas is taking a harsh tone toward Islamic Jihad to stop rocket fire at Israel, and that potential missile firers had been arrested. And indeed, after the firing of a rocket on Sderot last week, Islamic Jihad was quick to inform Egypt that it was not responsible.

These negotiations take place continuously. There is a meeting to assess the situation each day, in which Egypt also participates. Israel made its decision to close the Erez crossing until further notice in response to the rockets on Sderot after a discussion with Egypt, which continues to operate the Saladin and Rafah crossings as usual.

As opposed to previous years, in which negotiations with Hamas took place between Israel and Egypt, the connection Hamas created last year between Jerusalem and Gaza requires Israel to take the positions of other countries into account, such as Morocco, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and even Turkey. It seems that Hamas knows how to take advantage of the new diplomatic leverage at its disposal since the signing of the Abraham Accords to turn the balance of military deterrence into a balance of diplomatic deterrence.

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Israel's Middle East allies have changed the equation with Hamas - Haaretz

Pro-Israel group attacks Lee as bad Democrat without mentioning Israel, or its own support for GOP – 90.5 WESA

Posted By on April 29, 2022

A pro-Israeli political committee has taken to Pittsburghs airwaves by attacking Congressional candidate Summer Lee. But while its advertisements which dont mention Israel at all blast Lee for not being a loyal Democrat, the organization behind it also backs hardline Republicans who fought to overturn Joe Bidens election.

The ad, which started hitting local airwaves last week, accuses Lee of saying she wanted to dismantle the Democratic Party. And shes done everything in her power to do just that. It faults her for criticizing Biden and accuses her of refus[ing] to support Bidens infrastructure plan" in a February City Paper interview.

Lee and her supporters reject those claims while raising questions about the interests of those who paid for it.

The ads sponsor, United Democracy Project, says its goal is to help elect candidates that will be strong supporters of the U.S.-Israel relationship. UDP is a so-called super PAC, a political organization that, unlike traditional political action committees, can accept contributions of unlimited amounts but cant coordinate directly with candidates.

UDP was launched by AIPAC, arguably the nations most prominent advocate for close ties to Israel. The vast majority of UDPs money some $8.5 million was contributed by AIPAC, and the super PAC's top officer is AIPACs former political director. But UDP does not highlight those ties indeed, it previously has been scrutinized by Israeli media for not disclosing its agenda.

AIPACs political committee backs officials across the political spectrum, including progressive stalwarts such as New Yorks Hakeem Jeffries. But the group also supports Republican hardliners such as Ohio Congressman Jim Jordan and Pennsylvanias Scott Perry, whose role in attempts to overturn the 2020 election has drawn national scrutiny.

When you can hide behind a made-up organization, when you get to flood money into elections, you can play both sides, Lee said.

Lee is the only person in the race who currently holds elected office as a Democrat, and she has galvanized a progressive movement in local politics which in Pittsburgh is dominated by the Democratic Party.

She calls the spot disingenuous in every way. While her political career has been built around challenging the power structure on behalf of marginalized communities, she said the spot wrenches those efforts out of context. Her Biden remarks, for example, were made during a hotly contested primary during which many Democrats locally and nationwide had other favorites but rallied behind Biden once he became the nominee.

The ad is falsely "trying to convey that I did this during the general election, Lee said.

In any case, she added, Are we saying constructive criticism is bad? That marginalized people shouldn't criticize the party on the ways in which it should do better?

We will continue to be actively involved in this race

AIPACs entrance into the race on behalf of Lees likely chief rival, attorney Steve Irwin, is no surprise. Hardline supporters of Israel have voiced doubts about Lee since this past fall: Like an increasing number of Democrats across the country, Lee has argued for such steps as attaching humanitarian conditions to future U.S. aid to the country.

In a statement, the group said it has aired the spots because there is a clear difference between a candidate who supports a strong U.S.-Israel relationship in Steve Irwin and a candidate who will seek to undermine that relationship.

Asked why the spot made no actual mention of Israel, the group asserted in the statement: It is important for voters to know that Summer Lee is out of the mainstream Democratic Party.

WESA asked the group whether it was hypocritical to accuse Lee of insufficient loyalty to Biden while also backing Republicans who sought to overturn his election. In response, UDP said its donors are focused on ensuring that we have a U.S. Congress that supports a vibrant and robust relationship with our democratic ally, Israel. And it pointed to Democratic leaders it has backed.

We will continue to be actively involved in this race, it added.

According to the Center for Responsive Politics, United Democracy Project has spent nearly $350,000 attacking Lee so far an amount that is certain to increase, and that is already twice what the group has spent to date on attacking any other candidate. Mailers with messaging similar to the ad have also been sent out by the group to district voters.

Those are large sums in a race that has generally seen modest spending: Lee, herself a grassroots-fundraising juggernaut, put together slightly more than $300,000 of support in the first three months of the year.

AIPACs establishment of UDP, which has been accompanied by the creation of a more traditional political committee, marks an escalation in the groups efforts to affect national policy. It also has been criticized for touting democracy in Israel while backing Republicans tied to efforts to overturn the 2020 election in the United States.

The bare-knuckles approach has concerned some local Jewish political leaders.

They dont use AIPACs name on the super PAC, but its AIPACs money, and this is an organization that supports a lot of Republicans, including those who voted to overturn the results of the election, said Ritchie Tabachnick.

Tabachnick is the local political director of J Street, which urges a less hardline approach to Israels conflict with Palestinians. Tabachnick said the group has backed Lee, along with fellow candidate Jerry Dickinson, because she's aligned with us on our core issues.

An overview of what's at stake in the 2022 race for the new 12th Congressional district, as well as candidate profiles on Democrats Jerry Dickinson, Steve Irwin, Summer Lee, and Jeff Woodward; and Republican Mike Doyle.

We've interviewed her twice locally, and the national organization has interviewed her," Tabachnick said. "I just dont see Summer Lee as someone who isnt a friend of Israel. [And] theres no credibility to the statement that she isnt a true Democrat."

Its insulting to be told we dont belong

For her part, Lee says the spots mischaracterize her views by taking statements out of their context which in each case involved a discussion about how to maximize power for people often left out of political decisions.

Lees tweet about dismantling the party, for example, appears to have been taken from an online argument with far-left critics, who contended Lee could best fight white supremacy by leaving the Democratic Party. Lee argued that third-party movements hadnt shown they could deliver progress. She said that she would challenge reaction elements within the party itself but was not beholden to it. She called it nothing but a [means] for having access to the yay or nay button on the House floor to advance the interests of the disempowered.

The point, she told WESA, was to dismantle those things that keep us from having a party that reflects our constituents and their values.

And in the February City Paper interview cited by the ad, she did not say she would have voted against the infrastructure bill. Instead, she acknowledged that I can't give you a definitive answer for how I would have voted." That was because she agreed with progressives in Congress who warned that voting on it as a standalone proposal rather than alongside the more expansive Build Back Better proposal weakened the leverage for the broader agenda.

With Democrats in control of Congress and the White House, she said, "here was our opportunity [to] fundamentally change the lives of marginalized people, of poor and working-class people. It's why we have this majority." And given that Democrats have pulled back from more ambitious proposals since passing the bill, progressive skeptics "were proven right.The issue was never the progressives, she told WESA. The issue was always the conservative Democrats" like West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who has constantly frustrated the Biden agenda.

In general, Lee said, What we're seeing here and this is a bigger issue is the inclination to punch left, and to say it's the people on the left who are the obstructionists. But the real obstructionists have been Republicans and conservative Democrats.

Given that Manchin did far more to disrupt the Biden agenda than progressives in Congress, she said, singling out progressive candidates of color like her reflects not just policy differences but who they believe should be building power, and who power should be kept from.

Lee noted that Democratic prospects increasingly rely on the votes of people of color. We can't say we need Black people to engage in politics and then do things like this," she said. "It's insulting to Black people, to young people, to women, to progressive to be told that we don't belong here.

While the law forbids candidates and super PACs from working together, it isnt hard to send signals: Lee notes that Irwins site includes a messaging page that echoes some of the UDP ads arguments. Such pages can be used to telegraph a campaigns talking points to outside supporters. And Lee said Irwin could send a message by repudiating the spots.

In a statement, Irwins campaign observed that [b]y law, we have no control over Super PACs, but what the ad says appears to be very true. As for AIPACs allegiances, the campaign noted the group had endorsed a range of Democrats, including members of the House Progressive Caucus.

Steve Irwin is proud to stand up for the Jewish state of Israel and Americas strongest ally in the Middle East, the statement asserted.

That posture disappoints Tabachnick, who worries that AIPACs use of Israel as a wedge issue will be bad for the Jewish homeland in the long term and is hurting Democrats right now.

Ive known Steve Irwin for years, and I supported him [in a brief campaign last year] for lieutenant governor, Tabachnick added. Still, he said, "I wish Steve would come out and say, I dont support what they are doing. But he hasnt distanced himself from it, and I wish he would.

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Pro-Israel group attacks Lee as bad Democrat without mentioning Israel, or its own support for GOP - 90.5 WESA

Bold new Israeli brain theory touted as breakthrough for medicine, computing – The Times of Israel

Posted By on April 29, 2022

Israeli scientists have published an audacious new theory as to how the brain learns, and say that it could open up new possibilities for treating degenerative diseases and for boosting the power of computers.

The research appeared Thursday in Scientific Reports, a journal published by Nature. It has been peer-reviewed, which means it has been closely analyzed and deemed worthy of publication by independent experts.

The study suggests that while its widely believed that much of the brains learning happens in synapses, a large part of learning actually happens in another part of neurons in dendrites.

Synapses are the small gaps between two neurons, where nerve impulses are relayed, while dendrites are extensions of nerve cells.

Prof. Ido Kanter of Bar-Ilan University, who led the research involving years of animal studies, told The Times of Israel that the finding is exciting because drug developers can use it to help develop new types of treatments for degenerative diseases, such as Alzheimers and Parkinsons.

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He said that by focusing on strengthening the capability of dendrites, such new treatments may become possible.

An illustration of neuron anatomy, including dendrites. (iStock via Getty Images)

Kanter commented: Today, the focus of most research for medications is synapses, but if some of it starts to focus on dendrites, we have an opportunityto open up new possibilities in medicine development in the light of our findings.

Kanter said that one reason the finding is important is that dendrites consume far less energy than synapses. Studying and understanding how they enable learning will help computer science, as well as medicine, he predicted.

Prof. Ido Kanter, of Bar-Ilan University (courtesy of Bar-Ilan University)

For the last 70 years, machine learning has been based on the notion that brain learning occurs by modifying the strength of the synapses, following the relative firing activity of their connecting neurons.

Dendrite learning is far more efficient than the functioning of synapses, helping to explain why it is that brains are far slower than computers but can actually do much more in some respects.

As we understand dendrite learning better, I believe it will enable us to imitate its very efficient nature in artificial intelligence, he said.

This could pave the way to much more powerful computers that work much faster and analyze much more data in limited time. The sky could be the limit.

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Bold new Israeli brain theory touted as breakthrough for medicine, computing - The Times of Israel

How Israel used innovation to beat its water crisis – ISRAEL21c

Posted By on April 29, 2022

How did Israel, a country that is more than half desert, frequently hit with drought, and historically cursed by chronic water shortages, become a nation that now produces 20 percent more water than it needs?

Water demand from Israels rapidly growing population outpaced the supply and natural replenishment of potable water so much that by 2015, the gap between demand and available natural water supplies reached 1 billion cubic meters (BCM).

Recovering from such a scenario seems highly unlikely, yet Israel managed it by pioneering an unprecedented wealth of technological innovation and infrastructure to prevent the country from drying up.

Nationwide turnaround stories like this are in short supply these days given the momentum of global warming and the worlds unwillingness to scale the solutions needed to thwart its irreversible effects in time.

Some 4 billion people two-thirds of the global population now experience extreme water scarcity for at least one month out of each year due to the climate crisis.

But thanks to its national prioritization and seven decades of relentless determination, Israel has become a lifeline and source of hope for other water-deprived countries.

Israeli organizations like MASHAV, KKL-JNF, EcoPeace Middle East and the Arava Instituteactively disseminate Israels expertise, technologies and policy strategies with neighboring and distant communities suffering from endemic water crises.

Breaking ground

Israels leadership in sustainable water management began with finding solutions to the countrys first and foremost problem: the uneven distribution of freshwater throughout the country an issue that Zionist thinker Theodor Herzlrecognized in his 1902 book Altneuland with a fantasy plan to transport water great distances.

That fantasy began morphing into reality soon after Israel declared its independence in 1948 as waves of new immigrants lacked sufficient water for drinking and farming.

To supply the growing demand, Israels national water company Mekorot, began constructing the National Water Carrier.

This water transportation network was designed to pump water from the northern Lake Kinneret (Sea of Galilee) and transfer water from existing regional water projects to central and southern Israel.

A worker at the Eshkol Water Filtration Plant in northern Israel, the first of its kind in the country when it was constructed in June 2007 by Mekorot. The plant filters water pumped from the Kinneret. Photo by Moshe Shai/FLASH90

But upon its completion in 1964, 80% of the water transported by this system was allocated for agriculture. Clearly, the National Water Carrier alone could not satisfy both agriculture and household needs.

Luckily, a solution was already in development thanks to the innovative genius of Simcha Blass and his son Yeshayahu, who began developing a drip irrigationtechnology in 1959. Their revolutionary method slowly applies water directly to the roots of crops through a network of tubes, valves and drippers.

Carnations being watered by drip irrigation at Ringel Nursery, Israel. Photo by Martin Fischer via Wikimedia Commons

Because this delivery method avoids the full brunt of evaporation, plants absorb 95 percent of the water applied to them much more than sprinkler irrigation, surface irrigation or flood irrigation. With drip irrigation, less water could be allocated to farms without compromising agricultural output.

By 1965, the year following the completion of the National Water Carrier, Blass and his son began distributing their novel drip irrigation system throughout Israel and established Netafim, still a world leader in the field.

Today, drip irrigation waters 75% of Israels crops, but only 5% of farms worldwide currently utilize the technology due to financial barriers.

Using the unusable

Despite the transportive advantages of the National Water Carrier and the conservation benefits of drip irrigation, both innovations drew water solely from Israels very limited freshwater sources, which were being pumped faster than they could be naturally replenished.

Plus, the share of freshwater devoted to agriculture still vastly outweighed the amount allocated for drinking. By the mid-80s, agriculture was using 72%of Israels safe water supply.

Israeli engineers realized its not just about conserving available freshwater but also taking advantage of water sources previously considered unusable, such as treated municipal wastewater and stormwater.

In 1985, Israel began sending treated, recycled wastewater through its National Water Carrier to farms, greatly reducing the gap between consumer demand and available water.

This is because wastewater from our sinks, showers and toilets is not dependent upon climate fluctuations or seasonal weather patterns, but rather on population growth and living standards.

By 2015, Israel had managed to treat and recycle 86% of its wastewater for agricultural operations, leading the world in wastewater reclamation. Second to Israel in that same year was Spain, recycling just 17% of its wastewater.

Through Israels tertiary treatment processes, recycled wastewater is cleaned to near drinking-quality levels before reaching crops to avoid contamination.

The goal is to recycle 95% of wastewater for agriculture by 2025, leaving that much more fresh drinking water for the communities that need it.

Reclaimed and desalinated water

With a daily influx of roughly 470,000 cubic meters of raw sewage, the Shafdan treatment facility, Israels largest wastewater treatment facility, provides about 140 million cubic meters (MCM) of clean, reclaimed water to Negev desert farms for irrigation annually. In fact, more than 60% of agriculture in the Negev is supplied by Shafdan alone.

The biological reactor at Shafdan, Israels largest wastewater treatment plant. Photo by Abigail Klein Leichman

On top of that, the Israeli green development organization KKL-JNF constructed 230 reservoirsthat store treated wastewater for agricultural use. Every year, these reservoirs add upwards of 260 MCM of water to Israels water economy.

KKL-JNF also established several biofilter projects in which plants remove nearly 100% of pollutants from urban stormwater runoff to enable an additional source for non-drinking municipal water and agricultural irrigation.

Israels first stormwater biofiltration system, built by KKL-JNF in Kfar Saba. Photo courtesy of The Center for Water Sensitive Cities in Israel

By 1997, Israel had managed to reduce agricultures share of water to 63 percent,yet persistent droughts in the mid-90s made Israel turn its attention to the surplus of seawater along its Mediterranean coast.

In 1999, the Israeli government initiated a long-term, large-scale seawater reverse osmosis desalination program that culminated in the establishment of five operational desalination facilities: the Ashkelon Plant (2005) capable of producing 118120 MCM of potable water per year; Palmachim (2007), which now produces90-100 MCM of water per year; Hadera (2009) capable of producing 127 MCM of water per year; Sorek (2013),which produces 150 MCM of water per year; and Ashdod(2015), which produces 100 MCM of water per year.

Stars of David mark the Sorek desalination plant in Israel. Photo by Abigail Klein Leichman

Israel has two more desalination plants in development, one of which is aimed to be operational by 2023. They will have a combined capacity of 300 MCM per year.

Upon completion of the seventh facility, desalinated water will cover up to 90% of Israels annual municipal and industrial water consumption.

To remain resilient in the drought-projected years to come, the Israeli government in 2018updated its desalination with a target to produce 1.1 BCM of desalinated water by 2030.

Israels per capita consumption of renewable fresh natural water shrank dramatically from 504 MCM in 1967 to 98 MCM in 2015 the year that desalinated and recycled water accounted for nearly half of Israels water consumption.

A cultural innovation

Israel continues to improve the efficiencies, filtration and production capacities of its water conservation portfolio with many upgraded technological systems and regional agreements.

But technology must be accompanied by controlled consumption habits, or else a country could risk exhausting its resources or incurring a shortage no matter how sustainably it supplies its water.

Because Israels chronic water struggles were felt by Jewish settlers even before the foundation of the state, the value of saving water quickly became second nature.

In the midst of consecutive droughts throughout the 2000s, the Israel Water Authoritylaunched awareness campaigns via TV, radio and Internet urging the public to save water.

One such campaign was aimed at children through a series of cartoon television programs that taught the importance of saving water through simple means, nurturing generations of conscientious citizens.

The most significant awareness campaign came in 2009 and featured Israeli celebrities Ninet Tayeb, Bar Rafaeli and Moshe Igvy speaking honestly about the declining water levels of the Kinneret and the dire need to consume water in moderation.

As they spoke, their facial features began to crack and peel. This made water scarcity personal and led to an 18% reduction in water consumption in urban areas.

The combination of high-tech solutions and national cultural awareness truly distinguishes Israels water conservation program from so many others.

Israel succeeded in securing its water economy because the gravity of the situation was understood by all, from Israels leaders to its citizens.

Although it will likely be more expensive and difficult to scale similar infrastructure and solutions in areas like California, which needs more than 11 trillion gallons of waterjust to catch up with its current deficit, Israel shares its expertise internationally.

For countries struggling to expand or even begin water conservation strategies, Israel is a key global player in helping the world make the most of its water supplies.

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How Israel used innovation to beat its water crisis - ISRAEL21c

Israel/Palestine: UN experts call on governments to resume funding for six Palestinian CSOs designated by Israel as ‘terrorist organisations’ – OHCHR

Posted By on April 29, 2022

GENEVA (25 April 2022) - UN human rights experts* today called on the international community to take immediate and effective steps to protect and sustain the six Palestinian civil society groups that were designated as terrorist organisations by the Government of Israel in October 2021.

Israels disturbing designation of these organisations as terrorist organisations has not been accompanied by any public concrete and credible evidence, said the human rights experts. We note that the information presented by Israel has also failed to convince a number of governments and international organisations that have traditionally provided funding for the indispensable work of these six organisations.

In October 2021, the UN experts denounced Israels designation of six Palestinian civil society organisations Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, Al-Haq, Bisan Center for Research and Development, Defense for Children International Palestine, the Union of Agricultural Work Committees and the Union of Palestinian Women Committees as terrorist organizations. Israels designation enables it to close the organisations, seize their assets, end their work and charge their leadership and staff with terrorist offences.

Israel has had six months to substantiate its accusations and it has failed to deliver, the experts said. We call on the funding governments and international organisations to swiftly conclude that Israel has not established its allegations and to announce that they will continue to financially and politically support these organisations and the communities and groups they serve.

Although Israel has not substantiated its allegations publicly or to the funding governments and international organizations, several of the funders have delayed their contributions to the Palestinian organisations while they investigate these claims. The European Union has formally suspended its funding for two of these organisations. This has undermined the work of these Palestinian organisations and has had an incalculable impact on the communities they support. There has been a lack of clarity about the duration of these steps, the experts said.

We are deeply disturbed by Israels apparent misuse of anti-terrorism legislation to attack some of the leading civil society organisations in Palestine. Such misuse must be rejected and countered, the experts said.

The United Nations has been very clear that the drafting and application of anti-terrorism laws have to be rigorously consistent with international law and human rights protections, including the principles of legal certainty, necessity, proportionality, the rule of law and non-discrimination.

Against this background, the experts welcomed the statement issued on 23 March 2022 by the Belgium Minister of Development Cooperation, Meryame Kitir, who stated that: My administration has conducted an internal investigation into the allegations. This did not reveal any evidence that would confirm the allegations. I have therefore decided not to take any action against the Palestinian organizations in question. Nor is the evidence provided by the Israeli authorities such as to reconsider my decision.

The human rights experts emphasised that they recognise and applaud the indispensable work of Palestinian civil society in holding Israel accountable for its occupation and human rights violations and in promoting democratic principles and human rights within Palestinian society.

Applying anti-terrorism laws to well-regarded human rights defenders and civil society organisations without persuasive evidence to substantiate these claims seems to indicate a politically-motivated attempt by Israel to silence some of its most effective critics in violation of their rights to freedom of association and of expression, they said.

If the international community is serious about its support for Palestinian self-determination and an end to the 55-year-old Israeli occupation, it must become more vocal and assertive in defending the work of these organisations, and reminding Israel of its international human rights obligations.

Accordingly, the human rights experts called upon the international community to:

ENDS

Michael Lynk, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian Territory occupied since 1967; Mary Lawlor, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders; Fionnuala N Aolin, Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights while countering terrorism; Irene Khan, Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression; Melissa Upreti (Chair), Dorothy Estrada Tanck (Vice-Chair), Elizabeth Broderick, Ivana Radai, and Meskerem Geset Techane, Working Group on discrimination against women and girls; Reem Alsalem, Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences; Clment N. Voule, Special Rapporteur on the right to peaceful assembly and association; and Siobhn Mullally, Special Rapporteur on trafficking in persons, especially women and children.The Special Rapporteurs are part of what is known as the Special Procedures of the Human Rights Council. Special Procedures, the largest body of independent experts in the UN Human Rights system, is the general name of the Councils independent fact-finding and monitoring mechanisms that address either specific country situations or thematic issues in all parts of the world. Special Procedures experts work on a voluntary basis; they are not UN staff and do not receive a salary for their work. They are independent from any government or organization and serve in their individual capacity.

UN Human Rights, Country Page: Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel

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Israel/Palestine: UN experts call on governments to resume funding for six Palestinian CSOs designated by Israel as 'terrorist organisations' - OHCHR

More Than 1000 Chicagoans Take to the Streets Again in Support Of Palestine – Loyola Phoenix

Posted By on April 29, 2022

By Leen YassineUpdated April 27, 2022 11:03 a.m. CTPublished April 27, 2022 8:58 a.m. CT

For the second time in one week, hundreds of Chicagoans took to the citys streets to protest the Israeli governments recent violence against Palestinians.

The protests were organized by Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) and the Chicago Coalition for Justice in Palestine, which are local groups that work to promote peace in Palestine and support the Palestinian people.

An estimated 1,500 people gathered Saturday, April 23 at the intersection of Ida B. Wells Drive and Michigan Avenue in support of Palestine, according to representatives of SJP days after a demonstration Monday, April 18 drew in at least 700 people, The Phoenix reported.

The Saturday demonstration took place just one day after Israeli forces most recent storming of Al-Aqsa Mosque, Jerusalems most sensitive holy site, and the recent violence appears to be the heaviest-cross-border fighting since May 2021, the Associated Press reported.

The protest began with a rally, which included speeches from representatives of American Muslims for Palestine, the United States Palestinian Community Network, Jewish Voice for Peace, the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression and Pueblo Sin Fronteras/La Familia Latina Unida, a non-profit immigration advocacy organization.

25th Ward Alderman Byron Sigcho Lopez also spoke out in support of Palestine at the demonstration.

Protestors then marched down Michigan Avenue as SJP members led chants such as Free, free Palestine and Justice is our demand, no peace on stolen land, eventually making a U-turn back to the initial rally point.

Rama Alsakaji, a 25-year-old living in Oak Park, said she keeps up with SJP organizations on social media to stay updated on events like this one.

Im half Palestinian and this cause means a lot to me, Alsakaji said. My whole dads side of the family was removed [from Palestine] in 1948. Any time I see an event that I can go to, I try to make time to come.

She said her goal in attending these protests is to educate the average person who doesnt know about the conflict or is too scared to speak out.

Julian Quiroga, a first-year student in Loyolas School of Law, said he attended Saturdays demonstration to advocate for the Palestinian people who have been oppressed by the Israeli state.

The Colombian people Im from Colombia have always been oppressed by foreign powers so we understand the Palestinian struggle, Quiroga, 26, said. Two of my best friends are from Palestine so I understand their struggle and I want to increase their voice. This is a moment to catalyze change for everybody.

When asked what he hopes comes out of protests like this one, Quiroga said that the hope is to be heard.

Sometimes we forget the lack of freedom that somebody else has because we lose ourselves in the comfort of this society but we have to understand the injustices that are going on right now, Quiroga said. We have to show solidarity at least.

Meryam Elmakoudi, a 17-year-old attending Bennett Day School, said she heard about this protest through the Islamic Community Center of Illinois (6435 W. Belmont Ave.) and encourages others to advocate for the Palestinian cause.

Just try to come to these types of protests, support Palestinian stores, businesses, Elmakoudi said. Just try to get the word out.

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More Than 1000 Chicagoans Take to the Streets Again in Support Of Palestine - Loyola Phoenix

Henna tattooing, a way to show belonging in Palestine – TRT World

Posted By on April 29, 2022

Young women in Palestine hold onto their heritage and identity by having Palestinian designs as henna tattoos painted on their bodies.

Ahead of Eid al Fitr, a group of Palestinian girls have waited in a queue for their turn to have their henna tattoos painted by an artist in one of Gazas markets.

Thousands of Palestinian girls like to have henna tattoos painted on their bodies ahead of special occasions, and many of them choose to have symbolic henna tattoos that represent their love and belonging to Palestine.

Countless numbers of girls ask me to paint henna tattoos that are related to our Palestinian heritage and culture, Palestinian henna artist Somaia Shaheen told TRT World.

Girls ask for designs such as the map of historical Palestine, the Palestinian flag and Kufiya patterns, or mix an olive tree with the shape of the Dome of the Rock. Other girls choose to write Palestinian related words or a line of poetry.

I see the love of Palestine in women and girls of all ages; they are happy and proud to have henna tattoos that represent Palestine and resistance. The trending henna painting these days is the olive tree leaves. I painted such designs for many girls this week. Shaheen added.

Olive tree leaves represent Palestine as well as peace. And girls keep asking for such paintings on their arms. Also, the word Filisteeniya [meaning Palestinian woman] is a preferred design for many girls.

What is Henna?

The henna tree (Lawsonia inermis) is well-known in Palestine. It produces something locally called henna dates, which have a special smell.

Henna material used for painting is a powder made out of henna tree leaves. It is sold in local perfume stores and can be prepared at home by crushing henna leaves and mixing them with water, then adding dyes to give them colour.

According to historian Nasser al Yafawi, henna painting is part of Palestinian heritage. It was first used by the Phoenicians in the Levant in 1500 BC, especially in Lebanon and Palestine.

Phoenicians tattooed their hands and faces with henna as part of pagan rituals. Later on, henna became a part of womens ornamentation.

Yafawi said that henna tattooing has always been part of traditional rituals for Palestinian weddings. The brides hands and feet are painted with henna to resemble a mural on the night before her wedding, in what is called henna night.

Tattoo alternatives

The art of henna goes back thousands of years in Christian and Muslim traditions, and the practice symbolises good luck, health and sensuality.

When Islam came to prominence, beginning in the seventh century, inked tattooing was no longer allowed.

Palestinian Bedouins used to have inked tattoos as a tradition meant to identify tribes, show marital status, or enhance beauty. We may encounter some old Bedouin women in Palestine with tattoos on their faces.

The inked tattoo practice faded in recent decades because many of the faithful consider it a forbidden practice in Islam.

Hennas popularity grew in Palestine in recent years, and it has become an alternative to inked tattoos.

Instead of having a permanent image, pattern, or word on the skin created by using needles to put colours under the skin, nowadays, people prefer henna tattoos, which last for a few weeks.

With henna tattoos, the design doesnt last forever, and women have the option to have new designs or renew current designs on their bodies. Shaheen explained, I dont do ink tattoos, and generally, it is not requested by our community as many consider it harmful for the skin.

Henna and weddings

There is a tradition before any wedding. Brides have henna parties where the bride and grooms families gather and paint henna. Not all of them use Palestinian designs for weddings but various shapes and patterns, Shaheen said.

This henna party usually takes place the day before the wedding. The party doesnt only include skin decorations with henna but also some traditional songs and dances. Henna artists give guests the traditional temporary tattoos.

As for men, they usually have their own party on the same night, where they sing different songs and dance dabke.

Karima Zurub, a Palestinian mother from Rafah, said: Henna night is a tradition we inherited a long ago, and we keep it. During the night before the wedding, we clap, sing, press henna in the grooms hand and paint beautiful patterns for the bride.

Zurub added: Henna night was popular among those families who were expelled from their lands in 1948 during Nakba, but this tradition has moved to most of the Palestinian families.

READ MORE:What is Nakba? The day when Palestine's ethnic cleansing began, explained

Stealing Palestinian traditions

Last December, Israel hosted the Miss Universe pageant sparking criticism, especially when contestants appeared wearing Palestinian embroidered dresses.

Dressing Miss Universe nominees in traditional Palestinian dress, claiming that this is part of the Israeli occupation state, is an attempt of theft of our Palestinian identity and it is a failed attempt that represents the occupiers effrontery, Lana Hijazi of Palestinian Heritage Wear Society said.

Henna artist Somaia Shaheen noticed that Miss Universe participants didnt only wear Palestinian dresses but also had henna tattoos painted as if it were an Israeli tradition.

Shaheen said: I felt angry watching our traditions be stolen like this. But, seeing new young Palestinian girls eager to paint Palestine-related henna gives me hope that the new generation is holding onto our heritage and culture.

READ MORE:Palestinian embroidery: From a symbol of resistance to UNESCO heritage

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Henna tattooing, a way to show belonging in Palestine - TRT World

UNRWA Commissioner-General calls for support to Palestine refugees in Syria ahead of the IV Brussels International Conference on The Future of Syria…

Posted By on April 29, 2022

The Commissioner-General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) Philippe Lazzarini called on the international and donor community to support Palestine refugees in Syria. After a visit to Damascus on 19-21 April, and ahead of the international conference on The Future of Syria and the Region to be held next month, he reminded donors and policymakers that some 438,000 Palestine refugees remain in Syria, most at least once displaced and living under the poverty line.

The recent spike in the prices of food, fuel and commodities globally adds a layer of hardship to an already dire situation for the refugees in Syria, after 11 years of conflict. Many report living on one meal a day, preferring to lower their intake to be able to feed their children.

It is very difficult to describe the destitution of most Palestine refugees in Syria, said the UNRWA Commissioner-General. They often seem to fall off the grid, off the global attention. They need the support of the international community. After 11 years of a grueling conflict that displaced half the population, most Palestine refugees need UNRWA cash assistance to survive. Sadly though, insufficient funding to UNRWA makes it unable to cover their needs. Female headed families and families of disabled children are most vulnerable and most in need of support, said Mr. Lazzarini

UNRWA expects Palestine refugee families that receive government clearance to continue returning to camps such as Yarmouk and Ein el Tal, despite the destruction and risks of unexploded ordinance. UNRWA must be able to provide at least basic health and education services to Palestine refugees who have no choice but to return to camps that are still largely destroyed, said Mr. Lazzarini. It is always very compelling to see the scope and scale of destruction in Yarmouk and other Palestine refugee camps. It is also very gripping to see the extraordinary resolve and determination of young Palestine refugee girls and boys and their avidity to learn, he added after a meeting with UNRWA schools parliamentarians at the Beit Lahia Ariha School in Khan Dunoun camp.

During his visit, the Commissioner-General met with Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates, Dr. Faysal Miqdad and the Director-General of the General Authority for Palestinian Arab Refugees (GAPAR), Mr. Qasem Husein to discuss the situation in Palestine refugee camps and ways to continue to support jointly Palestine refugees.

The Commissioner-General lauded the UNRWA front line staff, teachers, doctors, nurses, social workers for their dedication in providing essential services throughout the conflict to Palestine refugees, sometimes at the risk of their own life. UNRWA has lost 19 staff member in Syria since the beginning of the conflict.

Background Information:

UNRWA is confronted with an increased demand for services resulting from a growth in the number of registered Palestine refugees, the extent of their vulnerability and their deepening poverty. UNRWA is funded almost entirely by voluntary contributions and financial support has been outpaced by the growth in needs. As a result, the UNRWA programme budget, which supports the delivery of core essential services, operates with a large shortfall. UNRWA encourages all Member States to work collectively to exert all possible efforts to fully fund the Agencys programme budget. UNRWA emergency programmes and key projects, also operating with large shortfalls, are funded through separate funding portals.

UNRWA is a United Nations agency established by the General Assembly in 1949 and mandated to provide assistance and protection to some 5.7 million Palestine refugees registered with UNRWA across its five fields of operation. Its mission is to help Palestine refugees in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, West Bank, including East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip achieve their full human development potential, pending a just and lasting solution to their plight. UNRWA services encompass education, health care, relief and social services, camp infrastructure and improvement, protection and microfinance.

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UNRWA Commissioner-General calls for support to Palestine refugees in Syria ahead of the IV Brussels International Conference on The Future of Syria...


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