Page 590«..1020..589590591592..600610..»

For African Hebrew Israelites, threats of deportation are dehumanizing and dj vu – Forward

Posted By on November 12, 2021

Last April, Israels Interior Ministry sent letters threatening 51 members of our community including those for whom Israel is the only home theyve ever known with deportation within 60 days. Since then, an administrative appeals court has issued a temporary stay, but the threat remains. With it comes an overwhelming sense of dj vu. We have been here before.

In the 1970s, dozens of our men were sporadically arrested at work sites in the Negev, imprisoned for weeks without contact and then processed for deportation. Family members would only hear from them weeks later upon their arrival in New York, in the same clothes that they set out for work in. Some were able to make it back to their families after many years of bureaucratic haggling. Others never recovered from the experience and never returned.

It happened again in 1986, when 46 members of our community were arrested at a citrus packing plant in the central Israeli town of Rehovot. Men, women and children ranging in age from 17 to 65 were roused from their sleep in the pre-dawn hours. Dozens were eventually deported, while the rest of the community members engaged in a protracted struggle that saw many renounce their US citizenship in order to prevent deportation and the separation of their families.

As Passover approached that year, we organized a protest march of the entire community to Jerusalem. On the morning of the planned march, we awoke to find our compound surrounded by police and IDF units brandishing riot batons and shields, tear gas, dogs and, no kidding, sniper units on neighboring rooftops and ridges in an effort to discourage our trek. Ben Ammi, our spiritual leader, passionately announcing that we would postpone our journey, asked Where is our Passover?

Fast forward to the present. On the eve of Yom Kippur the highest Holy Day of the Hebraic calendar, a day set aside for reconciliation among brethren the 51 community members received word of the Ministry of Interiors denial of their appeals. Where is our Yom Kippur? we asked.

Weve been here before.

Stepping away from the emotion of it all, why cant those in the Ministry of Interior realize that our presence here is rather extraordinary. The founders of our community were not misfits from the ghettos of America, as was once a common refrain in the media. The inference, of course, was that in America, we were unable to fit in and had seized upon an opportunity to claim a connection to Israel.

Nothing is further from the truth. Our pioneers left America primarily because they refused to deny their Hebrew heritage. They came to Israel leaving behind what draws most people to America nowadays jobs, homes and other material pursuits.

The only reason intelligent people endure ill-treatment, resist the urge to become angry and embittered and ultimately creatively contribute to the society that rejected them is that they have a higher motivation. We came answering the prophetic call of Zion, which tempered our resolve to stay in spite of the harsh treatment we encountered over the years. We are also thankful for the many kindred spirits in the general Israeli population who welcomed and supported us, souls who empathize and even identify with our struggle.

Through our pain, we recognize that many of the innovative lifestyle practices that are the hallmark of the community veganism, preventive health, organic agriculture, education and a vibrant communal culture evolved as a consequence of the hardships that we endured. As in the words of Joseph concerning the ordeal orchestrated by his brethren, Ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good. With veganism and other progressive aspects of our lifestyle taking hold in Israel in recent years, one might ask What other good things are you doing in Dimona? The annual stream of thousands of Israeli and international visitors attests to the question actually being asked, and the answer sought.But progress and mutual respect neednt come so hard.

The biggest challenge to Jewish society in Israel is to believe that the common ground that exists within the Jewish people can overcome our differences, Rabbi David Stav of the religious-Zionist Tzohar rabbinical association, was quoted in the Jerusalem Post this year as saying, as Yom Kippur approached. These differences owe to a plurality of Judaisms and Hebrewisms (both words that yet register in our spell checking software).

Recent years have seen an increasing awareness of ancient pre-Talmudic linkages and forms of Judaic belief among people of African ancestry, even if such ontologies remain subject to European criteria and are accompanied by condescension and marginalization. An Israeli anthropologist friend of mine, Malka Shabtay, related the comment of a colleague after sharing with him a chapter I authored a few years ago on this issue: Its challenging, he simply told her.

The case I laid out, like our presence, indeed poses a challenge. But not an insurmountable one. Challenges frequently leave those who encounter and overcome them stronger. That being said, it would seem that Rabbi Stav and I are actually on the same page. We have a promising opportunity here to begin the journey toward real reconciliation, a journey that will only be as long and arduous as our preconceived notions and prejudices necessitate. Otherwise, calls for Jewish solidarity will ring hollow and yield only more frustration and fragmentation.

The first task in the government and the opposition, says Rabbi Stav, is to make mighty efforts to create a unifying dialogue among the different groups of the Jewish people. I will presume his reference to Jewish people includes those who identify with Israel, though they may express their Judaism differently.

The Israeli Ministry of Diaspora Affairs ostensibly made such an effort in convening an inquiry into worldwide communities with affinity to the Jewish people. Although we find the term affinity to be condescending and insulting, lets call it a start. In his testimony before the inquiry (as recorded in their official report), Rabbi Andrew Sacks, director of the Masorti (Conservative) Movements Rabbinical Assembly, noted that the authorities, and especially the Ministry of the Interior contain built-in hostility towards those seeking affinity, that the process contains clear racial elements and recommended that (t)hese people should be removed from their post.

Now thats a thought. Would Interior Ministry personnel act with such impunity regularly misplacing applications and files in a seemingly purposeful attempt to discourage if they felt their jobs were in jeopardy?

The early 20th Century Zionist leader Zeev Jabotinsky had some thorny differences with other Jewish leaders, but he is widely revered as an Israeli pioneer. Labeled a revisionist for his insistence that the relationship between the Zionist movement and Britain be revised, he argued for unrestricted aliyah. Perhaps Israels immigration policies vis--vis African Hebrews are also due a revision.

We realize that no country in the modern world can afford entirely open borders. But what cannot be disputed is that the State of Israels very existence is owed to those who defied British authority based upon a spiritual imperative.

Herein lies an opportunity for a bold initiative: Lets sit down and talk. Hows that for a novel idea? Maybe the first step, as Rabbi Sacks suggests, is to remove those prejudiced elements from the Ministry of Interior to jumpstart a reevaluation and fresh dialogue. We will argue and fight no doubt, as Rabbi Stav said, but we will fight like brothers and family fight.

The challenge of the 51 souls facing deportation in the Hebrew Israelite community is not something Israel has not resolved for other communities, such as the granting of nearly 5,000 permanent resident visas for Filipino immigrant workers and their children in 2006 and 2010. Despite their presence owing primarily to economic motivations, they were recipients of Israels humanitarian largesse. Surely, we who share such close spiritual, cultural and ideological underpinnings are worthy of similar compassion.

None of this is to single out Israel, for racism is a global phenomenon that continues to plague even America, the self-proclaimed champion of human rights. But we have been treated unjustly in too many instances by the Ministry of Interior while other government offices looked the other way. I reiterate that to have remained here under such circumstances is a testament to our faith in Israels biblical/prophetic imperative: that from Jerusalem such a model society is destined. Sadly, all of this hyperbolic enmity and hatred, generated by a few, has distracted from our ongoing contributions toward that objective.

Israels policies in todays volatile world are often difficult to explain, but we have, whether defending Israels hotly-contested African Union observer status or rebuffing the nations label as a racist pariah state. This is especially true in many of the circles we frequent. (Imagine being queried about our 100% IDF enlistment rate by a vehemently pro-Palestinian audience!) But they can be explained. Such explanations are inherently more plausible coming from us, but not if our own experience of mistreatment lends itself to distrust and ill-favor. Israel needs all the help it can muster in this arena. Why not help us to help you?

In his final public address on the eve of his assassination, Martin Luther King issued a scathing indictment of Americas soiled legacy of racial oppression. King called for a human rights revolution to assuage the long years of hurt and neglect of those of lesser privilege and darker hue. Should that not happen, he warned, the whole world is doomed. How much more if such hurt and neglect is not worked out here in the very Promised Land he articulated at the end of that same momentous discourse?

Rabbi Stav lamented this feeling of enmity and hate between the various elements of Israeli society that threaten to destroy every good thing we have. Noble words, no doubt. But lets be sure to apply them to the Hebrew Israelites.

We are confident that we shall be vindicated, because our hopes rest not just upon any political settlement or legal ruling which might mark the end of these proceedings, but upon the righteousness of our cause and the Creators will. And, of course, because weve been here before.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

See original here:

For African Hebrew Israelites, threats of deportation are dehumanizing and dj vu - Forward

How a 55-Year-Old California Teacher Became a Bollywood Actor – The New York Times

Posted By on November 12, 2021

Its Never Too Late is a series that tells the stories of people who decide to pursue their dreams on their own terms.

By most accounts, Richard Klein had a pretty good life: a solid job as a teacher at a Hebrew day school in Oakland, Calif.; friends that were like family, and a passion for singing and dancing that ruled his nights and weekends. But one morning, at the age of 45, he woke up and realized that he had yet to embrace his full potential. He wanted to break into Bollywood.

Ive always loved performing, and I was listening to Indian classical and devotional music a lot, at the time, Mr. Klein said. The 2001 Bollywood epic Lagaan inspired him to try and make his passion his profession. Things have come full circle, he said, adding that he appears in the 2022 film Lal Singh Chaddha with Aamir Khan, who starred in Lagaan.

Six months after that fateful morning, Mr. Klein, who is divorced and has no children, moved to Mumbai. At first, he lived in the coastal metropolis part time. He alternated between a gig editing subtitles for English-language television shows in Mumbai and tutoring back in California, where he would make enough money to underwrite another six months of trying to make it in the performing arts world in India.

Eventually it paid off. Mr. Klein, now 55, has appeared in dozens of Indian films, television shows and commercials, playing such varied roles as a scientist, doctor, chef, spy, and, owing to his ability to nail a British accent, quite often, a mean British officer.

Making the change was not without strife. Still, he said he would do it all over again. Im in India, you know, the land of reincarnation, Mr. Klein said, but as far as Im concerned, I have this one life that Im dealing with. I want to make the most of it. (The following interview has been edited and condensed.)

What was your life like before you made this change?

I had been living in the San Francisco Bay Area for about 20 years. Mostly, I was a teacher: math, science, computer lab. My nights and weekends were spent doing some kind of performing arts. Ive always had an affinity toward music. I remember being a little kid, walking through the park, singing. A stranger walked by, and I sort of got quiet. My mom said: Dont be shy. You sing out loud and dont worry about anybody else.

What was the watershed moment?

I was working as a teacher at a Hebrew day school, and one morning I woke up and thought, If I dont do something, I could be here for the next 20 years. That wouldnt be a terrible outcome, but it wasnt the one I wanted.

I studied India in graduate school, when I was pursuing a degree in religion. Learning about India inspired me to adopt the nickname Bhakti, which Ive used since 1991, though I never changed my name legally. In a broad sense, Bhakti means devotion and love. The word is a reminder to lead with my heart instead of my head, so every time I hear my name, I think of that.

My first trip to India was in 1995 as a backpacker. I absolutely loved it. I went back a few times after that. So I thought: what if I go there, stay, and see what happens? On one of my first nights in Mumbai, I went out to a jazz club. All the performers were foreigners. We got to talking afterward, and I ended up joining their group as a singer, which was my first foray into the performing arts world here.

What was the biggest challenge that you had to navigate?

When I first arrived, I was staying in fairly cheap places. A lot of times, there was no hot water in the shower. A lot of times there wasnt even a shower most of my time in India, Ive taken a bucket bath, which is actually great.

How did you go from editing subtitles to acting in Bollywood productions?

About four years after moving to Mumbai, I started getting opportunities for voice-over work: corporate presentations, TV and radio commercials that wanted an American or British accent. Then I started getting calls to dub Bollywood movies. Then I got invited to audition to act.

At first, I got background parts. And then, because Im blessed with an American accent and some vocal training, I started auditioning for and getting speaking roles.

It was a godsend. It was another miracle of India. To be able to learn a new art form now is so incredibly beautiful and such an amazing opportunity.

Whats next for you?

I want to keep going with the acting. Theres so much more to learn. Im getting a lot of good feedback, and the parts are getting better, and theyre getting more varied. I dont always play a mean British officer anymore. Im getting other kinds of roles, bigger roles, and Im getting more respect. Im in a beautiful, sci-fi love story called X = Prem that comes out in February. Its my fourth time working with the director, Srijit Mukherji.

Otherwise, I just want to live every day in this amazing country.

How has this new act changed you?

Being here gives me the opportunity to be the best version of myself. I wasnt feeling that opportunity in the U.S. I feel like people here see me the way I want to be seen. I dont know why. I honestly feel like it boils down to the ridiculous love that I have for this place.

What advice would you give to people who are stuck and looking to make a big change?

Dream a big dream, then figure out what all the little incremental steps are to get there, and hit those steps one by one. There are always obstacles. Loved ones can be an obstacle, money can be an obstacle. Its not easy. Theres lots of sacrifice involved, but you can dream a big dream and make it come true.

Were looking for people who decide that its never too late to switch gears, change their life and pursue dreams. Should we talk to you or someone you know? Share your story here.

Go here to see the original:

How a 55-Year-Old California Teacher Became a Bollywood Actor - The New York Times

NYPD gives all clear after bomb threat led to NYU evacuations – WPIX 11 New York

Posted By on November 12, 2021

File photo of an NYPD police cruiser (PIX11 News)

MANHATTAN New York University students were evacuated from three locations after a Thursday night bomb threat.

The school received bomb threats the Stern School of Business, Center for Neural Science, and Hebrew Union College, which is an independent institution. The NYPD first received a call about the bomb threat just before 6:30 p.m.

Those evacuated were directed to proceed to the Bobst Library or the Kimmel Center. The locations were evacuated as of 8:20 p.m., NYU tweeted.

Police later directed the evacuation of Hayden Hall.

Officials initially advised people to expect traffic delays, road closures and emergency personnel in the area.

The NYPD issued an all clear at 9:35 p.m. Thursday after concluding its investigation.

Update: The NYPD concluded their investigation of the bomb threat received earlier this evening and issued an all clear. NYU community members can return to any of the evacuated buildings in line with their regular hours. https://t.co/I9Zycn5z14

The University of Southern Californiaalso received bomb threats on Thursday, KTLA reported. Additional threats were made at MIT, police said.

Bomb threats were made at several colleges over the weekend.

Bomb threats later deemed not credible were made against Columbia University on Sunday afternoon, according to the school.

There was also abomb threaton Sunday at Cornell University. Brown University officials in Providence, Rhode Island, sent a text alert to students that said police were investigating multiple buildings on campus involving a bomb threat.

Yale reported a bomb threat two days earlier that forced the evacuation of several buildings as well as nearby businesses in New Haven, Connecticut. The university resumed normal campus activity Friday evening.

Read the original:

NYPD gives all clear after bomb threat led to NYU evacuations - WPIX 11 New York

Why Lili Hayes is the angriest Jewish mom on the Internet – St. Louis Jewish Light

Posted By on November 12, 2021

Just like me, Kevin Hayes used to find hisIsraeli motherembarrassing in his youth her loudness, heavy accent, and unapologetic, larger-than-life personality were all a bitmuch.When I was younger, I was mad embarrassed, cause she was always loud and speaking 100 languages, he once told his followers in an Instagram Q&A.

But unlike me, Hayes has made his 74-year-old mother, Lili Hayes, a viral internet sensation by embracing exactly the qualities that make her so out-of-this-world. And for the past few years, she has been, hands down, no contest, my favorite person on the internet.

Nobody can make me laugh-cry like the loud, angry, Israeli septuagenarian, who speaks with a heavy Hebrew accent and whose social media bio accurately describes herself as always a little pissed (though the a little often feels like an understatement). If you have any qualms about R-rated language, Lilis feed is not for you, and she often directs that language at her son. Her favorite things to call him appear to be idiot (pronounced eedjiot) and moron. Another frequent moniker is crazy lunatic though she happily admits she is one herself.

Any attempt to scroll through her social media feeds inevitably ends in me doubled over, tears streaming down my face, about to choke from laughter. And Im hardly the only one who uses Hayes for some needed dopamine she has over 600k followers on Instagram at@lili_hayesand over 4.5 million followers on TikTok where shes@lilihayes. Shes donemusical collaborations with Fiona Apple,Christina Aguilera once lip-synced to her rendition of Lady Marmalade on TikTok, and shes had walk-ins with Kendall Jenner and Guy Fieri. Mandy Patinkin has even shared her videos on his @MandyPatinkTok. Basically, Lili Hayes is a star.

Hayes was born in Yugoslavia, moved to Israel as a young child, and then made her way to the land of opportunity in her 30s. She landed in Fairfax, started a family (aside from Kevin, she has a daughter, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren), and has, for the past few decades, been a garment wholesaler in downtown Los Angeles. Her storefront has a full wall covered with pictures of rabbis; at its entrance is a throne for Elijah the prophet. Lili worked hard and became the breadwinner of her family working in the garment district for decades means that Hayes also speaks fluentSpanish. As for English? Well, thats a different story.

Hayes, like Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, the father of modern Hebrew, has reinvented a language the English language.One of her most viral videos on TikTokis her mispronunciation of emoji she calls them smooshies She also calls a selfie a selfish, seltzer salsa water, and Ben & Jerrys ice cream Carlos & Bernie. Hand sanitizer becomes appetizer and vegetable dumplings are dimples. Sinuses are sciences. A corkscrew is a twisting. When youre euphoric, according to Lili, youre walking on clowns. I dont know about you, but I love Lili English more than I love American English, or any form of English, to be honest.

One ofher most popular videos on TikTok, with over 40 million views, is of her trying to say pumpkin pie over and over again, only to keep winding up with pancake pie. Lili seems pissed at her inability, but she keeps trying, again and again, then blames it on her son which she often does.

Lili is also great at reinventing music: She turns Benny and the Jets into Benny and the Shnook. Herrendition of Daft Punks Get Luckyhonestly defies words.

What I love about these videos is that its veryclear what theyrenotdoing. Theyre not, in any way, laughing at Lili. The joke doesnt feel like its at her expense; instead, theres just something really awe-inspiring about it all like Lili is this oracle of rage and hilarity, in her Supreme hats, gigantic glasses and oversized pearl earrings. Also, to be fair, all you need to do is watch one Lili video to know you dont want to mess with her.

Unless that is, you are her son. Kevin not only films his little daily seedlings of his mom for social media he creates entire elaborate productions for her, recreating famous movies and pop culture moments in full costume, like Howls Moving Castle, Scarface and The Princess Bride.

And Lili is always game: To me hes an artist the guy with the cans Andy Groofund [Andy Warhol], you are better than him, she toldAdobein 2019.

Ive only wanted to work with my mom, my whole life, always. Its the best kind of feeling in the world to just kind of be her partner, Kevin says in the same interview.

Recently, Hayes has taken up drawing and also sharing these masterful, delightful recreations of famous pop culture moments and characters on her TikTok they give both me, and her son Kevin, a giddy sort of joy.

As for Kevin, while he may be more fluent in English, its his Hebrew thats lacking. When I was younger she spoke to me in Hebrew, Kevin said in an Instagram Q&A. He would go to Hebrew school the maabul, Lili said, using the Hebrew slang for stupid, then in Hebrew, she adds, It went into one ear and out of the other, adding that Yehoshua HaParua, the popular Hebrew translation of the popular German childrens novel Der Struwwelpeter, is one of his favorites.

But what they do share, in great abundance, is love. There is one thing that weaves all these videos together aside from Lilis shouts of eedjiot and moron and thats Kevins uproarious laughter. These videos would absolutely not work without it; it makes it clear that the profanities hurled at him words that would usually send your offsprings to decades of therapy are in fact just Lilis quirky, candid way of loving him. In his laughter, you hear that the love is mutual.

Its my favorite thing about Hayes videos: the absolute joy she and her son find in each other. When Kevin laughs as they shoot a video, she says, she knows shes doing something right.One particular videogets at the zeitgeist of the family: Kevin films his mother loudly singing I Just Called to Say I Love You. He tells his audience that whenever his late father would hear the song on the radio, he would call his mom to tell her he loves her and that now, whenever she hears the song, she calls him its a tradition that he hopes to continue with his partner and kids.

Lili has her tender moments, too. Shes all about lifting up other women and encouraging them to be independent. In a video of her makeup routine,that you need to watch, Lili shares her life philosophy: Whether you contour or highlight or if youre like me, I barely wear some makeup you are all beautiful, and I love you from the bottom of my heart. We are all together, the womens, makeup, no makeup, we are one. I love you girls, I love everybody, I love the world. From anyone elsethesewords might sound hippy dippy or trite, but from Lilis curse-like-a-sailor lips, they feel extremely genuine.

For me, personally, Hayes brings a sort of internet redemption for my loud Israeli mom and all the other moms like her. And she makes me, a strange Israeli/American mom, want to be more of myself. Unapologetically different, and in her way, profoundly loving.

Go here to read the rest:

Why Lili Hayes is the angriest Jewish mom on the Internet - St. Louis Jewish Light

Antidote to Advent: Hanukkah – Time and Tradition – Murfreesboro Voice

Posted By on November 12, 2021

Time

Hanukkah isthe eight-day festival commemorating the rededication of the Second Temple in Jerusalem at the time of the Maccabean Revolt against the Syrian Empire.

The Hebrew word Hanukkah means dedication. Hanukkah is also known as The Feast of Dedication and The Festival of Lights!

The timing of Hanukkah is different every year due to the dates of the25th day of Kislev on the Hebrew calendar. Kislev is the Hebrew month which corresponds to November and December. Hanukkah always starts on the first day of Kislev. Hanukkah is in part a candle lighting ceremony, which traditions are closely tied to Shabbat. Shabbat is Hebrew for Sabbath, although Shabbat is a weekly25-hourtime of rest from just before sundown each and every Friday through the completion of nightfall on Saturday.

On each of the eight nights of Hanukkah a candle is added to the festival of lights but only after sundown!

It shall be unto you a sabbath of rest, and ye shall afflict your souls: in the ninth day of the month at even, from even unto even, shall ye celebrate your sabbath. Leviticus 23:32

Hanukkah is in part a candle lighting ceremony. A menorah is a nine-branched candelabra lit during the eight-day holiday of Hanukkah, as opposed to the seven- branched menorah used in the ancient Temple.

As the story goes, one nights worth of oil used to light the Temple's menorah miraculously lasted eight nights! For eight days, the Jewish people celebrate a miracle that occurred more than two thousand years ago. The tradition of using candles dates back to the 18th century, when olive oil became expensive to acquire in the winter.

Eating foods fried in oil is now symbolic of the oil once used in the Temple lamp stands.

Per The LA Times, the Hanukkah candles are added to the menorah from right to left but are kindled from left to right. The newest candle is lit first. (On the Shabbat of Hanukkah, kindle the Hanukkah lights first and then the Shabbat candles.) Light the Shamash the server candle set higher or lower than all the rest of the candles first, using it to kindle the rest of the Hanukkah lights as you say or sing: We kindle these lights because of the wondrous deliverance you performed for our ancestors. During these eight days of Hanukkah, these lights are sacred; we are not to use them, but only to behold them, so that their glow may rouse us to give thanks for your wondrous acts of deliverance.

Tradition

Every night, another candle is added, so that on the eighth night all eight candles (plus one server) are burning bright.

The required burn time is at least 30 minutes on weeknights, and up to one-and-a-half hours on Friday evening. The head of the household lights the family menorah while everyone else listens to the blessings and answers, "Amen. In the home, there are two preferred locations for the menorah: a central doorway or on a windowsill facing the street. The menorah lights should be between twelve and forty inches off the ground.

Reading Psalm Thirty, as an introduction to the candle lighting and prayer is also another Hanukkah tradition.

And it was at Jerusalem the feast of the dedication, and it was winter. And Jesus walked in the temple in Solomon's porch.John 10:22-23 KJV

View original post here:

Antidote to Advent: Hanukkah - Time and Tradition - Murfreesboro Voice

Prices of burgers, hot dogs expected to rise as ‘extraordinary’ inflation hits grocery stores – New York Post

Posted By on November 12, 2021

The price of some of Americas favorite foods, including burgers and hot dogs, are set to soar as annual inflation hit a 30-year high in October, the feds announced Wednesday.

Major US food companies, including Tyson Foods,ConagraandKraft Heinz, are reportedly preparing to hike prices on some of their meat products to offset higher supplier costs, according to supplier letters to wholesale customers that were obtained by CNN.

Ball Park hot dogs and burgers, State Fair corn dogs, Jimmy Dean frozen breakfast items, Hillshire Farm sausage and lunch meat, and Hebrew National and Oscar Mayer hot dogs will all be affected, the broadcaster said.

All the packaged meat suppliers are coming to the price increase party, a leader of one regional distributor to stores said, according to CNN, speaking on the condition of anonymity to protect their companys relationship with suppliers.

Grocery store prices have been rising for months, especially when it comes to various meats. But more expensive items like steak, pork chops and bacon have borne the brunt of those price hikes so far.

But now, suppliers of the cheapest meat items are beginning to raise prices due to higher costsfor packaging, labor, transportation and other services, CNN reported.

Those increases will likely force supermarkets and other retailers to follow, passing the costs on to customers.

Last month, Tyson Foods sent a letter to at least two regional distributors telling them to expect prices on Ball Park, Hillshire Farm, Jimmy Dean, State Fair and all deli meats to rise anywhere from 5 percent to 10.2 percent starting in January, according to CNN, who obtained the memo.

We continue to face accelerating levels of extraordinary inflation, Tyson wrote.

The sustained duration and significant impact of the inflation necessitates additional pricing action.

A Tyson spokesperson told CNN that the company is carefully managing these inflationary pressures through pricing actions and efforts to reduce costs.

Chicago-based Conagra similarly told distributors this week that its planning to hike prices in January on various Hebrew National hot dog packages anywhere from 10.9 percent to 12.6 percent, the report said.

And last week, Kraft Heinz told retailers that its planning to raise prices on Oscar Mayer beef and various hot dogs by around 8 percent in January, according to CNN.

The company has already increased prices by an average of 5 percent on four out of five of its products to help offset the escalating inflation that the entire industry is facing, a spokesperson told CNN.

But the company added that its rolling out more options and value-sized offerings of brands like Lunchables, according to the outlet.

Its the latest example of cost pressures building throughout the US economy, which has been slammed this year by record-setting inflation.

Consumer prices jumped 6.2 percent in October from a year ago, the Labor Department announced Wednesday. Thats the sharpest increase since November 1990 and comes as companies grapple with a snarled supply chain and a nationwide labor shortage.

Items that were hit particularly hard by the pandemic, like airline tickets and hotel rooms, have seen the biggest rise in prices as demand comes roaring back.

Used and new car prices have been hit particularly hard by inflation, to o, due to a global shortage of semiconductor chips, a key input in cars.

According to a Morning Consult/Politico poll released last month, sixty-two percent of Americans said President Biden is somewhat or very responsible for increasing inflation, which hits the middle and working-class more than the wealthy, who have their money protected in stocks.

See more here:

Prices of burgers, hot dogs expected to rise as 'extraordinary' inflation hits grocery stores - New York Post

How Lachish fell: Study reconstructs Assyrian onslaught almost 3,000 years ago – The Times of Israel

Posted By on November 12, 2021

Israeli and American archaeologists say they have managed to reconstruct how the Assyrian army may have built a massive ramp to breach the Judean city of Lachish in 701 BCE, deepening their understanding of the Iron Age powers military prowess as it conquered almost the entire Kingdom of Judah.

Using a wide variety of sources and data, the study concluded that the Assyrians, led by King Sennacherib, likely collected three million stones from a quarry near the hilltop city overlooking the Judean plain. In an exceptionally orderly process, the army constructed a huge siege ramp that allowed battering rams to be transported up to the citys defenses, breaching the walls and resulting in the citys complete destruction.

The siege ramp in Lachish is the biggest surviving siege ramp in the Near East, and the only surviving Assyrian siege ramp.

The study, published last month in the Oxford Journal of Archaeology, was led by Professor Yosef Garfinkel and Dr. Madeleine Mumcuoglu of the Institute of Archaeology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Professors Jon W. Carroll and Michael Pytlik of Oakland University.

They drew on extensive data that includes biblical texts, stone reliefs depicting Assyrian battle scenes, Akkadian inscriptions, archaeological excavations and photogrammetric analysis of aerial drone photographs that created a detailed digital map of the areas landscape.

Get The Times of Israel's Daily Editionby email and never miss our top stories

The resulting analysis was hailed Tuesday by the Hebrew University as a practical model that accounts for all available information about that battle.

Prof. Yosef Garfinkel. (Hebrew University/courtesy)

The siege by the Assyrians is extensively recorded both in biblical texts and in other historical sources. At the time, they were a veritable Near East superpower, controlling a landmass that stretched from todays Iran to Egypt.

The Kingdom of Judah, on the other hand, was a relatively small vassal state that attempted to break free of the Assyrias influence by allying with Egypt.

Lachish, which had been a flourishing Canaanite city in the second millennium BCE, was the second most important city in the Kingdom of Judah after Jerusalem.

But its fortifications were no match for the Assyrian army, which sacked the entire kingdom save Jerusalem.

Archaeological evidence at the Lachish site today makes it clear that the Assyrian siege ramp was made of small boulders, weighing about 6.5 kilograms (14.3 pounds) each, Hebrew University said in its statement.

To acquire three million such stones in a short amount of time, the army most likely quarried them at a site that was as close as possible to the bottom end of the ramp, the researchers concluded.

At Lachish there is indeed an exposed cliff of the local bedrock exactly at the point where one would expect it to be, Garfinkel said.

The stones would have been transported along human chains, passed from man to man by hand. With four such human chains working in parallel, each working round-the-clock shifts, the researchers calculated that about 160,000 stones were moved and placed each day, possibly completing the construction in just 25 days.

An illustration of the estimated construction process of the Assyrian siege ramp in Lachish, starting from the far end with a stone quarry nearby. (Yosef Garfinkel/courtesy)

This model assumes the Assyrians were very efficient, otherwise, it would have taken months to complete, said Garfinkel.

Time was the main concern of the Assyrian army, he added. Hundreds of laborers worked day and night carrying stones, possibly in two shifts of 12 hours each. The manpower was probably supplied by prisoners of war and forced labor of the local population. The laborers were protected by massive shields placed at the northern end of the ramp. These shields were advanced towards the city by a few meters each day.

As the workers built the final stages of the ramp and approached the walls of Lachish, the inhabitants are believed to have tried to defend their city by shooting arrows and throwing stones down on the workers. The researchers suggest that the laborers used massive L-shaped wicker shields, similar to those shown protecting soldiers on Assyrian reliefs.

A relief from the palace of Tiglath Pileser III at Nimrud, depicting a siege scene with two massive L-shaped shields protecting Assyrian soldiers. (British Museum/courtesy)

In the final stage, wooden beams were laid on top of the stones, where the battering rams, weighing up to a ton, were positioned. The ram a large, heavy wooden beam with a metal tip battered the walls by being swung back and forth, like a pendulum.

The researchers suggest that the ram was suspended on metal chains, rather than ropes that would quickly wear out. Supporting this theory, they say an iron chain was found on the top of the ramp.

Garfinkel said his team was planning excavations at the far edge of the ramp in the quarry area to firm up his research.

This might give additional evidence of Assyrian army activity and how the ramp was constructed, he said.

Youre serious. We appreciate that!

Were really pleased that youve read X Times of Israel articles in the past month.

Thats why we come to work every day - to provide discerning readers like you with must-read coverage of Israel and the Jewish world.

So now we have a request. Unlike other news outlets, we havent put up a paywall. But as the journalism we do is costly, we invite readers for whom The Times of Israel has become important to help support our work by joining The Times of Israel Community.

For as little as $6 a month you can help support our quality journalism while enjoying The Times of Israel AD-FREE, as well as accessing exclusive content available only to Times of Israel Community members.

Follow this link:

How Lachish fell: Study reconstructs Assyrian onslaught almost 3,000 years ago - The Times of Israel

This Israeli startup claims superiority over Google in the predictive text game – Geektime

Posted By on November 12, 2021

Back in 2018, Google introduced Smart Compose into our lives. The word completion and typo fixer feature quickly became a must have when writing emails -- especially for people whose English is not their mother tongue. Sounds great, right? Well, what if we were to tell you that an Israeli startup claims to do it better, faster, and in Hebrew?

During his service with the elite Unit 8200 of the Israel Defense Forces, Guy Katabi shares that he has spent his fair share of time with products from the Microsoft Office family: I searched Google for a tool to analyze typing patterns and save time. From there I started playing with this idea and thanks to my military background, it became something much more serious, he says. After discovering that there is no such product on the market, he co-founded Lightkey in 2016 with Eran Brauer.

The Lightkey solution includes seven models that analyze the text you type in real-time, and as Katabi explains many of them are actually there to predict your next words. In addition, the tool also offers users features like typo corrections or when your grammar needs a bit of a touch up.

According to Katabi, each model plays a different part in the system: One knows the language, one tracks typing history, one digs into your texts topic, and each one leverages its advantage. The models are constantly updated and take less than 10 milliseconds to understand if it can suggest changes. He notes that once installed, the system continuously learns its users, therefore providing more accurate writing suggestions.

And still, its hard not to compare the Lightkey system to its more popular counterparts at Google and Microsoft. However, according to Katabi, his company has a few notable advantages. First, the system being agnostic -- and not dedicated solely for Google or Microsoft products. Making it possible to utilize the tool for your social media; instant messaging apps, such as Slack or WhatsApp; work management tools like monday.com and Trello, as well as Salesforce, Zendesk, and others.

Katabi reveals another advantage; being that the Lightkey system is faster than the other tools on the market -- at five times faster than its competitors, the Israeli system can offer more writing suggestions over the same time span.

Of course, theres also the privacy issue. Unlike its market competitors from Google and Microsoft, Lightkey operates on-premise and is available offline -- and the Israeli startup ensures that your private data will be left off the cloud. Katabi states that the system only transfers anonymized statistics of private users -- and users can also neutralize this. As a veteran of the 8200 unit even on a moral level it was important to us that the users' information was not sent to the cloud at all, everything is processed on the computer. It is challenging for us because we do not use their data to improve the product, but rather use only public data, he says.

Where the Microsoft and Google products focus mainly on the English language -- Lightkey can predict text also in Hebrew (and in over 80 additional languages). Katabi tells me that while English is the core product -- mostly due to market size -- Hebrew has always been important to the Lightkey developers, primarily because the idea for the tool came from a need to predict texts in Hebrew.

When we founded Lightkey we built it to be multilingual, with RTL support. My original pain came from there, back in the unit we wrote mostly in Hebrew, so it was crucial to have that option. Even at the most basic level I wanted it for myself too. Behind the scenes there is a very sophisticated system for learning patterns and it can be operated in any language, he says.

As previously mentioned, Katabi explains that English is Tier-1 in terms of product focus, while Hebrew along with Latin languages -- French, Spanish, and Italian, are in the Tier-2 in terms of resources dedicated to their development. Nevertheless, he notes, that like every software tackling Hebrews right-to-left conundrum, its not an easy language to work with: Certain poetic or biblical words can crash the system. There are so many complexities and nuances, and thats the challenge. However, he also cites Russian and Korean as languages that have managed to challenge them even more than Hebrew. Incidentally languages like Chinese and Japanese have not yet been cracked because of their complexity.

Both of Lightkeys founders, Katabi and Brauer, are veterans of the famed military intelligence and technological unit 8200. The two never met during their service, and met through a post saying looking for a partner for an interesting startup. The post was first discovered by Brauers wife, and wasnt even posted by Katabi, but rather by one of his family members who eventually introduced the would be Lightkey founders. The Israeli startup sports hundreds of thousands of users in 170 countries using more than 80 different languages. So far the company has raised a small Pre-Seed round in addition to steady revenue from paying customers.

Katabi and Brauer explain that their financial model includes a limited performance but free product and a premium account; the Pro users receive unlimited text prediction and additional features for enterprise. According to the duo, the added value of the enterprise product is that Lightkey creates a prediction layer over the entire organizational network, thus improving the typing experience for every enterprise user.

For the past few weeks, I've been testing Lightkey, making it part of my writing routine - to test its capabilities compared to my go-to tool - Smart Compose. In English, I must admit, I hardly felt the difference - though I did not sit down to type letter after letter like the people at Lightkey did. I felt the most difference with Hebrew, when Lightkey was able to quickly predict quite a few words that I intended to write - and this is what impressed me the most. Just as Katabi and Brauer promise, Im sure that over time it will get even better.

While chatting with Katabi, he tells me that the vision behind the whole product is to, what he calls, eliminate the typing bottleneck -- the keyboard. We think at a rate of 2,000 words per minute and write about 40 words. Typing is an insane traffic jam between you and the computer, "says Katabi, claiming that the idea is to be a bit like what Elon Musk's Neuralink wants to do -- minus the chip in our brain. "The vision is to take these thoughts and help you convert them to their digital form without having to deal with grammar and syntax, focusing on whats important -- instead of the mechanics of typing."

View original post here:

This Israeli startup claims superiority over Google in the predictive text game - Geektime

The new chair of Yad Vashem wants to build a firewall between politics and Holocaust remembrance. Can he? – JTA News – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on November 12, 2021

(New York Jewish Week via JTA) For much of its history, Yad Vashem, Israels Holocaust authority, tried to steer clear of political controversies as it went about creating a lasting memorial and research center dedicated to the Nazi genocide of 6 million Jews.

That changed abruptly last year, when then-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tapped Effi Eitam, a former general and far-right politician, as Yad Vashems first new chair in 27 years.

Holocaust survivors, politicians and Jewish organizations said a non-academic known for harsh views about Israeli Arabs and Palestinians had no place as head of Yad Vashem, and his appointment never went through.

Instead,the Israeli government approved Dani Dayan as the new chairman of the Yad Vashem directorate, succeeding Avner Shalev. Although Dayan himself was identified with right-wing politics he previously served as chairman of the Yesha Council representing Jewish settlers he had just come off a successful run as Israels Consul General in New York from 2016-2020. During his term here, Dayan managed to win over skeptics who felt a champion of the settler movement couldnt relate to a diverse Jewish communitys liberals.

This week, Dayan, 65, will travel to the United States for the first time as Yad Vashem chair, meeting with politicians and Jewish leaders in Washington and New York.

On Monday he spoke with The Jewish Week via Zoom from Jerusalem, in an interview that touched on the uses and misses of Holocaust memory, his goals for the institution and how he intends to keep Yad Vashem out of politics.

The transcript has been edited for length and clarity.

JEWISH WEEK: For the readers who dont know, what is Yad Vashem? We always say Israels Holocaust authority and museum, but what does that really mean?

Dayan: The museum is only one component of Yad Vashem, and since its open to the public is obviously the most famous. But Yad Vashem is probably the most if not the most important research center on Holocaust studies, with by far the most extensive archives of Holocaust documents, more than 200 million. Yad Vashem has by far the most extensive library on Holocaust studies and films, from a full feature film like Schindlers List or 15 seconds taken in a village in Ukraine, during the Holocaust. We have a collection of art that was created during the Shoah. We have an invaluable collection of artifacts. One of the most important components is the international school for Holocaust education that trains teachers on how to educate on the Shoah.

And we are also the authority that is entitled to award what I believe is the most prestigious award the Israel can give a human being, and that is the Righteous Among the Nations.

Those are Holocaust rescuers.

Yes, non-Jews who endangered their lives to save the lives of Jews. So its a multi-, multi-faceted institution, a vast organization that has as its mission to never forget I would say almost obsessively in the positive sense of the world.

What specific purpose do you think the institution serves? Is it about national Israeli goals, global Jewish people goals? Do you think of it as an Israeli institution?

I believe it fulfills necessities of Israel and the Jewish people and actually all of humanity. First, its a place of mourning, a place in which you bow your head and shed tears.

The second thing is to know we have an obligation to our future generations. Such an atrocity is not to be forgotten. I think about the young girl that was taken from her home in Bialystok and locked in the synagogue in her town and set fire alive with her family and the congregation. We are obligated to know her name and to know what happened to her. Who were her parents. What were her aspirations in life. So we do that as I say almost obsessively.

The third is probably the most difficult: to feel empathy towards all victims or survivors. We read in the Passover Haggadah that every generation has to see himself or herself as if he or she themselves left Egypt.

People draw different conclusions or different lessons from the Holocaust. My conclusion, and I would say Yad Vashems conclusion, are clear. First of all the necessity, the vital necessity, for an independent, robust, secure Jewish state in our homeland. And the second is that when you see antisemitism and other forms of bigotry, dont let them grow. Confront them immediately and forcibly, because we know something today that the world and the Jewish people probably in the 1930s didnt know, and that is [antisemitism] can grow to monstrous proportions. And it can be devastating. So confront it when it is small and weak, and immediately and forcibly. That refers both to groups in society but also to regimes that are fanatic and extremist and devoted to annihilating Israel or any other country.

I want to tease out something you just said, about Israel as a secure Jewish homeland. I guess thats what makes Yad Vashem obviously different than, lets say, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, which is that it is very much tied into the case for an independent, autonomous Jewish state to protect the Jews.

I would say the main difference between us and all other big institutions is that we are the museum that represents the victims and the survivors.

Thats an important distinction. But Im thinking more about how Yad Vashem serves a national purpose. I know every world leader who arrives in Israel, one of their first stops is to the Hall of Remembrance.

Yes, Ive recently hosted Angela Merkel, the chancellor of Germany; the president of the Democratic Republic of Congo, and today the president of Colombia. But you know, Yad Vashem does not exist in order to advance Israeli political interests. It is not about that. They come to pay respect, to better understand Israel better but, first and foremost, to pay respect to the victims of the Jewish genocide in the 20th century.

Dani Dayan, left, chairman of Yad Vashem, presents German Chancellor Angela Merkel with a painting during a reception outside the Holocaust museum and research center in Jerusalem, Oct. 10, 2021. (Gil Cohen-Magen/AFP via Getty Images)

But your question implies that we serve Israels diplomatic interests or political interests, and we are not that. I can show you a very clear case: in 2018, the quarrel between Israel and Poland regarding the legislation that prohibited, actually limited, free research about the Holocaust, etc. And the prime ministers of Poland and Israel, in trying to solve a diplomatic crisis, published a joint statement. [Poland had passed a law making it a crime to implicate Poland in the Holocaust. The statement, meant to calm the Polish-Israeli rift, suggested the Polish government-in-exile and resistance acted resolutely to save Polands Jewish citizens during the war.] I wasnt chairman yet, but we would have behaved exactly the same way: Yad Vashem is bound only by historical accuracy, and we rejected the document [saying, Much of the Polish resistance in its various movements not only failed to help the Jews, but was also not infrequently actively involved in persecuting them.]

So we are not in any way an arm of the Israeli foreign ministry or something like that. We are completely independent and bound only by historical accuracy.

It came up in your appointment that because you had come from a political and diplomatic background, and had led the Yesha Council, there were people concerned that that would change that focus of Yad Vashem from an academic to a political institution. How have you responded?

I think that everybody who saw me in New York as Consul General didnt have the least doubt that I will lead Yad Vashem in the same manner, meaning apolitically. The moment that I was appointed chairman of Yad Vashem, I created a virtual firewall between me and politics. You will not hear me giving opinions on any political matter, neither domestic nor external of Israel. I vow to keep Yad Vashem completely apolitical and only, as I said, bound by history, by historical research.

I know Yad Vashem has commented on what Ill call bad Holocaust analogies, whether its comparing vaccine mandates to Nazi Germany or comparing Israel itself to the Nazi regime. How active do you want to be in policing those misuses and in trying to protect the integrity of the Holocaust?

No, I dont think the chairman or this venerable institution should react to every provocation or every single outrageous thing that is being said. The two examples that you mentioned are somewhat different. One is a gross distortion of the Holocaust: When you say that what Israel does have any similarity to the Holocaust, you are distorting the nature of the Holocaust. The other example is trivialization of the Holocaust. We are definitely determined to fight both, trivialization and distortion, but that doesnt mean we have to publish a press release on every single provocation that someone does.

I must tell you that, today, Holocaust denial is not the real problem. It was during the 80s and the 90s. In social media you can find anything, but no world leader, no serious person in politics or arts or journalism will deny that the Holocaust happened. But we do have a serious issue of distortion and trivialization. The Holocaust distortion that we are seeing these days is very well funded and organized and is done or backed by governments. A myriad of European governments are saying, Of course, the Holocaust happened, but my country was innocent. Well, that is also a distortion. Basically all countries in Europe had their collaborators, sometimes large numbers, sometimes smaller numbers, sometimes the government itself. I was in Ukraine to commemorate the 80th anniversary of Babi Yarlast month, and I had the opportunity to open an academic conference. And I said that we welcome, for instance, Ukraine to the family of democratic nations, and we welcome the fact that Ukraine today acknowledged that the victims were Jews, but there are many European countries Ukraine and Poland, but also Western European countries that still have to acknowledge their peoples collaboration with the Nazis.

What do you bring to this role personally, either in your own biography or in your family history?

Its somewhat paradoxical that my paternal family was saved that terrible fate by antisemitism, because they fled Europe in 1920 because of the pogroms to Argentina. But two of my dads uncles stayed in in Europe and perished in what then was Poland and now is Ukraine. But the Shoah was always extremely close to my soul. During my years in New York I had a very strong relationship with the Museum of Jewish Heritage, which is basically the Holocaust museum of New York State. In my speeches at Temple Emanu-El [in Manhattan] at the annual Holocaust commemoration, I would talk of my relationship with survivors, so for me, yes, the Shoah always was omnipresent.

Do you ever worry that it has shaped too much of Jewish thinking, whether in the Diaspora or in Israel?

No, no, I dont think its too much. You know, to say about the murder of 6 million Jews, the extermination of a third of our people, that it influenced too much or shaped too much our way of thinking, I cannot accept that. No.

What will you bring that is new or different to the institution?

I want to look outwards. That doesnt mean I wont be interested in what happens on the Mount of Remembrance our location in Jerusalem but I will be more interested in what irrigates from the mouth of the river of remembrance outside to the Israeli society and to the international arena, to the entire world. I think that my perspective will be more outwards than [Yad Vashem] was until now. Using technology, education, media and also probably diplomacy: I think that one of my goals is to strengthen the presence of the lessons of the Holocaust in the international diplomatic arena.

What changes now as Holocaust survivors are dying? How does that change the messages you can convey or the way you go about your goals?

That makes our mission more difficult without the witnesses, the actual witnesses, but it makes it much more important, much more vital. I dont believe that its a full replacement, but obviously we gather testimonies, and we will have to be much more creative in finding ways to replace the actual victims when they are gone. I hope that many of them are going to be with us for many years but we have to be extremely cautious, and not to fall into the trap of, you know, using techniques that are not appropriate.

We have a big debate in this country about the teaching of slavery and the teaching of the treatment of African Africans who were brought to this country in chains. When you think about American Jewish students or any student in America, and theyre going to learn about the Holocaust, what do you want them to learn? What is the takeaway?

I have a vast interest in African-American history. I think I have visited every single African-American history museum and been to every single place that was relevant to Martin Luther King Jr. and his life. I by no means underestimate the gravity of African-American history in the United States.

But you know, for me its probably sad to say but Holocaust remembrance is the thing in which we Jews all over the world and Israel find unity. We have far less differences of opinion and in the end the same sense of tragedy and pain. While other issues divide us, this one unites us. We have to build on the unity that the Shoah creates between us.

I want to just push you a little bit: It unites us around what?

When I think about the Shoah the first thing I think about is pain. And I think it unites us in a common search for knowledge. And basically, I believe that there are also no big differences over the lessons we learn from the Shoah. There are different shades of American Jews and differences with Israeli Jews, but I think that in many senses it unites us more much more than any other issue in the Jewish experience.

I wanted to end with a personal question: What do you miss the most about New York?

My close relationship that I had with the Jewish community. It was a love story.

I once heard Rabbi Shlomo Riskin say that what he missed most was Sundays.

Theres that. I must tell you I loved my work in New York. I love the New Yorkers. I am not such a fan of the city itself.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of JTA or its parent company, 70 Faces Media.

See the original post here:
The new chair of Yad Vashem wants to build a firewall between politics and Holocaust remembrance. Can he? - JTA News - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Mossad said to have foiled Iran terror attacks against Israeli targets in Africa – The Times of Israel

Posted By on November 12, 2021

IDF blacklists 6 Palestinian rights groups, enabling Israel to act against them

The Israel Defense Forces officially designates six Palestinian rights groups as unauthorized organizations, the military legal equivalent of terrorist organizations, following a similar decision by Defense Minister Benny Gantz last month, despite international criticism against the move.

Israel maintains that the six Palestinian organizations Al-Haq, Addameer, Defense for Children International-Palestine, the Bisan Center for Research and Development, the Union of Palestinian Womens Committees and the Union of Agricultural Work Committees serve as fronts for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine terror group, something that the groups have repeatedly denied and that has been questioned by their European and international funders.

Last month, Gantz declared them terrorist organizations, a designation with comparatively little immediate impact, as the groups operate within the West Bank and thus officially outside of Israels jurisdiction.

Today, however, the head of the IDF Central Command, who has formal legal authority over the West Bank, has also now outlawed the groups after he was presented with copious, varied and reliable information that indicates that these organizations represented a wing of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine terror group, the military says.

With this official designation, the military now has the power, among other things, to shutter the organizations offices and arrest its members.

The rest is here:
Mossad said to have foiled Iran terror attacks against Israeli targets in Africa - The Times of Israel


Page 590«..1020..589590591592..600610..»

matomo tracker