by Sara Yoheved Rigler The joys of living with the family.
Jews in Israel live in the midst of their mishpacha -- their family. We
are an unruly, bickering, sometimes dysfunctional family, but we are
one family nonetheless. And that family in action shines from these
true vignettes.
Only in Israel:
On the minor holiday of Lag B'Omer, almost 10% of the population of
Israel flocks to the tomb of the Talmudic sage Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai
on Mt. Meron in the north. A few years ago, my friend Uriela Sagiv
joined the pilgrimage. Around 9:30 p.m. she caught a public bus for the
3-4 hour trip home to Jerusalem. Confident that the last stop would be
Jerusalem's Central Bus Station, from where she would catch a cab to
her home, Uriela fell soundly asleep.
Hours later, she was awoken by a voice, "This is the last stop." She
looked up. It was not the Central Bus Station, but rather a totally
unfamiliar Jerusalem neighborhood.
"Where is the Central Bus Station?" she asked in bewilderment.
"Oh, that was three stop ago," the driver of the now empty bus
answered. "The bus is on its way to the yard -- ... more »
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Wednesday, May 7
by
Publisher
on Wed 07 May 2008 01:10 AM CDT
A contingent of 30 US Secret Service agents meticulously inspected
security arrangements at Israel's Knesset this week in preparation for
the upcoming visit of President George W. Bush.
Israel's Ynet news portal reported that the Secret Service insisted that Israel put up a special fence around the Knesset to prevent eye contact between Bush and external elements. All of the other security arrangement were apparently deemed suitable by the American agents. Bush is scheduled to arrive in Israel on May 15 to take part in events marking the 60th anniversary of the Jewish state's rebirth, including an address to the Knesset. Original Source more »
by
Publisher
on Wed 07 May 2008 01:07 AM CDT
Attila Somfalvi
Even if most politicians continue to remain silent in front of the cameras when they are asked about the new investigation against Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, the question faced by the political system at this time is “what’s going to happen?” The gag order on the affair prevents the politicians from embarking on significant political moves, mostly based on bitter past experience of probes against politicians that started with a bang and ended with a whimper. Yet everyone knows that soon we may see a political earthquake, particularly if an indictment is served against the prime minister. Should Olmert be forced to leave the Prime Minister’s Office, all eyes will turn to one person: Ehud Barak. If this scenario comes true, the Labor Party’s chairman would have to take a dramatic decision that means early elections. Labor Party officials estimate that Barak would not be able to miss out on another opportunity to go to elections over a moral issue. He indeed stayed in the government in the wake of the Winograd Commission report, yet shying away from new elections in case the prime minister resigns will place him in the position of being perceived as ... more »
by
Publisher
on Wed 07 May 2008 01:03 AM CDT
Absorption Ministry's campaign to bring Israelis back results in
record-breaking numbers
Itamar Eichner The Absorption Ministry campaign to return emigrants to Israel ahead of the country’s 60th anniversary has been a great success so far. Since the campaign’s onset, 2,500 people have returned to Israel, the highest number to date. Another 4,500 people are in the process of returning. In November of 2007, the ministry launched a campaign in an attempt to bring Israelis back to the country. The initiative was launched in correlation with the country’s 60th anniversary celebrations, and those who return will be granted various perquisites. On the Rise North American aliyah continues to climb Jewish Agency anticipates that immigration to Israel from North America will increase by 5 to 10 percent in 2007 Full story Amongst the benefits are discounts on flights and on the shipment of belongings, a reduction on income tax in the countries from which they came, health insurance, Hebrew lessons, assistance in job placements, business loans, scholarships for researchers and scientists and facilitating in the scheduling of matriculation exams for teenagers. The Ministry of Absorption presumed that many families that left Israel are just waiting for an ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 May 2008 09:47 PM AKDT
It is not really possible to exaggerate why David Ben Gurion’s
declaration – 60 years ago this May, of the independence of the State
of Israel for the people of Israel – is one of the most important
historical happenings ever to impact the world.
Why was the creation of Israel on May 14, 1948 so significant? It was important on many levels for the Jews themselves, but not only for the Jews: It marked the arrival of the Jewish people at a – for them – long-feared unreachable milestone in their millennia-old history – the end of their worldwide Diaspora or dispersion. It signified the total failure of Adolf Hitler – and the myriad antisemites before him: the Vatican, the Crusaders, the Inquisition, the Cossacks, the rulers of Austria, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Hungary, Belgium, Slovakia, The Netherlands, France, England, Poland, Bohemia, Russia and all the other nations that expelled their Jews – to do away with God’s Chosen People. It established a port of safety – a haven – for a nation whose people for 2000 years had been denied acceptance and lived precariously virtually wherever they sought to dwell among the gentiles. It gave a long-scattered people a ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 May 2008 09:30 PM AKDT
Sara Goudarzi
for National Geographic News April 23, 2008 An ancient Greek tomb thought to have held the body of Alexander the Great's father is actually that of Alexander's half brother, researchers say. This may mean that some of the artifacts found in the tomb—including a helmet, shield, and silver "crown"—originally belonged to Alexander the Great himself. Alexander's half brother is thought to have claimed these royal trappings after Alexander's death. The tomb was one of three royal Macedonian burials excavated in 1977 by archaeologists working in the northern Greek village of Vergina (see map of Greece). Excavators at the time found richly appointed graves with artifacts including a unique silver headband, an iron helmet, and a ceremonial shield, along with a panoply of weapons and an object initially identified as a scepter. "[Archaeologists] announced that the burial in the main chamber of the large rich [tomb] was that of Philip II, father of Alexander the Great, who was assassinated in 336 B.C," said Eugene N. Borza, professor emeritus of ancient history at Pennsylvania State University. But recent analyses of the tombs and the paintings, pottery, and other artifacts found there, suggest that the burials are in fact one ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 May 2008 09:20 PM AKDT
The Democratic National Convention is scheduled to begin in Denver in
just 111 days.
Merely the announced intention of the Democrat high command to exclude all of the delegates from Florida and Michigan for their states' disobedience in holding primaries early suggests that Denver may be as wild as Chicago in 1968 – though with much less actual blood in the streets. What is even more politically explosive is the growing possibility that neither candidates Barack Obama nor Hillary Clinton will arrive in Denver with enough votes to win the nomination before the balloting begins. That and reported threats from polled backers of both these candidates that if the other is nominated, they will not support the nominee. This is why there are reports of G.O.T.S.B. (Gore on the Second Ballot) with the former vice president and now Nobel Prize winner thought of as possibly prestigious enough to unite a savagely divided party. Given the result of the Pennsylvania Primary and the latest in Sen. Obama's Wright Crisis, there might be a possibility that the senator from Illinois will withdraw. Syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer asks: "How does one explain campaigning throughout 2007 on a platform of transcending racial divisions, while ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 May 2008 09:19 PM AKDT
By Jen Haberkorn
U.S. Coast Guard cutters sit unused at the shipyard in Baltimore after the costly Deepwater project encountered problems with extensions and cracked hulls. Commandant Adm. Thad Allen said problems were too numerous to repair when the vessels were decommissioned in 2006. (Katie Falkenberg/The Washington Times) Eight ships that were supposed to be the government's latest, best weapon for stopping terrorists, illegal immigrants and smugglers now float unused in a U.S. Coast Guard shipyard in Baltimore, the symbol of a nearly $100 million taxpayer debacle. Instead of patrolling, the ships were deemed unfit for the high seas after just a couple of months of use and eventually will be dismantled without ever fulfilling their promise. The Coast Guard hopes to finally put the problems with its much maligned "Deepwater" program behind it, taking ownership this month of a brand new 418-foot national security cutter that was built from scratch after contractors bungled the modernization of the earlier eight ships. Commissioning of the USCGC Bertholf will be the next major step in a 25-year, $24 billion project to extend the Coast Guard's reach further than ever before beyond U.S. shores. Taxpayers, however, won't see much benefit until the Bertholf ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 May 2008 09:14 PM AKDT
By Ryan Singel S
The government's new cyber-security "Manhattan Project" is so secretive that a key Senate oversight panel has been reduced to writing a letter to beg for answers to the most basic questions, such as what's going on, what's the point and what about privacy laws. The Senate Homeland Security committee wants to know, for example, what is the goal of Homeland Security's new National Cyber Security Center. They also want to know why it is that in March, DHS announced that Silicon Valley evangelist and security novice Rod Beckstrom would direct the center, when up to that point DHS said the mere existence of the center was classified. Those are just two sub-questions out of a list of 17 multi-part questions centrist Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Connecticut) and Susan Collins (R-Maine) sent to DHS in a letter Friday. In fact, although the two say they asked for a briefing five months ago on what the center does, DHS has yet to explain its latest acronym. The panel, noted it was pleased with the new focus on cyber security, but questioned Homeland Security's request to triple the center's cyber-security budget to about $200 million. They cited concerns about the ... more »
by
Publisher
on Tue 06 May 2008 08:56 PM AKDT
MICHAL LANDO,
Jewish activists are hailing the overwhelming decision by the United Methodist Church to abandon efforts to divest from companies that allegedly contribute to Israel's occupation of the West Bank. Five divestment resolutions were shot down at the United Methodist Church General Conference in Texas last week, after a protracted campaign by Jews to halt the effort. The resolutions called on the denomination to identify companies that profit from sales of products or services that "harm the Palestinians and Israelis" and begin a phased divestment from them. Firms targeted included Caterpillar, which manufactures tractors used to raze Palestinian homes and olive groves, and Motorola, which manufactures security systems. "I think this general conference is an important and positive milestone," said Ethan Felson, the associate executive director of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, a public policy umbrella group. "We clearly have many friends and have made many friends community by community, and that's a lot of what this is about." Though the recent decision is a "turning point," said Felson, the divestment campaign, once thought to be dormant, is still active among mainstream Protestant churches. A 2004 decision to begin a phased divestment by the Presbyterian Church was amended ... more » |
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