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Thousands rally in Tel Aviv against government as budget battle looms – The Times of Israel

Posted By on November 2, 2021

Bill Gates to Bennett: Israeli innovation can help tackle climate change

GLASGOW Prime Minister Naftali Bennett meets Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on the sidelines of the COP26 climate change conference in Glasgow.

The pair agree to establish a working group between the State of Israel and the Gates Foundation in the area of climate change innovation.

Israel is known as the startup nation, and I think that its time we pivot and channel our national energy which is the energy of the people, the brainpower to fighting climate change, Bennett tells Gates during their meeting. Were going to take this as a national mission.

Bennett says that Israel is cooperating with many of its neighbors on climate-related issues, particular in the field of water scarcity.

Gates tells the Israeli premier that my big belief is that we can solve climate change if we accelerate innovation.

Speaking about innovation, Gates says: Thats really what Israel is known for, but not so much in the climate space. The key, he says, will be understanding where are the brilliant people in Israel who are thinking about these new techniques.

We were thinking: How do we connect up and find more people who are doing mitigation type innovation, more people doing adaptation? Gates asks. Given the talent that you have and what weve seen in the digital space, how do we unleash more of that? So Id love to take that R&D innovation push and figure out where Israel can partner with us.

Energy Minister Karine Elharrar adds: Israel can be a very strong power in the climate change fight, and I think a joint venture is really great news for that.

Gates notes that both he and Bennett who made millions in hi-tech before entering politics realized that innovation was the key in their first careers. Love that comparison, jokes Bennett, to laughter.

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Thousands rally in Tel Aviv against government as budget battle looms - The Times of Israel

Israel promised to monitor violent men in 2020, but the plan is still not off the ground – Haaretz

Posted By on November 2, 2021

After two women were murdered by their partners in the span of a week in March 2020, the public security minister ordered the establishment of a unit that would track men with a history of domestic violence, slated for September of that year. The date has long passed, but the unit still has not been established, and the ministry says the process will take another year at least.

After Mastwell Alaza and Tatiana Khaikin were murdered last year by their partners, a week apart from each other, then-Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan ordered a unit be set up to track violent men using GPS. In both murders, the defendants charged with the crimes had already served time in prison for violence against their wives, but nonetheless returned to their homes and stabbed them to death.

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Following the September 2020 target date, the Public Security Ministry said at the time that the delay was caused by the fact that the state budget had not been approved, and added that legislation changes would be needed in order to establish the unit.

The unit is supposed to use GPS bracelets and phone location apps to track defendants and those convicted of domestic violence offenses, as well as people with protective orders those whose families have restraining orders against them. It is intended to operate similarly to the Zur unit of the Prison Service, which monitors child sexual abusers who have been released from prison, though it has not yet been decided which organization will lead it.

According to the plan, domestic offenders will be monitored according to risk categories starting from high-risk suspects about whom they received intelligence, to released convicts, to people who have been arrested and released but have not yet been tried. The location of each one will be tracked to ensure that he is not close to the telephone of the woman he is accused of harming. The ministry also wants to assemble a mobile team on motorcycles that can reach the scene quickly after receiving a warning. In the first stage, according to officials in the ministry, the plan will be limited to 100 participants, and will be expanded later.

This week, the Public Security Ministry said that it is in the final stages of drafting a comprehensive working plan in preparation of establishing the unit, and that in coming days it will be brought before the present minister, Omer Bar-Lev. But after Bar-Lev approves the plan, it will need to be brought before other government ministries, such as welfare and justice, hence the full approval for the unit is likely to take at least a year.

Since October 2020, the police and local authorities' welfare departments are notified whenever a person defined as a "dangerous prisoner" is about to be released from prison. But in the case of administrative release that is, when prisoners are allowed out early due to overcrowding in facilities they receive the message just days before the actual release, making it difficult for authorities to prepare. Recently, a senior official in the Welfare Ministry told Haaretz that the ministry is hoping to amend the law so violent offenders, including those imprisoned for domestic violence, would not be eligible for administrative release.

According to Prison Service figures, until October 2021, 1,322 prisoners who were convicted of domestic violence got out of prison on administrative release. According to data collected by Haaretz, in 2019 and 2020, 1,978 men were sent to Welfare Ministry rehabilitation and aid programs for domestic violence crimes. Most were defendants in criminal proceedings, and a few were in civil proceedings.

Last week, an amendment to the bill to prevent domestic violence passed a preliminary reading in the Knesset, and faced no opposition. The amendment would allow a person who has a protective order issued against them to be fitted with a monitoring device. According to data provided to Haaretz by the Courts Administration, an average of 10,000 requests per year were submitted for protective orders from the courtsfrom 2018 through 2020. The figure was 9,800 in 2018, and about 10,000 in 2019, and 10,253 in 2020. This year, through the end of September, 7,295 such requests were submitted.

The bill, sponsored by MK Yorai Lahav-Hertzanu (Yesh Atid), had two similar bills attached to it from MKs Aida Touma-Sliman (Joint List) and Keren Barak (Likud). According to the unified proposed law, a court that issues a protective order will be authorized to determine whether the defendant will be supervised electronically, in cases where the person violated a previous order, was convicted in the past of violent offenses, or if his case is deemed dangerous enough. But according to the 2016 inter-ministerial committee on violence against women, law enforcement does not have the tools to supervise protective orders.

Barak told Haaretz: Violation of protective orders fell by dozens of percentage points in all the countries where the electronic cuff were used. The bracelet's deterrence is enormous and prevents the attacker from reaching the victim just because of the very understanding that he is being tracked at all times.

Touma-Sliman said that as part of the establishment of the unit, the Public Security Ministry intends to make the Prison Service responsible for enforcement. This will be insufficient, she said, because the service is only authorized to deal with convicts, and not with people who have not yet finished their legal proceedings.

Touma-Sliman submitted another bill that would require judges to request an opinion or memorandum that examines the readiness of a convict charged with domestic violence offenses for treatment. The bill passed its first reading in the previous Knesset, and it is expected to be brought up soon for its second and third readings.

The Public Security Ministry said they are in the midst of work on the matter and are preparing to present the minister with solutions and directions for action. After the minister approves the findings of the staff work, ministry representatives will work to receive comments from the relevant ministries and advance the legislation and implementation of the electronic bracelets.

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Israel promised to monitor violent men in 2020, but the plan is still not off the ground - Haaretz

Sally Rooney’s Israel Boycott Fits in With Ireland’s Anti-Israel Hate – Algemeiner

Posted By on November 2, 2021

A few weeks ago, Teen Vogue ran an article reporting on the decision of best-selling Irish author Sally Rooney not to have her latest novel translated into Hebrew by a publisher in Israel. The article was titled, Sally Rooney Boycotts Israeli Apartheid, Refuses Work With Publishers.

In a statement, Rooney claimed she is not antisemitic, but merely acting in line with the BDS movements institutional boycott guidelines. No one should be surprised at Rooneys decision anyone who has read her books could have seen this coming. But Rooneys selective hostility towards Israel is concerning, and comes amid a surge of anti-Israel hate in Ireland.

In the past, Rooney has openly displayed her hostility towards Israel. In her novel Normal People, both main characters attended a 2014 protest against Operation Protective Edge (Israels defensive war against Hamas). The author was keen to see antisemite Jeremy Corbyn elected UK prime minister, which gives an insight into her sensitivities regarding antisemitism.

In 2019, Rooney signed a letter in support of a pro-BDS author who saw a German literary award for tolerance, respect and reconciliation withdrawn over her support for BDS. This year, she was a signatory to a letter which libeled Israel as an apartheid state and its people as violent colonizers.

Rooney states that she would like to see a Hebrew translation of her latest work if it can comply with the BDS movements institutional boycott guidelines. In other words, there is now a Palestinian veto over her relations with Jews and the Jewish state.

Rooney whitewashes the true character of the BDS movement. Ignoring the fact that the US, Canada, Germany, and Israel have all branded the movement as antisemitic, Rooney compares the movement to the South African boycott campaign against apartheid (in that case, it really was apartheid). But there are several issues with this.

First, the pseudo-comparison of Israel to an apartheid state is illusory, and an insult to the actual apartheid suffered in South Africa.

Israels Arab citizens play a vital role in the countrys democracy, and in all walks of life. Arabs in Israel are judges, generals, ambassadors, MKs, sport stars the list goes on. In fact, an Islamist Arab party with ties to the Muslim Brotherhood are a coalition party in Israels current government. Upon even a cursory examination, the apartheid libel is quickly exposed.

The BDS movement is a movement which explicitly seeks to destroy the Jewish state. Omar Barghouti, one of the chief proponents of BDS, has stated on at least 13 occasions that the groups objective is to eliminate the Jewish state. This is well-publicized, yet Rooney persists in her fealty to BDS, which leaves only two options either she is willfully ignorant of BDS antisemitism, or she does not object.

Also, if Rooney is so concerned with principled boycotts, why is her book available in Chinese?

Uighur Muslims are being tortured in concentration camps, while the Chinese Communist Party wages demographic warfare to end their existence. This example one of many demonstrates that Rooney, like many others, applies a standard to Israel to which no other nation is held.

Rooneys anti-Israel action comes against a dark backdrop in Ireland. The particular enmity of the anti-Israel movement in Ireland is infamous. Political parties, such as the Sinn Fin and People Before Profit, have a systematic issue of antisemitism in their ranks. This is not new but unfortunately, a reliable constant of Irish politics.

A recent report by investigative journalist David Collier has documented the blight of antisemitism across Irish politics, media, and society. From Holocaust denial, to 9/11 conspiracy theories, to a Sinn Fin leader liking a Hitler was Right comment, the report showed that antisemitism is not only tolerated within Irish society, but has become the vernacular for those who hate Israel.

The report itself was released to the Irish media, and sent to all Oireachtas members (the Oireachtas is the legislature of Ireland). At the time of this writing, there has been negligible acknowledgement of the report in the national media. The report was largely ignored in the Oireachtas, and the harrowing findings did not get the circulation they merited.

However, all national media publications have covered (if not defended) Rooneys BDS embrace.

Ireland has shown itself to be an outlier in its attitudes towards Israel and antisemitism. There are a great many allies of Israel and the Jewish people who still speak out in Ireland. However, they are the minority. Rooney and her ilk are the majority and they often stray into antisemitic territory.

The refusal of an Irish author to translate her novel into the language of the Jewish people or allow it to be sold in Israel should not be seen as an isolated incident. Rather, this act serves to further darken the ever-growing cloud of antisemitism hanging over Ireland.

Daniel ODowd is a UK Campus Associate for CAMERA On Campus.

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Sally Rooney's Israel Boycott Fits in With Ireland's Anti-Israel Hate - Algemeiner

Israel is reopening to tourists. Here’s how it will sanction COVID transgressors – Haaretz

Posted By on November 2, 2021

With Israel opening its borders to vaccinated tourists in the coming days, the Health Ministry has recommended a set of potential sanctions aimed at reducing the spread of the coronavirus by people arriving from abroad.

In a letter outlining its view on how to handle tourists who break public health rules, the ministry recommended that foreigners arriving in Israel without meeting the criteria for entry be deported to their countries of origin. It also instructed the Population and Immigration Authority to consider imposing a sanction on entry to Israel in such cases.

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Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz recently approved a new policy allowing tourists who are fully vaccinated with recognized vaccines into Israel starting on November 1.

Under the ministrys recommended sanctions, foreigners who violate mandatory quarantine will be forbidden from entering the country for three years, while an infected foreigner who refuses to isolate in a quarantine hotel or leaves isolation will be blacklisted for five years.

The ministry also recommended that any foreigner who entered Israel or attempted to enter Israel with forged documentation related to the pandemic will be banned from the country for five years, and that someone who stays in Israel more than 180 days after being vaccinated or recovering also be barred from entering.

Under the governments initial plan, tourists are considered fully vaccinated if they:

Have received the second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine at least seven days earlier, and will leave the country within 180 days.

Have received the second dose of the Moderna, AstraZeneca, Sinovac or Sinopharm vaccines at least 14 days earlier, and will leave the country within 180 days.

Have received one dose of Johnson & Johnsons Janssen vaccine at least 14 days earlier, and will leave the country within 180 days.

Have received a Pfizer-BioNTech booster shot at least seven days earlier.

Have received a third dose of the Moderna, AstraZeneca, Sinovac or Johnson & Johnsons Janssen vaccine at least 14 days earlier.

Have recovered and presented proof of a negative test taken at least 11 days earlier, and will leave the country within 180 days.

Have recovered and have received at least one dose of a vaccine that has been approved by the World Health Organization.

On Wednesday, Israel updated these criteria to allow tourists inoculated with the Russian-made Sputnik V jab into the country from November 15, provided they present an antibody test. The announcement was made following a meeting between Bennett and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi this past weekend.

Health officials had initially recommended delaying recognition of the Russian vaccine upon the arrival in Israel of the new COVID-19 sub-strain known as AY.4.2,and Israeli officials told Haaretz that the decision to allow tourists vaccinated with Sputnik V had been the result of recent pressure by Russian officials.

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Israel is reopening to tourists. Here's how it will sanction COVID transgressors - Haaretz

Lebanese journalist: Energy access to be found in peace agreement with Israel – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on November 2, 2021

Lebanese Shiite journalist and media personality Nadim Koteich wrote in an article in the popular London-based Al-Sharq Al-Awsat that Hezbollah is holding the country hostage and preventing it from reaching a peace agreement with Israel.

According to a report by the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), Koteich is known for his opposition to Hezbollah and has said that an agreement with Israel would allow Lebanon to take advantage of much-needed energy resourcesnamely, natural gas.

But more than that, he wrote: Can Lebanon be sure that the pharmaceutical labs all over the world have no Israelis working in research and development? Can the Lebanese make sure that their children studying in universities abroad will graduate without having their ideas contaminated by ideas of Israeli philosophers, who are now among the worlds leading thinkers, such as Yuval [Noah] Harari and Daniel Kahneman? Can they ensure that [what they watch] on Netflix and on similar entertainment platforms is free of Israeli content?

Koteich noted that country is holding back its own progress. What prevents Lebanon from being part of the changes that have taken place in the Eastern Mediterranean in the area of gas? he posed. Very simply, what prevents this is the culture of perpetuating the conflict with Israel.

The post Lebanese journalist: Energy access to be found in peace agreement with Israel appeared first on JNS.org.

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Lebanese journalist: Energy access to be found in peace agreement with Israel - Cleveland Jewish News

How the shadow war between Iran and Israel is affecting shipping – Ship Technology

Posted By on November 2, 2021

A Romanian ship captain and a British chief security officer died on 29 July 2021 off the coast of Oman while working aboard the Japanese-owned merchant tanker Mercer Street.

The cause of the incident, a suicide drone attack, was attributed by the UK, the US and Israeli governments to the Iranian regime as part of the shadow war at sea conducted by Tehran and Tel-Aviv in the last few years. Suicide drones are remotely-controlled UAVs that self-detonate when reaching their target. Their use has increasingly been seen by actors such as Iran and China.

The Mercer Street incident is the most fatal in a long series of sea attacks. As reported by Sky News, eight incidents had taken place in 2021 between February and May, with numbers increasing in the following months.

At the beginning of August, Dubai-owned vessel Asphalt Princess was reportedly hijacked by men coming aboard. Resolved in quick time, the incident was blamed on the Iranian authorities who denied their involvement, calling the accusations a pretext for hostile action.

According to Sky News, on 29 July the UK Maritime Trade Operation a Royal Navy capability in charge of providing information about sea incidents issued a warning around 7am for a non-piracy incident 86 miles off the coast of Omani port city of Al Duqm.

Experts believe that the attack took place near the island of Masirah because the vessels speed dropped dramatically from 15.3 knots to 3.3 knots.

By checking the coordinates, shipping authorities soon realised that the ship involved was the Japanese-owned merchant vessel Mercer Street, in transit from Tanzania to the UAE. Despite its Japanese ownership, Mercer Street was operated by London-based firm Zodiac Maritime, which belongs to Israeli shipping magnate Eyal Ofer.

The company released a statement on the afternoon of 30 July saying that details of the incidents are still being established and an investigation into the incident is still underway, and that Zodiac Maritime was working closely with the UKMTO and other relevant authorities.

Later that day, the company released a third announcement via Twitter, confirming that the Mercer Street is under the control of her crew and under her own power at 14 knots to a safe location with a US naval escort. The escort in this case being a US missile destroyer and a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.

A couple of days after the incident, the US Department of State stated that Iran was believed to be behind the attack and that the Iranian regime had used a suicide drone.

Upon review of the available information, we are confident that Iran conducted this attack, which killed two innocent people, using one-way explosive UAVs, a lethal capability it is increasingly employing throughout the region, read the statement.

We are working with our partners to consider our next steps and consulting with governments inside the region and beyond on an appropriate response, which will be forthcoming.

The Mercer Street incident was the last in a series of attacks to ships tied to the Ofer family. In July the CSAV Tyndall vessel previously owned by Zodiac Maritime was allegedly attacked by Iran using similar methods. At the end of March, the container ship Lori fell victim to a missile while transiting through the Arabian Sea.

The Lori is owned by Israeli firm XT Holdings, whose partial owner is Eyal Ofers younger brother, Idan Ofer.

Iranian attacks against Israeli vessels and Israeli attacks on Iranian vessels have been in the spotlight for the last few years. Opponents for more than 40 years, Israel and Iran have translated their political animosity into a maritime shadow war, with both sides reportedly attacking each other, but not claiming responsibility.

Israels determination to remain the only nuclear power in the Middle East has led it to attack Iranian nuclear scientists and strike against Iranian ships believed to be transporting oil to Syria.

On the opposing side, Iran has allegedly carried out several attacks against vessels around the Arabian Sea, Red Sea, and the Straight of Hormuz, a focal point for oil exports.

Iran has committed to an aggressive posture throughout the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, with an intent to dominate its immediate sphere of influence, but also in a bid to posture against what it perceives as the encroachment of foreign forces and a hedge against the thawing in relations between Israel and other regional states, reads an analysis by security firm Dryad Global.

Over the last ten months, both Israel and Iran have carried out strikes against each other. At the end of February, Israel accused Iran of setting off explosives aboard its vessel Helios Ray, which was travelling from Saudi Arabia to Singapore, while a few weeks later it was Irans turn to blame Israel for damages sustained by one of its container ships travelling to Syria.

What is the impact for shipping?

The IranIsrael shadow war is having a severe impact on the global shipping industry, as vessels transiting through the Red Sea, the Arabian Gulf, and the Strait of Hormuz are under heightened risks.

As explained by Protection International strategic director Harry Hayes, vessels risk exposure is increasing premiums against vessels.

If an owner has vessels that are charted to one of the trade routes, the owners will undoubtedly try and push over the increased war risk premiums onto the charterers, which impacts their decision making on whether or not the Persian Gulf is a worthwhile and commercially viable place for them to continue their trade, says Hayes.

Despite the rise in risk profile, attacks to ships in the Middle East are not expected to impact daily operations. Such incidents remain irregular and are highly unlikely to impact normal commercial operations throughout the region, adds the Dryad Global report.

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How the shadow war between Iran and Israel is affecting shipping - Ship Technology

Claudia Roden Looks to Her Greatest Inspiration – The New York Times

Posted By on November 2, 2021

LONDON If youve ever swiped a supple piece of pita bread through a plate of garlicky hummus and your family roots arent in the Middle East, you may have Claudia Roden to thank.

In 1968, in the modestly titled A Book of Middle Eastern Food, the 32-year-old Egyptian exile gave the non-Arabic-speaking world one of its first detailed looks at this rich cuisine. Through hundreds of traditional, comprehensive and carefully tested recipes, like herb-flecked Lebanese tabbouleh and Syrian lamb kibbe, she introduced western home cooks to the subtle, extensive art of Middle Eastern cooking.

Before her book, she could find no volume of recipes like this published in English or in any European language. If you wanted to make baba ghanouj, you might persuade a Turkish or Egyptian cook to share family secrets passed down through generations. But lets face it, before 1968, if you were living in Britain, chances were good youd never tasted baba ghanouj.

Over the course of her 50-year career, Ms. Roden, 85, has helped revolutionize the way the British cook and eat. She taught them how to blend cucumbers with yogurt and garlic into a creamy salad, how to simmer lentils with cumin to make a warming soup, and how to fold phyllo stuffed with cheese and herbs into flaky bite-size pastries.

As if that wasnt legacy enough, she also helped shift the way writing about cuisine, particularly by women, was perceived.

Paul Levy, chairman emeritus of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cookery, of which Ms. Roden was a founding member, said her scholarship on food was part of a growing cultural trend.

Along with culinary writers like Elizabeth David, Jane Grigson and Sri Owen and even Julia Child, he said, she deepened the conversation around food to address questions of culture, context, history and identity.

Her dozen cookbooks, particularly The Book of Jewish Food, produced a genre of works that is at once literary and deeply researched while still being, at heart, practical manuals on how to make delicious meals.

When Ms. Roden started writing A Book of Middle Eastern Food, Ms. David had already published a handful of Middle Eastern recipes notably, hummus bi tahina in her far-ranging A Book of Mediterranean Food in 1950. But it was Ms. Rodens work that took on the entire cuisine of the Middle East in depth, in ways both scholarly and highly personal.

Yotam Ottolenghi, the chef, cookbook author and New York Times food columnist,credits Ms. Roden with laying the foundation for chefs like him.

A Book of Middle Eastern Food has been around for so long it feels like prehistory, he said, adding, it was really revelatory for its time.

Although its hard to imagine, in the midst of Britains current love affair with Middle Eastern flavors, that the cuisine was considered outlandish and unappealing in the 1960s. Ms. Rodens book was all but ignored when it came out, on the heels of the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, in which Britain supported Israel.

At that moment, no one was interested in the food of the enemy culture, said Ms. Roden, who identifies as a Sephardi/Mizrahi Jew (Mizrahi is the Israeli term for Jews from the Middle East and North Africa). When the book came out, people would always ask me if all the recipes were for testicles and eyeballs.

At the border of the lawn stood a hedgerow of scarlet-blossomed fuchsia trees reminiscent of the florescent bougainvillea on her familys terrace in Cairo, where she lived until she was 15. Thats when she left for boarding school in Paris, and didnt return until a quarter-century later. By that time, her family had long been expelled from Egypt, and her childhood home was gone.

Claudia Douek was born in 1936 to a large, prominent Syrian Jewish family, who had emigrated to Cairo in the 19th century. This was when the Egyptian capital supplanted Aleppo as the regions mercantile center after the opening of the Suez Canal.

Cairo had a diverse, polyglot culture. Ms. Rodens first language was French (as it was for all cosmopolitan Jews in Cairo), followed by Italian (the language of her beloved nanny), English and Arabic. Her maternal grandmother, who could trace her ancestry back to pre-Inquisition Spain, spoke Judeo-Spanish (Ladino), which Ms. Roden absorbed and which helped her research and write The Food of Spain, published in 2011.

She lived with her parents, Nelly and Cesar Douek, and two brothers in a prosperous circle of extended family, with dozens of cousins, aunts and uncles nearby. They all gathered regularly for opulent feasts scented with rosewater and toasted coriander; every holiday, wedding, birth and even Shabbat dinner was celebrated on a grand scale.

Ms. Roden describes the cuisine of the Syrian Jews as sophisticated, abundant, varied and purposely intricate and time-consuming.

If you didnt labor over a dish, people thought you didnt love them, she said, handing me a wedge of homemade Turkish yogurt cake, the souffld top glowing with red sugared berries. You had to have taken a lot of trouble rolling almond paste into balls, making phyllo fingers, stuffing aubergines. One-pot meals would have been an insult.

When Ms. Roden talks about her childhood, you can hear the longing in her voice, not just for the food but for the entire way of life. Much of her work has been an attempt to reconstruct the lost scents, sounds, tastes and feelings that flowered on that Cairo terrace. Her recipes capture the flavors; the stories she enfolds around them evoke the richness of a lost universe.

The London-based cookbook author Diana Henry calls Ms. Roden our greatest living food writer.

Wherever she is, she tries to recreate the Egypt of her childhood, Ms. Henry said. Shes held it very clearly in her head for all these years, and it comes across in her writing. Reading Claudia is like going somewhere.

In 1956, during the Suez crisis, the president of Egypt, Gamal Abdel Nasser, expelled the Jews from the country. Leaving all their possessions behind, the Douek family made their way to London, where Ms. Roden attended St. Martins School of Art, and went on to become an accomplished painter.

Nelly Doueks kitchen became a gathering place for fellow exiles. They sought succor in stuffed vine leaves and honeyed pastries, and companionship in the memories they all shared.

Although most of the cooking in Ms. Rodens childhood home was done by servants, Nelly Douek and her friends chopped herbs, kneaded doughs, stuffed vegetables and rolled confections in London, laughing and reminiscing over cups of syrupy coffee.

Throughout the Middle East at that time, a familys heirloom recipes were among its most closely guarded secrets. The indiscreet sharing of a recipe would have been nearly as bad as negotiating an unfortunate marriage for one of the children.

In exile, things were different. The exchange of recipes became a currency, a way of communicating and expressing love. And women were freer to choose their husbands. (Ms. Roden married Paul Roden when she was 22; the couple had three children before separating in 1974.)

In her mothers busy kitchen, Ms. Roden heard the women ask the same question Do you have any recipes? every time a cousin or friend would arrive. They shared the secrets to their dishes so that when any one of them prepared that rich orange-almond cake or a mint-sprinkled tahini salad, they would remember one another and feel loved and understood.

Ms. Roden took notes, detailing regional pilaf variations and each cooks method of layering onions, tomatoes and pita bread into fattoush.

We all felt a very strong need to collect, to record, Ms. Roden said, adding that it was all part of preserving culture and identity.

If we dont collect it, she said, it will disappear.

She amassed more than 1,000 recipes and stories this way. These became the cornerstone not only for A Book of Middle Eastern Food, but also for The Book of Jewish Food, since most of the families who passed through the Doueks home were from the Sephardic Jewish diaspora. In addition, she spent 10 years researching recipes and customs from other parts of the Arab world.

She worked on those two canonical books for a combined total of 25 years. But she wasnt done. When her children grew up and left home, she left, too, traveling across the world to research her books The Food of Italy, The Food of Spain and Arabesque: A Taste of Morocco, Turkey, & Lebanon.

On these trips, she delighted in talking to anyone about food and culture: people on trains and buses, waiters in cafes and maids in hotels. Shed ask them what they liked to eat and if they had any recipes. Traveling alone, Ms. Roden had a knack for getting herself invited by strangers to try a local specialty, like the octopus-and-potato salad from the Greek island of Skopelos in her most recent cookbook.

As I was walking by a family eating on their terrace, they invited me in to share their octopus salad and a bottle of wine, she wrote. It was heaven.

Mr. Levy, of the Oxford Symposium, calls Ms. Roden a culinary anthropologist.

Shes gone around and done what is the equivalent of field work, then dealt with it in a sophisticated, analytical way, he said. Shes a serious thinker.

Of all her books, Claudia Rodens Mediterranean, is the most poetic, the most lyrical (with photos by Susan Bell), and perhaps the one that most unites all of her many facets.

Containing 100 recipes and spare but warm prose, it has an intimacy that shows these are the dishes shed cook if you came to her house, gathered from her lifelong travels. But instead of striving to faithfully record someones recipe, as she does in other books, she has taken the creative license to tweak them to suit herself. Theres an emphasis on vegetables and grains, and in many cases, simplified, streamlined techniques (and even an occasional one-pot meal).

The food writer Nigella Lawson, a friend of Ms. Roden since Ms. Lawson was 19, calls this book a distillation of Ms. Rodens joyful, generous spirit. Reading it is like talking with her in her garden, Ms. Lawson said.

All of a sudden, there are all these exquisite little plates in front of you, and shes telling you to dip something in olive oil. And you have this sense of what it would be like at her house in Cairo, sitting on her terrace, watching the sunset.

Which is, of course, exactly what Ms. Roden has set out to do.

Writing this book was a way of bringing back my past, Ms. Roden said as the light cast a warm glow over her garden, and enjoying all of my memories.

Recipes: Bullinada (Catalan Fish Stew With Aioli) | Yogurt Cake

A dish like this stew needs a wine that can cut through its creamy pungency. As with bourride, a similar Provenal fish stew, ros would be a great choice, or, in this case, Spanish rosado, as long as it is dry. Other good, dry Mediterranean ross would likewise be delicious, as would incisive white wines. This being a Catalan dish, I would love to try it with xarello, one of the traditional constituents of cava, the Spanish sparkling wine that is largely made in Catalonia. A good cava would be great with this dish, and more readily available than a still xarello. So would a manzanilla or fino sherry. Outside Spain, try a Sancerre or a village Chablis. Picpoul de Pinet, a Provenal white, would be excellent, and Ive tried some good versions coming from California. ERIC ASIMOV

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Claudia Roden Looks to Her Greatest Inspiration - The New York Times

Breast Cancer Screenings Should Not Be Delayed Due to COVID-19 Early detection and treatment supports the best possible outcomes – HubcitySPOKES.com

Posted By on October 31, 2021

Breast cancer and other medical illnesses remain a risk for women - even in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. Unfortunately, due to concerns about the virus, many women have postponed their annual screening mammograms, increasing their risk of undetected cancer. Merit Health Wesley is encouraging women who may have delayed their mammograms to schedule the screening now, because when breast cancer is detected early, life-saving treatment can begin right away.

When screenings are delayed, diagnosis is delayed, and treatment is delayed, said radiologist Tom Cole, MD. But the best chance for survival of any cancer is early diagnosis and treatment. Women should not be afraid to get a mammogram. Many safety precautions have been put in place in our imaging center to protect everyone from COVID-19. So as a doctor, Im telling you - if youve put off having a mammogram, dont put it off any longer.

Early Detection Saves Lives

Nearly all breast cancers can be treated successfully if found early. The most effective way to detect breast cancer at an early, treatable stage is to have yearly mammograms. Since mammography became widely used in the 1980s, the U.S. breast cancer death rate in women has dropped 43 percent.

Here in Mississippi, 17,037 new female breast cancer cases were reported in 2018, the most recent year data is available.

The American College of Radiology (ACR) and Society of Breast Imaging (SBI) recommend that all women, particularly African American and those of Ashkenazi Jewish descent, should have a risk assessment at age 30 to see if a screening earlier than age 40 is needed. Women who were previously diagnosed with breast cancer are recommended to be screened with magnetic resonance imaging, an MRI.

For women of average risk, the ACR and SBI recommend annual mammograms starting at age 40. Different guidelines apply to women at higher risk. A screening mammogram can help detect breast cancer in its earliest and most treatable stages.

To learn more about womens health services at Merit Health Wesley, MeritHealthWesley.com/womens-health.

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Breast Cancer Screenings Should Not Be Delayed Due to COVID-19 Early detection and treatment supports the best possible outcomes - HubcitySPOKES.com

Theyre just not that into you – Haaretz

Posted By on October 31, 2021

Unlike lawmaker Yariv Levin, I wasnt astounded to read the decision about disqualifying former Defense Minister Amir Peretz from serving as Israel Aerospace Industries chairman, just as I wasnt astounded this morning when the sun came up.

Not because Amir Peretz isnt qualified of course he is, even the Gilor Committee was forced to admit it (Peretz is fully qualified to serve as the board of directors chairman) or because he doesnt deserve the position he deserves much more. In a dignified country, he would be president today instead of Isaac Herzog, the son of. I wasnt astounded because I know who Im dealing with.

The explanation for Levins astonishment appears in his response: Amir Peretz isnt part of the ideological camp I belong to, but nobody can take from him the enormous experience he has accumulated while serving in numerous public positions, including some of the most senior ones.

LISTEN: Can Israeli climate tech undo decades of neglect?

Only someone who isnt part of Peretzs ideological camp could have been surprised by the shameful decision to disqualify him. Whoever doesnt see that suffers from selective blindness. Read the Gilor Committees conclusions. Learn perhaps the most important lesson in your life: When youre not wanted, youre not wanted, regardless of your academic title (which isnt in the companys main area of activity), the positions youve filled (14 years have passed since he was defense minister ... the world and society have changed since then) I swear Im not making this up the public work, the seniority. None of them will do you any good when youre not wanted.

The documents five pages read like this: Blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah we dont want Peretz. The romantic comedy Hes Just Not That Into You teaches women that all the excuses a man gives you are because hes simply not that into you. This document is the same thing, only for Mizrahi Jews whom the Ashkenazi Jews arent into anymore.

For Peretzs ideological camp members theres nothing more self-evident than his disqualification. Its merely a justified ass burial, as Moran Sharir described this week in Haaretz's Hebrew edition.

On paper, it was the Gilor Committee that disqualified him, but Peretz had already been disqualified. This is what they do to a Mizrahi man who allowed himself to behave politically as if he were Ashkenazi. At least Sharir doesnt hide that this is about settling accounts in the left wing with someone who smuggled himself and his vassal Itzik Shmuli into the government. Sharir had supported Benny Gantzs sitting in a government with Benjamin Netanyahu because unlike Peretz the smuggler, clean Gantz did what he thought was right. Not like Peretz, who simply jumped into the coalition blithely.

And as for Levin and his assertion that nobody can take from him his enormous experience Levin, what navet. With the bat of an eye they took everything from him and reduced him to a Moroccan joke without a mustache. That is perhaps the only thing Peretzs ideological camp excels in. And to think that anyone who today dares criticize Labor and Meretzs strategic choice to sit in the most radical, rightist government in Israels history is denounced as a purist. By whom? The people who only two days ago tarred and feathered those who entered the government in the midst of a pandemic and stopped a host of rightist moves with their bodies. Those very moves are today accepted as a necessary price for the coalitions integrity.

Lets conduct a thought experiment. Tzipi Livni is the transportation and finance ministers favorite candidate to chair the government company NTA Metropolitan Mass Transit System. Like Peretz, Livni isnt a member of the directors team, and her appointment also requires the committees approval. In view of Peretzs experience as defense minister, and as father of the Iron Dome (try to imagine the hell that would have broken loose here and in Gaza without it, you bunch of pathological ingrates), its obvious that his affiliation to Aerospace Industries is stronger than Livnis to trains. Now honestly, is it conceivable that the Gilor Committee wont approve Livnis appointment?

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Theyre just not that into you - Haaretz

1 in 4 Jews in the US experienced antisemitism in the last year, report says – NPR

Posted By on October 31, 2021

A Marcher hold signs that reads "Anti-Semitism = Anti-Human" as they walk across the Brooklyn Bridge in January 2020. Ira L. Black - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images hide caption

A Marcher hold signs that reads "Anti-Semitism = Anti-Human" as they walk across the Brooklyn Bridge in January 2020.

Nearly one out of every four Jews in the U.S. has been the subject of antisemitism over the past year, a number that advocates for the Jewish community say should trouble all Americans.

The data was published in a new report released Monday by the American Jewish Committee, which called for action to stop what the group characterized as a "severe problem" in the nation.

Seventeen percent of respondents in the committee's survey said they had been the subject of an antisemitic remark in person, while 12% said they were the victim of an antisemitic remark online. Three percent of Jews who responded to the poll said they were the target of an antisemitic physical attack.

"Now is the time for American society to stand up and say 'enough is enough.' American Jews see antisemitism on the far right and the far left, among extremists acting in the name of Islam, and elsewhere throughout America," the committee's CEO, David Harris, said in a statement.

The report also found that, out of fear of antisemitism, 39% of American Jews changed their behavior in the past 12 months, such as by avoiding posting online content or wearing items that would identify them as Jewish.

"Where is the outrage? Where is the recognition that antisemitism may begin with Jews but, ultimately, targets the fabric and fiber of any democratic society?" Harris added.

An outbreak in violence between Israel and Hamas in the spring saw an uptick in antisemitic hate crimes thousands of miles away in the U.S. The Anti-Defamation League said it received 193 reports of possible antisemitic violence in the week that the fighting began, a nearly 50% increase from the week prior. Hate crimes against Muslims also grew in the days after the violence in Gaza.

The report also highlights a stark divide between the number of Jews who believe antisemitism is a problem in the U.S. versus the rest of the population. Some 90% of American Jews think antisemitism is a problem in the country, while just 60% of the general population said the same.

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1 in 4 Jews in the US experienced antisemitism in the last year, report says - NPR


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