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Three arrested as police, ultra-Orthodox protesters clash in Jerusalem – The Times of Israel

Posted By on January 24, 2022

Police clashed with some 100 ultra-Orthodox protesters in Jerusalem on Sunday, arresting three people.

Demonstrators from the Toldot Aharon Hasidic sect were protesting the opening of a cellphone store in their neighborhood. The insular group has in recent years been waging a battle against internet usage and especially web-connected phone ownership in its communities.

Police said the three people were arrested for disrupting police and attacking officers.

Video posted online showed a police officer using a baton to keep a group of protestors who had surrounded him away.

There have been several protests over the opening of the store in recent weeks, due to its sale of regular mobile phones.

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Many ultra-Orthodox people use so-called kosher phones devices stripped of social media and most other apps at the advice of rabbis.

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Three arrested as police, ultra-Orthodox protesters clash in Jerusalem - The Times of Israel

Far and Near Embrace | JewishBoston – jewishboston.com

Posted By on January 24, 2022

This weeks Torah reading gives us the opportunity to reflect upon the value of distance, as well as closeness in our relationships, even with the Divine.

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It centers on the climactic moments of the Mount Sinai revelation, a paradigm for Jews of a direct encounter with the Divine. Rabbinic tradition does not speak of the Ten Commandments, but rather of the aseret ha-diberot, the Ten Utterances. This term hews closer to the Torahs own language elsewhereExodus 34:28 refers to the covenant of the ten devarim, rather than mitzvot. In addition, the rabbinic language here may reflect tensions with nascent Christianity, whose elevation of the eternal validity of the Ten Commandments accompanied a denial of the same to other commandments of the Torah, a clear anathema to rabbinic Judaism.

Yet the title the Ten Utterances also emphasizes what is unique about those mitzvot that were imparted from Mount Sinai: the Divine voice that spoke them was heard not only by one prophet, but by all of the Israelites (Deuteronomy 4:12 and 4:33). Mount Sinai thus becomes the model for intimacy and nearness with God. Rashi (Song of Songs 1:2) compares it to a Divine kiss, which, having once experienced, we long for again and again.

However, the parashah takes its name from a very different encounterthat of Jethro with his son-in-law, Moses. In fact, while the Mount Sinai story is about connection between the people and God, the episode with Jethro is about the need to create distance between the people and Moses. The text also provocatively frames this as a kind of distancing of the people from God.

Essentially, Mosess father-in-law advises him that it is impossible for Moses to respond personally to all the issues and questions of the people. He must, instead, set up a hierarchy between himself and the people, such that only some individuals and especially-difficult cases rise to the level of direct involvement with Moses. When Moses father-in-law asks him why he is responding directly to peoples concerns all day, Moses tells him:

It is because the people come to me to seek God (Exodus 18:15).

One can almost hear Moses asking, between the lines, How can I turn them away? Yet, of course, Jethros objection seems difficult to refute. Mosess current model is simply unsustainable: The thing you are doing is not right, Jethro states bluntly, you will surely wear yourself out, and these people as well (18:17-18). Moses accepts this advice and duly sets up a hierarchy between himself and the people.

What is the message of this story for those of us who seek God and desire a direct encounter with God, or a face-to-face meeting with a great prophet who can speak to us Gods word? It seems that these must be sacrificed for the sake of creating a sustainable institution. This system will be administered by the authorities enumerated by Moses in Exodus 18:25. But these officers, even as we hope that they act justly and with integrity, are no prophets.

Hasidic texts often read such political texts in terms of the inner lives of individuals. Thus, in his Torat Emet, the Hasidic master Rebbe Yehuda Leib Eiger (1817-1888, known as Reb Leibeleh) sees the encounter between Moses and Jethro as an opportunity to reflect upon the devotional life of an individual. Reb Leibeleh is struck by the language of the verse, which describes Jethro as Mosess friend (reahu, in Shemot 18:7). He asks: How did Jethro merit such a title in relation to the greatest of all prophets?

Although this is, in my opinion, a rather forced question, his response is very profound. (This combination is not infrequent in Hasidic literature.) Precisely because Jethro, who we met as a non-Israelite priest of Midian (Exodus 2:16), has been far from the God of Israel, the greatest peace and profoundest friendship is exemplified by his union with Moses. Reb Leibeleh quotes Gods words to the prophet:

Shalom, shalom, to the far and to the nearsays God (Isaiah 57:19).

Here, shalom is related to peace, though the root meaning is that of wholeness. Reb Leibeleh tells us that Moses is the near, a tzaddik who experiences unparalleled closeness to God, while Jethro is the far, a baal teshuvah. The opening of the parashah celebrates the fact that Jethro, from afar, has heard and understood some of the revelations of God, and has drawn himself closer. Although Moses is glad to see his father-in-law, rejoicing that Jethro has seen the value of drawing close, he perhaps does not initially realize that Jethro has something to teach him, too: the value of distance.

In Moses experience, one who is seeking God needs to have a quick and direct response from the Divine. For instance, when Moses is presented with questions that he cannot answeras in the case of the daughters of Zelophehadhe asks it of God and receives a response (Numbers 27:1-11).

For Jethro, on the other hand, God is the One who, rather than giving answers, gave him the space to wander long and far in his God-seeking. The midrash states that Jethro had engaged in every form of idolatry before finding the One God. Perhaps from all of these experiences, Jethro learned many lessonsincluding the irreducible value of the religious quest itself, for all of its challenges and heartaches.

Read existentially: Jethro is the part of us with the awareness that one who is seeking God needs to be given space, not only answers. Yet we do also need those Moses moments, in which we feel a real response and encounter. Imagining Moses and Jethros embrace, Reb Leibeleh sees the wholeness of a doubled shalom that embraces equally the near and the far, the moments of direct response and encounter as well as the endless quest.

Jethros advice was not merely of a practical naturea concern that the people will be worn out, as a vine will wither from too much sun. Rather, he understands that human growth requires the warmth of the Divine presence, as well as the air of freedom and space that God grants us, as in the great Luranic teaching of tzimtzum, to find and become ourselves in our ongoing search for the Divine.

Rabbi David Maayan is completing his Ph.D. in comparative theology at Boston College. He received an MA in Jewish studies from Hebrew College, with a focus on Hasidism, in 2017. He has also taught courses in the Hebrew College Rabbinical Schooland in theProzdor teen program.

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How the COVID-19 pandemic is shaping main streets in five Canadian cities – The Globe and Mail

Posted By on January 24, 2022

The view from the top of King Street, looking down toward the harbour, in Saint John, N.B.Chris Donovan/The Globe and Mail

Empty storefronts. Shuttered theatres. Winter patios. A development boom in the Maritimes. After nearly two years, the COVID-19 pandemic has battered small businesses, transformed peoples daily routines and reshaped Canadas neighbourhoods.

Here is a look at how the pandemic, and the latest wave driven by the Omicron variant, has affected life along five high streets across Canada.

Pedestrians cross at the intersection of Park Avenue and Rue Bernard in Montreal.Photography by Christinne Muschi/The Globe and Mail

On a Friday before sundown, Montreals Park Avenue is never going to be sleepy not even in January, not even in a pandemic. The biblical day of rest is about to begin. Ergo, the Hasidic community is shopping furiously.

At Lipas Kosher Market, on the east side of the street, all the fixings for a Sabbath feast are flying off the shelves: many, many kinds of challah bread; not just smoked salmon but carp, whitefish and sablefish; Mensch merlot, an Israeli wine.

It would be hard to guess that a public health crisis was tearing through Quebec from the action on Parc. Yes, the famous Rialto Theatre, whose Paris Opra-inspired faade has stood here since 1924, sits temporarily empty, a victim of the provincewide ban on most indoor gatherings.

Lipa's Kosher Market is one of three independent grocers on Park Avenue that has weathered the pandemic with support from the local community.

But grocery stores have thrived everywhere in Canada for the past two years thanks to restaurant closures. That has been good news for this stretch of Park, home to three of Montreals great, distinctive independent grocers. Sales also remain strong at picerie Mile-End, across the road, where there are no restrictions on buying grapefruit Perrier, bulk pistachios, bundles of asparagus or Gusta vegan wheat sausage.

Shoppers in this neighbourhood of Orthodox Jews, Outremont francophones and Mile End hipsters have also helped buoy other kinds of businesses, such as the toy store La Jolie Boutique. It had a strong Christmas season despite the Omicron wave and no e-commerce presence, owner Mary Vacondio said.

Being forced to close during the provinces first lockdowns, while big-box stores stayed open, was a frustrating blow for shopkeepers. But since then, people have rallied to the brick-and-mortar storefronts that give the area its bustle. Online shopping may have soared across the world during the pandemic, but on Park Avenue a buy-local counter-revolution has taken seed.

I think people became conscious of the value of small businesses, Ms. Vacondio said. There was a mental shift. People come and they tell us, Its important, we want you to stay.

COVID-19 has left its mark here, of course, as it has everywhere else. Down the street, Martha Wainwrights event space Ursa is waiting for indoor gatherings to be legal again, now that Quebecs 10 p.m. curfew has been lifted after about two weeks.

Above, masked shoppers browse the shelves in La Jolie Boutique toy store on Park Avenue. Below, foot traffic on the street picks up in the hours before sunset.

But in keeping with the pandemic turn toward goods and away from services, many places that sell stuff have wind in their sails. Boutique locolocal, a store specializing in the products of Quebec artisans, moved north on Park Avenue to a much bigger location in August. The virus still has a big impact on her business, said owner Catherine Nepveu, but so do other factors, such as switching to the sunny side of the street, where pedestrians are likelier to walk in winter.

Last year I was pleasantly surprised by the number of sales I had despite the pandemic, she said. Its not that the pandemic was good, you just have to persist.

Eric Andrew-Gee

People cross the intersection of Whyte Avenue and Gateway Boulevard by the Strathcona in Edmonton.Photography by Megan Albu/The Globe and Mail

On a Tuesday in January, while the rest of the country was clamping down, Edmonton, it seemed, was opening up.

Alberta remained, in the Premiers words, open for business, as it had been for most of the pandemic. And, with temperatures rising more than 20 degrees in a day, lifting the city out of the worst cold snap since 1969, things along Whyte Avenue felt light and fresh and even hopeful.

Inside Julios Barrio, a woman removed her mask to sip a margarita with a bottle of beer tipped into it. At Remedy Cafe, patrons whod shown identification and proof of vaccination lounged on couches drinking chai.

Wee Book Inn and Vivid Print are local staples on Whyte Avenue in Edmonton.

Down the street at Wee Book Inn, one of the avenues longest-standing businesses, Jaye Busch wore surgical gloves and two masks as she dealt with customers. The early pandemic affected things, but now weve been pretty much back in full swing, she said.

One man bought a hard-to-find Thomas Pynchon book. Another grabbed a copy of The Last Waltz on LP. Upstairs, Fleur the cat licked her paw near a sign asking customers not to pet her.

An interest in books predicting pandemics had subsided, Ms. Busch said, and people were back to their usual reading. Theres definitely been requests for books to take their minds off things. But we get that fairly regularly.

Elsewhere, the effects of the pandemic were still evident. Capacity limits, early cut-off for liquor service and bans against dancing and billiards made for quiet nights on a stretch known for its bar and restaurant scene. Walking his beat, Constable Alan Mackay found himself missing the old energy and action. The Princess Theatre sat dark and empty.

Several storefronts were vacant, though it wasnt always clear whether the businesses were victims of the pandemic or part of the regular churn. Some were already under construction. There would be a new sandwich shop, a coffee place.

Behind the counter at Vivid Print, co-owner Mark Wilson considered the good things. Theyd added services such as printing sewing patterns and were heartened by the support of their customers, their landlord and the business community. They were hanging on.

While the rest of the country was clamping down on COVID restrictions, Edmonton seemed to be opening up.

Mr. Wilson and his partner were cautious about the virus. They asked customers to wear a mask even when it wasnt required, and had switched to pickup-only orders for six months. The shop was fully open again, but they were watching the press conferences and the numbers, waiting to see what would happen with the variant and deciding what to do next.

Jana Pruden

Customers wait in line to be seated at Caf Diplomatico, in the Little Italy neighbourhood of Toronto.Photography by Christopher Katsarov/The Globe and Mail

Rocco Mastrangelo Jr. is fuming. The city says his enclosed patio at Caf Diplomatico on College Street is contrary to public health rules, but the restaurateur argues he wont attract customers in winter if he removes two of the glass walls. And given pandemic restrictions on indoor dining, the co-owner of the Little Italy mainstay says the patio is crucial.

Its frustrating. Im done, Im done. Im ready to sell the Diplomatico, he said. Who gives me the best offer, I will sell it to them.

A week later hed simmered down. He couldnt fight city hall, he realized, so he decided to close the patio, lay off staff and hope things improve.

The sword hanging over his restaurant, which for 54 years has anchored this downtown area, even as it evolved from largely Italian to a cosmopolitan mix, exemplifies the dire effect of the pandemic here.

Christian Aldo, founder and curator of the experimental art space Super Wonder Gallery on College Street, took the chance to retreat last year when their landlord offered them an out on the lease. He believed there were more tough times to come and compared cycles of government support and restriction with mice being lured out with treats and then killed.

Barista Antoine Larochette serves customers at the Agenda Cafe on College Street.

Im not going for the cheese again, he said. If we do itll put us out of business for real.

The Omicron variant hit the area just when many merchants were hoping for a holiday boost to carry them into winter, cutting optimism off at the legs. Its since grown quieter still; on a few recent evenings the sidewalks were largely empty. The mood was depressed.

How Little Italy comes back remains an open question. Even before the pandemic, the area was fighting competition from a number of new retail neighbourhoods. And the pandemic may prove to have instilled new habits, raising the question of whether the area can have the same appeal.

At the bar Birreria Volo, co-owner Julian Morana has noticed that his friends are more likely to cook at home and arent as keen to go out drinking as much.

I think people are still going to come onto College, but its going to take more than just a bar now to survive, he said, noting his business now relies on the adjoining food and bottle shop they started as a sideline. I think the next step for us is, because were also a tap bar, were going to just really focus on doing draft to go.

Though patios and looser restrictions brought people to the street last summer, the recent rise of Omicron has slowed foot traffic in Little Italy.

The local picture looked quite a bit brighter as recently as last summer. City rules allowing restaurants to extend into the street helped created a buzzy strip. Many evenings the scene was hopping as pandemic-weary Torontonians escaped their homes. But the appeal tailed off as the evenings got chiller.

Foot traffic was down already when Omicron emerged to thwart office parties and hurt retail sales.

The new cheese shop Kiss my Pans struggled through its first holiday season in the area after establishing the storefront in summer. The first two weeks of December were nerve-racking, said founder Jeanne Chai, as they sat on thousands of dollars in product and offered constant discounts. But they hung on, and sales improved as word got out.

The community has definitely rallied around us and given us so much support, she said.

Oliver Moore

King Street in Saint John, N.B., is one of the oldest main streets in North America.Photography by Chris Donovan/The Globe and Mail

In Saint John, where history seems to linger around every corner, change comes slowly.

But on King Street, one of the oldest main streets in North America, two giant holes in the ground are tangible signs of progress. Both are the early stages of major redevelopment projects that promise to bring thousands of people back to the citys original commercial artery, part of a building boom thats been fuelled in part by eastward migration during the pandemic.

At the foot of King Street, heavy equipment is preparing the former Coast Guard site for the Fundy Quay development, a $300-million mixed-use waterfront project that plans to add 677 condominiums and five towers, and is set to be completed in 2023.

Saint John is Canadas first incorporated city.

At the top of the street, demolition work is already finished for a new 12-storey commercial and residential tower at an address that locals still refer to as where the old Woolworths was, even though the retail chain moved out in 1994. In between those two properties, on a street that looks onto an increasingly busy cargo port, youll find changing attitudes about the future and a growing belief that Saint John is a city on the move.

The pandemic has brought a wave of residents and entrepreneurs to Canadas first incorporated city, with developers following close behind. While Saint Johns economic revival was beginning before COVID-19 arrived, business owners say its been sped up by the shifts in labour patterns forced by the virus. Many of those moving here are Maritimers who left after high school, returning home with money in their pockets and opening businesses.

In the early stages of the pandemic, it was like we had a mini gold rush, said Elizabeth Cook, owner of Handworks Gallery, a shop that sells Maritime art, crafts and jewellery on King Street.

Two doors up from her shop, a clothing store in a heritage building that was once a home for Benedict Arnold is moving to a larger location. Further up the street, teenagers are crowding into a new Vietnamese restaurant, the only place in town to get banh mi, or Vietnamese baguette sandwiches.

As our population grows, were seeing an increase in foot traffic, and more people out and about and needing more things. And thats new for a lot of Saint Johners, said Ms. Cook, who moved back from Calgary in 2018.

King Street is still a work in progress, and part of a city in transition. Brunswick Square, a once-bustling three-storey indoor mall that anchors the street, remains a wasteland of for lease signs and empty retail space. With rising housing prices and an expanding population, there are growing pains, with the local paper full of stories of out-of-province companies buying older properties and raising rents.

But on King Street, at least, theres something else thats new: a growing sense of optimism about what lies ahead.

Greg Mercer

Vancouver's Gastown neighbourhood was a tourist hot spot, but has seen fewer tourists since the onset of the pandemic.Photography by Jackie Dives/The Globe and Mail

Gastowns Water Street is the kind of street that exists in every major North American city founded in the early 1900s. Its one of Vancouvers oldest, lined with historic buildings from the citys days as a centre for gold-panning supplies, complete with a (fake) steam clock and a (fake) cobblestone street.

Before the pandemic, its lifeblood came from tourists, many sailing on cruise ships docked at the convention centre a short distance away, as well as workers venturing from nearby offices.

Now, the convention centre is still providing the street with some business by bringing thousands of people downtown for COVID-19 vaccine boosters. Thats how Kitsilano residents Susan Andrews and Geof Petryschuk ended up on Water on a recent Friday at lunch hour.

This time of day, its not too crazy, said Ms. Andrews during a quick postvaccine lunch at World Wrap Place. She means that it feels safe and comfortable, something that isnt always the case in this neighbourhood. Its proximity to the Downtown Eastside means that it sees a bigger share than other places of people struggling with substance abuse issues, many of whom lack adequate housing.

Locals Susan Andrews, left, and Geof Petryschuk have lunch at World Wrap Place in Vancouver.

That reality has always been part of the Water Street and Gastown life, but it became more visible when the office workers and tourists disappeared during the pandemic. Public-health restrictions have limited access to services, exacerbated the opioid crisis and, the city believes, may have increased the population of people sleeping rough (though Vancouver has skipped its annual census of residents experiencing homelessness for the second year in a row because of the pandemic).

The sense of disorder prompted a few businesses to move out, while some others closed as part of the regular churn. But, in spite of everything, another 33 businesses opened to replace the 34 that shut their doors in the past two years.

Those that are here are determined to hang on, and a slowly returning tide of visitors and office workers is helping. One day a small crowd makes the obligatory stop at the steam clock at noon. A pair of young women take selfies in front of the most-talked-about new arrival on the street: Maison Kitsun, a French-Japanese clothing and music label with a caf attached. A couple from Calgary, here on vacation, study a street map to figure out where to head next.

The local businesses are counting on those visitors to not just buy things, but to repopulate the street and make it seem like the lively mix it once was as recently as the summer, when the patios were full, or even in early December, when there was a rush of Christmas shopping before the Omicron variant scared everyone away again.

Above, the iconic cobblestone streets of Gastown are in need of repair. Below, David Sims, left, and Robert Dedarisse, who are visiting from Calgary, explore the neighbourhood.

At Eduardo Bilardellos Italian-themed Brioche restaurant, which has been in Gastown for 20 years and recently moved over one block to a Water Street location, its quiet but there is still a scattering of customers at the tables. His catering business has almost evaporated, so this is what hes relying on.

Frances Bula

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How the COVID-19 pandemic is shaping main streets in five Canadian cities - The Globe and Mail

Malka Leifers father-in-law arrested over child sex assault allegations – Sydney Morning Herald

Posted By on January 24, 2022

The rabbi father-in-law of accused child sex abuser Malka Leifer has been arrested for allegedly sexually assaulting a child and a teenager in Israel.

Baruch Pinchas Leifer, an influential and highly regarded rabbi who led the small Chust Hasidic sect, was arrested this week over historical sexual assault allegations, which he denies.

Malka Leifer (right) appears in a court in Israel in 2018.Credit:AP

One of the rabbis alleged victims, a family member, claims the rabbi sexually assaulted her several times when she was 12, while a man alleges the rabbi committed sexual offences against him when he was 18.

Two victims advocates close to the case verified Ms Leifers relationship to the rabbi: Magen for Jewish Communities Shana Aaronson, the executive director of the Israel-based advocacy organisation for sexual abuse victims; and, VoiCSAs Manny Waks, the chief executive of that organisation, which combats child sexual abuse in the global Jewish community.

We hope that some semblance of justice will prevail, Mr Waks said.

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Local media report the rabbi, who is in his 70s, vehemently denies the allegations against him, and claims they are a plot against a family dispute.

His daughter-in-law Ms Leifer, the former principal of the Adass Israel School in Elsternwick in Melbournes south east, is due to stand trial this year on allegations she abused three of her students between 2004 and 2008.

Ms Leifer has pleaded not guilty to at least 70 charges, including rape.

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Malka Leifers father-in-law arrested over child sex assault allegations - Sydney Morning Herald

Culture of Israel – history, people, clothing, traditions …

Posted By on January 24, 2022

Identification. According to the Bible, Israel is the name given by God to Jacob. The modern country of Israel includes two distinct nationalities, the Palestinian and the Jewish. Each nationality is inextricable from its religious identity. The Palestinians are Arabs whose traditions are founded in Muslim culture; the Jews define their culture in large part around their religion as well. Each group identifies as part of a larger, international religious and cultural community, and each has a history in the region that goes back to ancient times.

Location and Geography. Israel is in the Middle East on the Mediterranean Sea, bordering Egypt, the Gaza Strip, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and the West Bank. Its total area is 8,019 square miles (20,770 square kilometers), slightly smaller than New Jersey. The Negev Desert covers the south of the country. Mountains rise in the central region from the low coastal plain along the Mediterranean. The Jordan River stretches 200 miles (322 kilometers) from Syria in the north, emptying into the Dead Sea. The Dead Sea (technically a lake) is, at 1,312 feet (400 meters) below sea level, the lowest inland sea on earth.

Demography. Israel's population in 2000 was 5,842,454. This includes an estimated 171,000 Israeli settlers in the West Bank, 20,000 in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, 6,500 in the Gaza Strip, and 172,000 in East Jerusalem. The population is roughly 80 percent Jewish; of the total population, 32.1 percent were born in Europe or America; 20.8 percent in Israel; 14.6 percent in Africa; and 12.6 percent in Asia. Most of the 20 percent who are not Jewish are Arab.

Linguistic Affiliation. Hebrew is the nation's official language. The modern Hebrew language was designed by Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, a Lithuanian Jew who moved to Palestine in the 1880s. Previously, biblical Hebrew had been the language of prayer, whereas the vernacular of most Jews was Yiddish (Ladino for Spanish and Portuguese Jews). David Ben-Gurion's vision of a national language, which would allow Jews from different parts of the world to communicate with each other, was an important element of the Zionist movement. Arabic is the official language of the Arab minority. English is studied in school and is the most commonly spoken foreign language. Immigrants from various countries also bring their languages with them, and Spanish, Italian, African dialects, and especially Russian are often heard.

Symbolism. The flag consists of a blue six-pointed star on a white background, with a horizontal blue stripe above and one below. The star, called a Magen David, or Shield of David, is a symbol of the Jewish faith.

The Israeli national anthem, Hatikva , is over one hundred years old. Its melody is of unknown origin, although some believe it comes from an Eastern European fold song. Its lyrics are explicitly Zionist, extolling the return of the Jews to their holy land. The song was banned from the airwaves during the British mandate, and it continues to be somewhat controversial today; there has been some debate as to whether its Zionist message is still valid.

Emergence of the Nation. There is archaeological evidence of settlements in Israel dating from nine thousand to eleven thousand years ago. It is thought that the first people of the kingdom of Israel migrated from Mesopotamia. Much of the history of ancient Israel is laid out in the Bible. The Israelites were slaves in Egypt from about 1750 to

Israel

In 538 Babylon was conquered by the king of Persia, who allowed the Jews to return to their homeland, where they rebuilt the Temple and began what became known as the Second Jewish State. In 322 B.C.E. , Alexander the Great defeated the Persians and took control of Israel. Between 322 and 160 B.C. , the land of Israel changed hands several times under various Greek and Syrian rulers. In 160 Judas Maccabee led a rebellion that allowed the Jews to reclaim Jerusalem, a victory that Jews still celebrate in the festival of Hanukkah. Judah became an independent state in 141 B.C.E

Herod conquered Judah in 37 B.C.E. In 19 B.C.E. , under his rule, the Temple was again rebuilt. The First Revolt against Rome occurred in 66 C.E. ; however, Jerusalem fell to the Romans in 70 C.E. The Temple was destroyed, and the majority of the Jews were dispersed throughout the world.

Byzantines ruled the area from 313 to 635, although toward the end of this period, from 614 to 629, the Jews ruled Jerusalem under Persian jurisdiction. The years 622 to 632 saw the founding of Islam by Muhammad. In 638 Arab Muslims conquered Jerusalem, where their rule lasted until the Turkish conquest in 1078. The First Crusaders took the city in 1099. In 1187 Saladin, the Kurdish ruler of Egypt, conquered Jerusalem. In 1516 the land of Israel, known at this time as Palestine, was taken over by the Ottoman Turks, who ruled for four hundred years. In 1799 Napoleon unsuccessfully attempted to take the territory, but did not succeed.

The first modern Jewish settlement in Palestine was established in 1870, and was followed at the end of the nineteenth century by others, as Jews fled pogroms in Russia and Poland. In 1897 the First Zionist Conference was held in Basel, Switzerland, and under the initiative of the Hungarian Jew Theodor Herzl, the Zionist movement began its mission to create a Jewish homeland in the territory from which the Jews had been expelled nearly two thousand years earlier.

The Balfour Declaration, issued by Britain in 1917, expressed support for the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine. The British used a 1920 mandate from the League of Nations as license to rule the area for the ensuing decades, during which time they kept control by feeding the animosity between Palestinian Arabs and Jewish settlers. The British also restricted Jewish immigration to the region, even by Jews who were experiencing persecution at the hands of the Russians, and later the Nazis. The Arabs attempted unsuccessfully to revolt against the British from 1936 to 1938; tensions between Arabs and Jews also escalated, and there were several anti-Jewish riots.

From the time Hitler came to power in 1933 until the beginning of World War II in 1939, a large number of German Jews managed to immigrate to Palestine despite British restrictions, fleeing the increasingly oppressive regime. Between 1939 and 1945 more than six million Jews were killed in the Holocaust, a horror that gave new impetus to the movement to form a Jewish state and that caused European nations to recognize the legitimacy of such a claim.

In Palestine, a truce with the British lasted through World War II, but when the war ended, violence again increased, both between Jews and Arabs and against the British. In 1947 the United Nations voted to partition Palestine into two states, one Jewish and one Arab. The Palestinians rejected this plan.

On 14 May 1948, when Israel proclaimed its independence, the declaration was met by an invasion on behalf of the Palestinians by the armies of Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and Iraq. The war that followed lasted until the Arab defeat in January 1949. A mass immigration of Jews from Europe and Arab countries took place over the first few years after the state's founding, and the economy grew. While some Palestinians chose to take up Israeli citizenship, many others immigrated to the primarily Arab West Bank and Gaza Strip, or sought refuge in other Arab nations.

When Egypt took control of the Suez Canal from France and Britain in 1956, Israel, fearing the increase in power of their unfriendly neighbor, staged an attack in Egypt's Sinai Desert. Several days later, Britain and France joined the offensive. The United Nations sent peacekeepers, who stayed in the region until 1967. When they pulled out, Egypt sent its military back into the Sinai, obstructing the southern Israeli port of Eilat. Israel responded by attacking on 5 June. Syria, Jordan, and Iraq came to Egypt's defense, but all four nations were defeated. The Six-Day War, as it came to be known, won Israel not just the Sinai but the Gaza Strip and the Golan Heights as well. It also resulted in a Jewish occupation of the West Bank and a reunited Jerusalem. (The city had been partitioned earlier between the Jews and the Arabs.)

The Arab League vowed that the situation would not rest and proceeded to put Israel in a state of siege. Arab terrorists highjacked Israeli airplanes. They also killed Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics. The following year, on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, Egypt and Syria mounted a surprise attack on Israel at the Suez and the Golan Heights. Israel managed to defeat the two armies, but the resulting situation was far from stable. In 1977 Egyptian president Anwar Sadat went to Jerusalem to talk with Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin, and in the following year U.S. president Jimmy Carter helped to broker the Camp David Accords. Sadat and Begin shared the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts at reconciliation, and an official peace treaty was signed in 1979 in Paris.

In 1982 Israel agreed to give up the Sinai, but it also invaded Lebanon, to leave its northern settlements less vulnerable to Palestinian attacks. However, by 1985, Israel had limited its presence to a security strip along the border.

The Palestinian uprising called the Intifadah began in 1987. Palestinians threw rocks at Israeli soldiers occupying the Gaza Strip and the West Bank; the Israelis retaliated, and the violence escalated, ultimately resulting in hundreds of deaths. Israel proposed a peace initiative in 1989. This same year saw the beginning of a mass immigration by Soviet Jews.

The first peace talks between Israel and Palestinian Arabs, represented by Yasser Arafat of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), were held in Madrid in October 1991. The resulting agreement gave the Palestinians responsibility for the Gaza Strip and Jericho.

In 1993 another round of peace talks, between Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin and Arafat, resulted in further compromise, including Israel handing over most of the Gaza Strip and parts of the West Bank to the Palestinian National Authority (PNA). By moving in this direction, the agreements presumed eventual statehood for the Palestinians. Other deals included resolving the issue of Israeli settlements in the West Bank and Gaza, as well as

A Sephardic family celebrates the Jewish festival of Passover by sharing a picnic in West Jerusalem.

Israel went on to sign a peace agreement with Jordan in 1994, and to begin talks with Syria as well. However, despite progress at the upper echelons, violence continued. In 1995 Israeli prime minister Rabin was assassinated at a peace rally in Tel Aviv. The killer was an ultraconservative Jew who was angered by what he saw as Rabin's overly conciliatory stance toward the Palestinians.

In October 1998 a conference at the Wye River in Maryland resulted in an agreement by the PLO to get rid of its terrorist groups, to confiscate illegal weapons, and to imprison their own terrorists, in exchange for more land on the West Bank. The meetings also resulted in the creation of a U.S.-Palestinian-Israeli committee, to convene several times a month to prevent terrorism and assess the state of affairs. These meetings had some degree of success, and the incremental progress appeared promising. In September 2000, violence again broke out. The fragile peace established by the Oslo Accords crumbled. By the end of November more than 280 people had been killed, most of them Palestinian, with no end to the conflict in sight.

National Identity. National identity for Israelis is to a large extent bound up with their identity as Jews. For the more devout, national identity takes on a spiritual element, in which the observance of religious ritual becomes an expression of national pride. However, there are also a large number of secular Jews in Israel, for whom Judaism is more a cultural and ethnic identity than a spiritual practice. Many Palestinians living in Israel do not identify as Israelis at all, but rather with the displaced Palestinian nation (and with the rest of the Arab world as well). Much of their national identity is also based on both religious and cultural elements of the Muslim faith.

Ethnic Relations. Relations between Jews and Arabs are extremely antagonistic. Each side sees the other as the aggressor. Palestinians resent the fact that the Jews took over their homeland, and that they have exercised their far superior military technology to maintain it, whereas the Jews feel that they are making a claim to land that is rightfully theirs, and from which they have been exiled for thousands of years. Palestinians have often resorted to terrorist action, which further aggravates the situation. Atrocities have been committed on both sides of the divide, and there is little sign of reconciliation in the near future.

Relations within the Jewish community itself also have been problematic. Many of the Orthodox and ultra-Orthodox oppose any compromise with the Palestinians and want the state to follow a more strictly religious line. They do not consider more Reform or Conservative Jews Jewish, because these more liberal branches do not strictly follow all the religious laws.

Ninety percent of Israel's population is urban. Jerusalem is the capital and largest city, with a population of 602,100. It is in the center of the country, straddling the border between Israel and the West Bank. The city has been continuously settled for more than three thousand years and is home to many sites of historical and religious significance for Jews, Christians, and Muslims. These include the Dome of the Rock, the Wailing Wall, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and the Tomb of the Virgin Mary, among others. The Old City is divided into quarters: Jewish, Christian, Muslim, and Armenian. Outside the walls of this oldest district, the city sprawls in neighborhoods containing residential zones, parks, museums, and government buildings.

Tel Aviv is a more modern city, and the commercial and industrial capital of the country. It is in fact a combination of two cities, Tel Aviv and Jaffa. Jaffa's history dates back to biblical times, whereas Tel Aviv was founded in 1909 by European Jewish immigrants. The third-largest city in the country is Haifa, in the north. It is the country's main port and also is an industrial center.

Israel's architecture is diverse, spanning many centuries and styles. There is a good deal of Islamic architecture, most of which dates from 1250 to 1517. Today most Israelis live in modern high-rise apartments, which are overseen by committees elected by the inhabitants of the building. Some Jewish settlers in Palestinian territory, and many Palestinians themselves, live in shacks, unfinished houses, or other modest dwellings.

Food in Daily Life. Falafel , ground chickpeas mixed with onions and spices formed into balls and fried, are served in pita bread as a sandwich. Other popular dishes include tabuleh (a salad of bulgar wheat and chopped vegetables), hummus (chickpea paste), grilled meats, and eggplant. Cumin, mint, garlic, onion, and black pepper are used for flavoring. Baklava is a popular dessert of Arabic origin and consists of flaky dough layered with honey and nuts. Coffee is often prepared in the Turkish style, extremely strong and thick and served in small cups.

Jews are bound by a set of dietary laws called kashrut , which, among other restrictions, forbid the consumption of pork and shellfish, as well as the consumption of both meat and milk products at the same meal. Not all Israelis observe these rules, but many restaurants do.

Food Customs at Ceremonial Occasions. Food plays an important role in nearly all Jewish celebrations. The Sabbath, observed on Saturday, is ushered in on Friday evening with a family meal including an egg bread called challah. At the Jewish New Year the challah is baked in a circle, symbolizing the cyclical nature of life. Apples and honey also are eaten, symbolizing the wish for a sweet new year. Hamentaschen are traditionally served at Purim, the celebration of Queen Esther's triumph over the evil Haman, who was trying to annihilate the Jewish people. These are cookies filled with lekvar (prune preserves) and baked in the shape of a triangle. Some believe hamentaschen symbolizes the tricornered hat of Haman; others think it is his pockets, and still others think it represents his ears, which were clipped as a sign of shame. During Passover, Jews abstain from eating all leavened foods (bread, pasta, etc.). Instead they eat matzoh ,a flat, crackerlike bread. This is in memory of the Exodus from Israel, when the Jews could not wait for their bread to rise, and so carried it on their backs to bake in the sun. Passover also is observed with a ritual meal called a seder. Four glasses of wine, representing God's four promises to Israel ("I will bring you out of Egypt;" "I will deliver you;" "I will redeem you;" and "I will take you to be my people"), are drunk throughout the evening. Other symbolic foods at the occasion include boiled eggs (symbolizing new life) and charosis (a mixture of apples and walnuts, representing the mortar the Jews used as slaves). On Shavuot in the late spring, dairy-based treats are served. Because cooking is forbidden on the Sabbath, a traditional Saturday meal is cholent , a thick stew that is left in the oven to simmer overnight.

Basic Economy. Israel's economy was originally based on a socialist model, in which the Histadrut

People voting in an election. Israel is a parlimentary democracy, divided into six administrative districts.

Land Tenure and Property. Some land is privately owned and some is public property. Israel also has a system of kibbutzim (singular: kibbutz ), cooperative farms in which property is collectively owned. Residents share chores, and instead of a salary receive housing, medical care, education, and other necessities. There are also moshav , farming communities in which each family owns its own house and is responsible for its own land, but in which other functions, such as selling their products, are done collectively.

Commercial Activities. Israel produces a variety of agricultural goods, including meat and dairy products, vegetables, citrus, and other fruits. Computer industries and technology account for a large amount of the nation's commercial activity. Tourism is another important sector. Israel draws roughly two million tourists each year, with its historical and religious sites as well as resorts and health spas near the Dead Sea.

Major Industries. Israel has a variety of industries, including food processing, textiles, diamond cutting and polishing, metal products, military equipment, high-technology electronics, and tourism.

Trade. The main exports are machinery and equipment, software, cut diamonds, textiles, and agricultural products. These go primarily to the United States, the United Kingdom, Hong Kong, the Benelux countries, and Japan. Israel imports raw materials, military equipment, rough diamonds, fuel, and consumer goods from the United States, the Benelux countries, Germany, and the United Kingdom.

Division of Labor. Palestinian Israelis generally do not have access to as good an education as Israeli Jews and therefore are more likely to occupy less skilled and poorly paid positions. Immigrants as well, even highly educated ones, often are forced to take jobs of a low status, and many are unemployed.

Classes and Castes. Israel is not highly stratified economically; most people have a similarly comfortable standard of living. However, the majority of the poor are Palestinian. Recent immigrants from Africa and Eastern Europe also tend to be at a disadvantage economically.

Symbols of Social Stratification. Among Israeli Jews, clothing is often an indication of religious or political affiliation. Men wear yarmulkes , or skullcaps, for prayer; more observant men wear them at all times. Conservative Jewish men can be distinguished by their black hats, whereas liberal Jews wear white crocheted caps. In the strictest Orthodox communities, men dress all in black and wear peyes , long sidelocks. Women keep their heads covered; traditionally, after marriage, they shave their heads and wear wigs. Secular or less conservative Jews, who comprise the majority of the population, wear Western-style clothes. Many Arabs wear traditional Muslim dress, which for men is a turban or other headdress and long robes, and for women is a long robe that covers the head and the entire body.

Government. Israel is a parliamentary democracy, divided into six administrative districts. There is no formal constitution; instead, there is the Declaration of Establishment, from 1948, the Basic Laws of the parliament ( Knesset ), and the Israel citizenship law. The head of government is the prime minister, elected by popular vote for a four-year term. The 120 members of the Knesset also are elected for four years. The Knesset selects the president, who serves as chief of state.

Leadership and Political Officials. There about twelve political parties represented in the Knesset, ranging from the far right wing to the far left, and many in between. The most powerful of the conservative parties is the fairly centrist Likud . The Labor Party is the liberal party with the most clout, and the one Palestinian Israelis tend to support. The Palestinian Liberation Organization, headed by Yassar Arafat, is the main political representation of Palestinians seeking the formation of a separate state. There also are several militant and terrorist organizations with this same objective, including Hamas and Hezbollah .

Social Problems and Control. The legal system is a combination of English common law and British mandate regulations. For personal matters, Jews, Muslims, and Christians are subject to separate jurisdictions.

The role of the police force is sometimes virtually interchangeable with that the armyfor example, in the case of the border guards in the West Bank. The Palestinian National Authority has its own police and security forces, which have a record of human rights abuses. Palestinian civilians have a reputation for violence against Israeli soldiers and law-enforcement officers, who in turn have a reputation for responding brutally.

Military Activity. The military consists of the Israel Defense Forces (ground, naval, and air troops), the Pioneer Fighting Youth, the Frontier Guard, and Chen (composed of women). All citizens, men and women, are required to serve in the armed forces. For unmarried women, two years of active duty are required (not in combat); for men, a minimum of four years. Military expenditures total $8.7 billion annually, 9.4 percent of the GDP.

Social welfare programs include pensions for the elderly, maternity insurance, workers' compensation, and allowances for large families. The government also provides assistance for recent immigrants, although these programs have been criticized for helping well-off immigrants at the expense of poorer native-born Israelis.

A number of nongovernmental Jewish organizations make considerable economic contributions to Israel, such as the international World Zionist Organization, which supports the immigration of Jews to Israel from around the world. Synagogues in the United States and Europe also send aid and sponsor tree-planting drives. Israel also has a system of "national institutions," which are not part of the government but function alongside it in the

A Torah scribe works with his son. Judaism is the official Israeli religion, and the Torah is the most sacred text.

Division of Labor by Gender. Women are well represented in many fields, both traditional (teaching, nursing, child care), and nontraditional (law, politics, the military). Israel even elected a female prime minister, Golda Meir, who served from 1969 to 1974. Some strides toward equality have been reversed; while it used to be a hallmark of kibbutzim that labor was divided without respect to gender, today women are more likely to be found in the kitchen and in child care facilities. Women, like men, are required to serve in the armed forces, and during the war for independence fought in the front lines alongside men. Today women are not permitted combat. Instead they are mostly confined to adminstration and education, and usually do not achieve high-ranking positions.

The Relative Status of Women and Men. In the Orthodox tradition, women and men live very separate lives. Women are considered inferior, and are excluded from many traditional activities. However, most of Israeli society is more progressive, and women are generally accorded equal status to men, both legally and socially. (The main exception to this is the divorce law.)

Marriage. Traditionally, in both Arab and Jewish societies, marriages were often arranged, but that is uncommon nowadays. However, there are powerful social taboos against intermarriage, and it is illegal for a Jew to marry a non-Jew in Israel. Those wishing to do so must go abroad for the ceremony. Even within the Jewish community, it is unusual for a very observant Jew to marry someone secular. Divorce is legal, but Orthodox Jewish law applies. According to this statute, men have the power to prevent their ex-wives from remarrying. If the woman enters into another relationship, the courts refuse to recognize it, and any children from such a union are considered illegitimate and themselves cannot marry in the State of Israel.

Domestic Unit. The most common family unit consists of a nuclear family. In more traditional families, grandparents are sometimes included in this. In the original kibbutz system, the living arrangements were different. Husband and wife lived in separate quarters from their children, who were housed with the other young people. Some kibbutzim still operate in this way, but it is now more common for children to live with their parents, although their days are still spent separately.

Infant Care. Babies are generally adored and showered with affection. The extended family plays an important role in helping to raise the baby, but the mother generally takes primary responsibility. Jewish boys are circumcised eight days after birth in a religious ceremony called a bris.

Child Rearing and Education. In most of Israeli society, children are raised in the setting of a nuclear family. However, collective child care is common, especially for mothers who work outside the home. In kibbutzim, they stay separately from their parents, and usually see them only at night or on weekends. Children are generally indulged and are not strictly disciplined.

In the Arab tradition, boys and girls are raised separately. They have different responsibilities at home, where girls are expected to help much more with domestic chores. The schools are also usually gender-segregated.

Education is mandatory from the ages five through fifteen. The state runs both religious and nonreligious schools; 70 percent of children attend the nonreligious ones. There is a separate education system for Arab children, where the language of instruction is Arabic. The quality of education in these schools is often lower due to a relative unavailability of teachers and poor resources, and they have at times been subject to closings due to violence and political instability. Arab schools receive some funding from the government, as well as from religious institutions. There are three types of high schools: academic, vocational, and agricultural.

Higher Education. Israel has seven universities. Entrance standards are high, and students must pass a national exam before being admitted. The oldest and most prestigious of these is Hebrew University in Jerusalem, which also has one of the strongest medical schools in the Middle East. Ben-Gurion University, in Beersheba, specializes in natural conservation, and Technion in Haifa focuses on science and engineering. The Weizmann Institute in Rehovot supports postgraduate study. There also are vocational, agricultural, and teacher training institutes. Yeshivot are religious academies (generally not open to women) that train future rabbis and Jewish scholars.

Israelis are very informal in social interactions. Their standards would, in many other countries, be considered rude. For example, store clerks do not act at all solicitous or even acknowledge a customer's presence until the customer approaches. "Please" and "thank you" are not uttered lightly. Despite this apparent brusqueness, touching and eye contact are common in social interactions.

Religious etiquette dictates that women dress conservatively when visiting holy sites (shorts are not acceptable for either gender) and that men cover their heads with a yarmulke.

Arabs are physically affectionate people, but in Arab society, men and women are often separated socially and there is less physical contact between men and women in public. It is customary to remove one's shoes before entering an Arab household.

Religious Beliefs. Judaism is the official religion. Eighty percent of the population are Jewish, 15 percent are Muslim, and 4 percent are Christian or Druze. Jews believe in the Hebrew Bible, or Tenakh, which corresponds to the Christian Old Testament. The most sacred text is the Torah, or the five books of Moses. The Bible is seen as both historical record and religious law. Different communities follow the Holy Book with varying degrees of literalness. The strictest are the ultra-Orthodox, who believe that the Scriptures were physically handed down from God. There are also Conservative, Reform, and Reconstructionist congregations, who interpret the law more leniently, and who allow women more of a role in the religion. There also are different sects of Judaism, such as the Hasidim and the Lubbavicher.

There are five pillars of faith that Muslims follow. They are: a declaration of faith in Allah; praying five times a day; giving alms to the poor; fasting from sunrise to sundown during the holy month of Ramadan; and making a pilgrimage at some point in one's life to the holy city of Mecca.

Religious Practitioners. Rabbis are the religious leaders of the Jewish community. They are ordained in Jewish law, and often are scholars in addition to delivering sermons and offering spiritual guidance. The Chief Rabbinate is a body of rabbis who make the religious laws to which Israeli Jews are subject.

An overview of Haifa and the bay area, in 1989.

The main religious figures in the Muslim community are muezzins, who are scholars of the Koran and sound the call to prayer from mosques.

Rituals and Holy Places. Jews worship in synagogues. In the most traditional, men sit in the front and women in the back, separated by a partition, or in a balcony. There are a number of places in Israel, in Jerusalem in particular, that have religious significance to Jews, Muslims, and Christians. The Dome of the Rock is an ancient Muslim shrine. Christians often make pilgrimages to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, also in Jerusalem. The Wailing Wall, the remains of the Temple destroyed by the Romans in 70 C.E. , is a sacred spot for Jews. There is a separate section of the wall for men and women. People often write their prayers on pieces of paper and slip them in cracks between the stones. The Jewish New Year, called Rosh Hashana, falls in September or October. Jews attend synagogue for two days and listen to readings from the Torah. The ten days following Rosh Hashana are known as the Days of Awe, a period of reflection and penitence. This culminates in Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, and the holiest day of the year. Jews fast from sundown to sundown and attend synagogue, where they repent for their sins and ask God to be inscribed in the Book of Life for another year. Sukkot, the harvest festival, is later in the fall. Hanukkah, which falls in December, is an eight-day holiday celebrating the victory of the Maccabees over the Greeks in C.E. 165. Purim, in the spring, celebrates Queen Esther's outsmarting Haman, who wished to kill the Jewish people. Passover, which falls later in the spring, remembers Jewish liberation from slavery in Egypt.

The bar mitzvah (for boys) or bat mitzvah (for girls) is an important coming-of-age ceremony in Judaism. Children study for years to prepare for the event that occurs when they turn thirteen. They are called to read from the Torah before the congregation; the service is followed by a party with food and dancing.

Death and the Afterlife. Judaism focuses more on the here and now, rather than the concept of an afterlife. A death is followed by a mourning period of seven days, a process called sitting shiva , during which friends and relatives pay visits to the family of the deceased and bring food. Mourners dress in black, sit on low stools, and recite prayers. Another traditional practice is for mourners to tear their clothes; today they generally rip only the lapel of their shirts. When visiting a Jewish cemetery, it is customary to place a stone on the gravestone in memory of the deceased.

Making the desert bloom in the arid Jordan Valley, kibbutz members prepare the ground for planting winter crops.

Israel has a well-developed health care system. It has one of the highest ratios of doctors to general population in the world. Since independence, sanitation has improved, and the rate of infectious diseases has decreased. Histadrut, the labor federation, runs Kupat Cholim, or Sick Fund, which provides health care to members through regional hospitals and local clinics. The Ministry of Health provides for those who do not receive care from a sick fund. In general, Jews receive better health care than Arabs. The life expectancy is longer for Jews, and the infant mortality rate is significantly lower.

Noted here are the more secular Israeli holidays, but virtually all celebrations and commemorative occasions have some religious significance. The dates of these holidays vary from year to year, because the Jewish calendar does not correspond to the Gregorian: Holocaust Memorial Day, April/May; Memorial Day, April/May; Independence Day, April/May; Jerusalem Day, May/June; National Day (Palestinian), November.

Support for the Arts. The government founded the magazine Ariel to promote literary endeavors. The publication now has a web page as well. There is a national drama company, Habima, as well as dance troupes, a national orchestra, and museums and galleries, including the Museum of Contemporary Art in Tel Aviv and the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.

Literature. Israel has a varied literary scene. Many of its writers have come to the country from abroad, including Zbigniew Herbert from Poland, Vasko Popa from Yugoslavia, and Robert Friend from the United States. The Israeli writer Shmuel Yosef Agnon, a German who immigrated to Israel in 1913, won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1966. The poet Arnon Levy, who was born in Jerusalem, has also gained international recognition, as has Yehuda Amichai, whose verses have been translated into a variety of languages. Amos Oz is perhaps the best-known Israeli writer internationally. Both his novels and his nonfiction have been translated into a number of languages.

Graphic Arts. Contemporary painting and sculpture are alive and well in Israel. The Israeli style is highly influenced by European art, but much of it deals explicitly with Jewish themes and issues. Israeli artists who have gained international acclaim include the painters Ya'akov Agam, Menashe Kadishman, Avigdor Arikha, and the sculptors Dany Karavan and Ygael Tumarkin.

Ritual Jewish art includes beautifully crafted menorahs (candelabra), wine cups, candlesticks, tallilot (prayer shawls), and other ceremonial objects.

Performance Arts. Israel has a well-known philharmonic orchestra. The country has produced such classical music stars as violinist Yitzhak Perlman and pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim. The Leonard Bernstein International Music Competition in Jerusalem gives annual awards in classical music. Pop music and rock and roll also have a large following, particularly in Tel Aviv, where local stars such as Ofra Haza, Ilanit, and Shalom Hanoch perform to enthusiastic audiences. Klezmer , a form of Jewish music that originated in Eastern Europe during the seventeenth century, is a raucous blend of drums, violins, clarinets, keyboards, and tambourines that is common at wedding celebrations.

The Israel Ballet Company is world-famous. There are several modern dance troupes as well, most notably Inbal, Batsheeva, and Bat Dor. Israeli choreographer Ohad Nahrin is well known in the dance world. Israel also has a lively tradition of folk dances, which are performed by professional troupes and at occasions such as weddings. The hora , a circle dance, is one of the most commonly performed.

Theater also is popular in Israel. Jewish theater is traditionally highly melodramatic, although many contemporary productions adopt many Western theatrical conventions and social issues. There are companies that stage productions in Russian and English as well as in Hebrew and Arabic. The film industry, also thriving, is best known for its documentaries, including Yaakov Gross's Pioneers of Zion , produced in 1995, and Toward Jerusalem , Ruth Beckermann's 1992 production.

The country's scientific and technological progress has been aided in recent years by an influx of well-educated immigrants from the former Soviet Union. Israeli scientists have made contributions in electronics, nuclear and solar power, and computer hardware and software, as well as in weapons-related technology. Cutting-edge firms have developed wireless and cellular telephone technology, as well as new applications for the Internet.

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The best Jewish TV, movies and books coming in 2022 – Forward

Posted By on January 24, 2022

2020 and 2021 will likely not be remembered as the most enjoyable years in American history, but if 2022 turns out to also be a dud, at least there will still be lots of fresh reading and viewing material for us to engage with from our childhood bedrooms and underground bunkers.

The year brings the revival of familiar names, with a new season of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel and newly translated essays by Isaac Bashevis Singer, as well as some fresh takes on familiar stories, like historical communism among Bronx Jews and a TV adaptation of the novel Fleishman is in Trouble. Heres hoping the pandemic ends soon and were too busy partying in empty hospitals to binge any of them.

Part 2 of Netflixs The Club

When Part 1 of The Club premiered in November, it quickly charmed Turkish viewers, especially Jewish ones, who recognized themselves in the shows portrayal of 1950s Turkish history. The series, which largely takes place in Istanbuls Jewish community, follows Matilda, a woman released from prison 17 years after committing a mysterious murder as a teenager, and her daughter, who grew up in an orphanage. Part 2 of the miniseries is now available to stream on Netflix.

The 2022 Winter Olympics

The U.S. government will be staging a diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Olympics this year because of Chinas human rights abuses against Uyghur Muslim minorities. American athletes, however, will still be competing, as will four Israeli ice skaters, including 19-year-old Orthodox Jewish New Jersey native Hailey Kops. The Olympics will stream on NBC, and sports include skiing, snowboarding and ice hockey.

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, eason four

Season 3 of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel found Midge closer than ever to achieving her dreams as a comedian only to be kicked off her tour with famous singer Shy Baldwin. It also found Midges parents, Abe and Rose, stuck living with her ex-in-laws in Queens after Abe left his jobs at Columbia University and Bell Labs. Will a long-awaited fourth season see the clan at new highs or new lows? Find out Feb. 18 on Amazon Prime Video.

Bros

Billy Eichner, best known as the overly energetic, in-your-face host of Billy on the Street, steps into character as a lead in this film, billed by its studio as the first romantic comedy from a major studio about two gay men maybe, possibly, probably stumbling towards love. The movie, which is produced by Judd Apatow and set to debut in August, has an all-LGBT principle cast, including for heterosexual roles.

The Fabelmans

After directing his fair share of blockbusters, Steven Spielberg turns his gaze toward his own life in this semi-autobiographical coming-of-age story, which takes place in Arizona, where Spielberg grew up. The young actor Gabriel LaBelle will play aspiring young filmmaker Sammy Fabelman, and Seth Rogen will play his uncle.

Diamonds

Jews and diamonds what could possibly go wrong? Shot in Dutch, English and Yiddish, this eight-part Netflix crime drama takes place in Antwerps diamond district and follows the adventures of an Orthodox diamond-dealing family. Its yet to be announced when the series will stream, as shooting started in September, but its about time we get a (second?) Jewish Sopranos.

Fleishman is in Trouble, based on the book by Taffy Brodesser-Akner

Jesse Eisenberg and Lizzy Kaplan will star in Hulus adaptation of Taffy Brodesser-Akners debut novel, which Forward editor Talya Zax described as an examination of power and gender that, because it is easy to read, somewhat masks its own intricacy. A premiere date hasnt been set, so it might (or might not!) happen in 2022.

Most Dope: The Extraordinary Life of Mac Miller by Paul Cantor

The unauthorized biography of Jewish rapper Mac Miller, who died of a drug overdose in 2018 at age 26, is embroiled in a controversy of its own. Millers family released a statement in May saying the author didnt have meaningful access to important primary sources and discouraging fans from reading it, encouraging them instead to read a book called The Book of Mac: Remembering Mac Miller by Donna-Claire Chesman, which was released in October.

Literary critic Paul Cantor defended his biography to Page Six, saying of Miller, I believe my book explores and contextualizes the life and art that he left behind. No matter what, its sure to be interesting. Pre-order it here.

Missing Time: Essays, by Ari M. Brostoff

In this essay collection, Brostoff, the culture editor of Jewish Currents magazine, takes on the reemergent millennial left, Philip Roth, Vivian Gornick, communism among Jewish immigrants in the Bronx circa 1940, and other themes both Jewish and Jew-ish, while also grappling with questions of sex and gender. Readers can pre-order it from the n+1 bookstore.

Id Like to Say Sorry, but Theres No One to Say Sorry To by Mikoaj Grynberg, translated by Sean Gasper Bye

Here, Grynberg, a Polish photographer and writer who has conducted oral histories of Polish Jews, uses 31 fictional first-person vignettes by both Jews and gentiles to tell a story about interreligious relations in Polands past and present. Pre-order it here.

American Shtetl: The Making of Kiryas Joel, a Hasidic Village in Upstate New York by Nomi M. Stolzenberg and David N. Myers

For 15 years, scholars Nomi M. Stolzenberg and David M. Myers have worked to tell the story of how a group of Yiddish-speaking Satmar Jews formed its own local government in Orange County, New York. With sympathy toward their widely misunderstood subject matter, the authors explore the Kiryas Joel Satmar communitys rapidly changing role in American politics, as well as its place in the American Jewish community. Pre-order it here.

Loss of Memory Is Only Temporary: Stories by Johanna Kaplan

Critics have mentioned Johanna Kaplan in the same breath as authors of American Jewish classics like Philip Roth, Saul Bellow and Grace Paley, and those who read this short story collection will see why. The book, which includes stories originally featured in Kaplans 1975 collection Other Peoples Lives, is as funny now as it must have been then, and features characters of different identities rubbing against each other: Jew and Gentile, American and Israeli, Bronxite and Manhattan native, Ashkenazi and Sephardic. Its riddle of a title suggests that the past will always catch up to us, no matter how far we think weve come. Pre-order it here.

Old Truths and New Clichs: Essays by Isaac Bashevis Singer

This new collection by the winner of the 1978 Nobel Prize in literature includes 19 essays, most of which have never before been published in English, and several of which were originally published in Yiddish in the Forward. The essays span three categories: literary arts, Yiddish and Jewish life and personal writing and philosophy. Pre-order it on the Princeton University Press website.

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The best Jewish TV, movies and books coming in 2022 - Forward

Fourth shot enhances COVID resistance for people over 60: Israeli study – New York Post

Posted By on January 24, 2022

A fourth COVID-19 vaccine dose given to those aged over 60 made them three times more resistant to serious illness than those who received three shots, a study released by Israels Health Ministry on Sunday found.

The fourth dose, or second booster, also made older adults twice as resistant to infection than the thrice-vaccinated people in the same age group, the study said.

The research compared data from about 400,000 people over 60 who received the second booster with 600,000 people in the same age group who were given a third shot four months earlier.

The findings are in contrast to a preliminary study published by Israels Sheba medical center a week ago that found a fourth shot increases antibodies to even higher levels that the third but not to the point where it could completely fend off Omicron.

The new study published Sunday was conducted with several major Israeli universities and the Sheba medical center.

Israel started offering the second booster shot of the Pfizer vaccine to people over 60 earlier this month as the Omicron variant raged.

Nearly 600,000 Israelis have already received the fourth shot, according to the countrys latest data.

Israel like the US and other countries has seen COVID-19 cases surge due to Omicron.

Deaths, which usually lag about three weeks behind cases, havent spiked in Israel with just two fatalities reported Friday due to COVID.

With Post wires

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Fourth shot enhances COVID resistance for people over 60: Israeli study - New York Post

Baby in moderate condition after being shot alongside mother in southern Israel – Haaretz

Posted By on January 24, 2022

A month-old baby is in moderate condition after being shot Monday in southern Israel alongside his mother, who was lightly wounded, during what police say was a family feud.

First responders took them to Soroka Medical Center in Beer Sheva for treatment. No other casulaties were reported.

Police reported a brawl in the Negev Bedouin village of Sawa, where forces were detaining a man suspected of illegal possession of arms when the shots were fired at the mother, in her 20s, and her son. The exact course of events leading up to the shooting remains unclear.

Last week, a 36-year-old woman was shot dead in central Israel, leading police to launch an investigation into the shooting in Ramle's Jawarish neighborhood.

Suhaila Jarushi was rushed to the nearby Assaf Harofeh Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead. She was the seventh victim of intracommunal violence in Israel's Arab communities this year.

Just one day prior,Rasmia Barbur, 28,was found dead with multiple stab woundsin the northern city of Nof Hagalil after her husband, Mohammad Arslan, called the police to tell them that he had killed his wife. The couple reportedly has a 3-year-old son. According to the police, Arslan had no criminal record, and welfare services said that no domestic violence complaints had been filed.

In 2021, 126 Arabs were killed inviolence and crime in Israel, according to data from the Abraham Initiatives, an NGO working toward social change and advancing the integration and equality of Arabs and Jews in Israel.

Out of those victims, 62 were under the age of 30 and 16 were women. In 105 of those cases, the murder was committed with a firearm. In addition, nine Arabs were killed by police or security guards in 2021.

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Baby in moderate condition after being shot alongside mother in southern Israel - Haaretz

NSO in Israel: Would you let the police handle uranium? – Haaretz

Posted By on January 24, 2022

If the reports are correct about the Israel Police's use of the NSO Group's Pegasus spyware to surveil Israeli citizens, including protesters and mayors, and in general to "fish" for potential suspects, it is the biggest scandal since it was revealed that authoritarian states across the world acquired the spyware and have used it for similar purposes.

It turns out that the restraint needed to refrain from abusing such technology is in short supply these days - and this is as true in democracies as it is in authoritarian states. The technology is out there. The real issue the NSO-Israel Police affair poses, therefore, is primarily one of oversight. The bigger underlying questions it poses are: who knows about its uses, who approves it and how.

In their response to Tomer Ganon's investigative report in Calcalist, the Israel Police said that everything had been approved by the attorney general. The relevant department in the attorney general's office authorizes, guides and sets the limits for various state agencies to use privacy infringing technologies (smart security cameras in cities, hospitals and public-transportation lanes, the "hawk eye" license plate recognition system and so on and so forth).

These internal guidelines are provided in the absence of any explicit statutory authorization to use such technologies by state entities. There is some rationale to this, since technology changes and advances rapidly, the Israeli Privacy Protection Law is outdated and in any case the law enforcement and security agencies are exempt from its provisions. However, this does not excuse the fact that there is no other form of real oversight or legal restrictions on tech that gives the government access to citizens' biggest secrets.

Naivete & hubris

Israels relevant legal framework, which includes the Wiretapping Law, the Communications Data Law, and the criminal procedure ordinance (which covers digital search warrants), simply cannot be expected to cover all potential use cases and scenarios. The collection of data from open sources (OSINT, or open-source intelligence) or hacking for the purpose of data collection (as with Pegasus) all fall beyond its scope.

As a result the ad hoc existing legal framework is open to different creative interpretations. For example, though its a good thing that the police do not decide on such uses themselves, but rather turn to an outside entity the attorney general - it is clear the current system is failing. The golem has turned on its creators. The breadth and depth of the guidelines issued by the attorney general has turned them into a de facto constitutional court.

Moreover, in recent years there has been a protracted struggle for freedom of information due to the attorney generals stubborn refusal to make these guidelines public. As a result, the department ends up approving the use of surveillance technologies that are not explicitly authorized by statutory law, and all with neither transparency nor public oversight. The Calcalist report demonstrates that the idea that staff in the attorney general's office can rein in, all by themselves, the polices attempt to make excessive use of surveillance technologies is both nave and full of hubris.

Naive because as we know, even if a statutory spyware warrant system for such activities was in place, the judges would approve an overwhelming majority of police warrant applications. It is also overly confident because the courts cannot provide us with a broad view on questions regarding the different applications uses, of what is ultimately done with the information they collect and where it then goes.

Last week the supreme court ruled on the admissibility of a warrantless cellphone search that was made on the cellphone of Jonatan Urich, an advisor to Benjamin Netanyahu. The decision, which now allows the police to present information acquired by an unlawful cellphone search as admissible evidence in a criminal trial, creates an additional incentive for the police to continue its sniffing and probing.

The upshot of all this is that the need for comprehensive oversight of digital data collection by law enforcement is now clearly acute. An independent agency an oversight commission of online surveillance powers must be established, with two purposes.

First, such a body will have access to data and to data systems, in order to review what the authorities are collecting and to guarantee that they do not collect, store, examine or analyze anything prohibited to them. Second, the commission shall serve as an additional barrier, a double lock, when it comes to how such requests for court orders for data collection can even be made. For example, the police will need to get authorization from them before it can apply to the courts for such surveillance orders.

An oversight commission of this sort will be fully informed on the big picture issues of privacy and could thus be charged with holding the authorization powers over all online surveillance warrant applications. It will also have ombudsman functions, serving as the body to which state employees and citizens who fear abuse of surveillance powers is taking place can go to to complain. The U.K. and the Netherlands already have such bodies. Such an oversight body will be manned with experts of varied backgrounds - law, intelligence and technology, and headed by a person with the legal competence of a senior judge.

For now, without such a mechanism in place, it is clear: The current system of gatekeepers has failed to stop or reign in the state thirst for data. This current scandal involving the police and NSO should serve as a dramatic wake up call for citizens and lawmakers alike: Data is like uranium. It has great power and value, but it is also radioactive and extremely dangerous when it falls into the wrong hands.

Tehilla Shwartz Altshuler is the head of the Israel Democracy Institute's media reform and democracy in the information age programs, and holds a doctorate in law from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Amir Cahane is a researcher at the Israel Democracy Institute and the author of the Oversight of Online Surveillance in Israel.

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NSO in Israel: Would you let the police handle uranium? - Haaretz

Protesters embraced the cognitive dissonance of claiming to own science while basking in conspiracies and fanciful theories – Coda Story

Posted By on January 24, 2022

Before the anti-vaccine mandate protesters on Sunday marched across the National Mall, event organizers prepared for their arrival at the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. A row of inspirational photos of anti-vax activists was unfurled at the bottom of the steps pictures of an African-American family, an older Latina woman, a Native American man, an Orthodox Jewish couple, a woman of Asian descent among others.

In a movement associated with the far-right, where its leaders liken vaccine passports to full-blown totalitarianism, and at a demonstration where the mostly white speakers declared themselves not woke but awake, the organizers had clearly gone out of their way to also try to present a welcoming, inclusive context. In posters and in speeches, they co-opted the language of diversity to give the impression of appealing to a wide audience and the appearance of embracing mainstream values.

It was hardly the sole instance of cognitive dissonance at the demonstration. Conservative YouTube comedian JP Sears got the ball rolling, telling the thousands of protesters We didnt come here to agree with each other.

The crowd roared in agreement. The short, balding man in front of me turned to the tall, balding man next to him and said, Exactly.

There to denounce government vaccination mandates (and Big Pharma, the medical establishment, school closures, Bill Gates, fascism, CNN and surveillance) and champion truth and freedom (and vitamin D supplements, ivermectin, dissident doctors, parental choice and Joe Rogan), Sears and subsequent speakers repeatedly cited Martin Luther King Jr. as inspiration. Reminding the protestors that he had given his I have a dream speech on the same steps 58 years ago, King, said Sears, wasnt a mandate kind of guy. He knew you cant comply your way out of tyranny.

But behind their abuse of language and their warping of science in support of their unscientific arguments, the organizers had identified correct currents of concern: authoritarianism, surveillance, loss of privacy, digital tools of social control, experts selling the public a false bill of goods. These are legitimate sources of dread, potential threats to everybodys liberty and freedoms. They are topics deserving scrutiny.

But by putting these issues in service of their right-wing populism and viral disinformation, it begs the question whether any of the anti-mandate crowd speakers and protesters actually care about these things in the first place. Hours into the event, when all the soaring language of liberty and freedom faded and muted by repetition, what was left were true motives: influence, power, attention, and profits from selling useless medical remedies.

Organizers had been adamant that this was a demonstration against government vaccination mandates, not an anti-vax event. That party line fell away when the speakers took to the podium but it had been a crucial messaging tactic. Instead of getting deplatformed by social media companies for propagating vaccine disinformation, organizers quickly amassed tens of thousands of followers on their anti-mandate Facebook pages, galvanizing people to travel to DC from across the country.

But from the start of the demonstration or the show, as JP Sears described the rally vaccination hostility shared center stage with an anti-mandate agenda. The event headliner, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (son of Senator Robert Kennedy), warned of a coming apocalypse stemming from vaccinations and mandates. Even under the Nazis, he said, his voice shaking, Anne Frank was able to hide. But those seeking relief from vaccine tyranny will have nowhere to go. Another key figure behind the march, Robert Malone, a virologist and immunologist, peddled misinformation, fake cures, and compared the United States to a psychotic society similar to Nazi Germany.

At the March: Anti-mandate firefighters local media reported 200 DC firefighters attended around a giant flag they had carried horizontally from the Washington Monument; different groups of protestors giving interviews in Spanish; the Proud Boys, a white supremacist group, mingling in the crowd.

Demonstrators and reporters lined up to take photos of a man with a white, wispy chin-beard, dressed head-to-toe as Uncle Sam with a giant syringe around his head. One man in his early 20s wore a Guy Fawkes mask; another man stood on stilts in a grim reaper costume, his sign warning of the deadly consequences of In Pfizer we trust.

While the crowd thronged the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, around the edges, small groups held placards and commented on the proceedings with bullhorns, like an unhinged Greek chorus. One gaggle of people stood on the sidewalk, incessantly correcting the speakers that Christ is who matters here. We need to remember what Lincoln stood for, said a speaker. You need to remember what Jesus stood for, a member of the sidewalk group answered. This went on for about 30 minutes when, as three Hasidic Jews walked toward the Lincoln Monument, the group told them through the bullhorn to get right with Jesus you dirty Jews.

Another scraggly group on the sidelines chanted Darwin wins as protesters passed. At first, I took them as counter-protesters, an anti-anti-mandate carve-out. But apparently, no: they were anti-vax and anti-mandate, and felt Darwin was on their side. The data shows otherwise: Although Covid-19 vaccine effectiveness decreased with emergence of the Delta variant and waning of vaccine-induced immunity, protection against hospitalization and death has remained high.

Many of the protesters had drawn similar conclusions. Science is on their side. Speakers invoked Albert Einstein and Saint Augustine. While one particularly intricately drawn sign proclaimed I trust and follow my intuition & instincts discerning what is fight & true for me, most of the others begged the world to follow the data. Echoing the science is real lawn signs in front of progressive U.S. households, the rally signs urged people to believe in credentialed experts, but only the vanishingly small minority of medical experts who condemned vaccines and are unfairly persecuted by their colleagues, and realize, as one sign read, Galileo also was accused of spreading misinformation.

The pre-rally messaging of a solely anti-mandate agenda, instead of anti-vaccination, allowed organizers to focus on what they argued is the true peril facing the world: the loss of liberty and freedom to digital vaccine passports, coerced vaccine shots, and medical surveillance. Speakers cited the Chinese social credit tracking system, surveillance phone apps, and Chinas one child policy, which was rescinded in 2015. Protesters signs echoed the same concerns.

Much of that isnt viewed as over the top by millions of Americans, according to the Center for Countering Digital Hate. While about 75% of Americans eligible for the vaccine have taken at least one shot, conspiracies centering vaccinations, government mandates, and disinformation are on the rise. Since January 2020, the 153 most influential anti-vaccine social media accounts have gained 2.9 million new followers.

The number of protesters who showed up for the demonstration was far less than the 20,000 promised by the organizers. But in promoting he message of diversity and multiculturalism while simultaneously denouncing woke culture, in claiming to defend science while simultaneously contradicting it, in condemning authoritarianism, surveillance, and the theft of privacy while promoting right-wing populism and a conspiracy worldview that allows for these things to prosper, the organizers have struck a chord. Its dissonant, but it works. The next march will be bigger.

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Protesters embraced the cognitive dissonance of claiming to own science while basking in conspiracies and fanciful theories - Coda Story


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