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תמונת הפרופיל של DAVID YECHOUAתמונת הפרופיל של jesuskommtbald70תמונת הפרופיל של Diana Brown
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+Diana Brown JESUS MESSIAH WILL BE CARPENTER...
👑THE LORD GOD 👑 REGNED AND BE 👑KING👑 OF NATIONS
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Michael Schobel

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
#Palestine   #Israel  .
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Palestinian woman shot and killed after alleged stabbing attempt north of Jerusalem
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תמונת הפרופיל של mary jo dodd
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Michael Lederman

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Get To Know Israel
#gettoknowisrael   #saudiarabia   #egypt   #palestinians   #israel  
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תמונת הפרופיל של ishaan sharma

Sabina Tariq

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
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תמונת הפרופיל של George Bootheתמונת הפרופיל של Really?
2 תגובות
 
Therefor, resisting a resistance is admirable!!
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Michael Lederman

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
We Support Israel... Sia
#wesupportisrael   #israel   #sia   #australia  
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Michael Lederman

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Get To Know Israel
#gettoknowisrael   #israel   #egypt   #electricity  
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Michael Lederman

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
The History Of Palestine Israel
#thehistoryofisrael   #israel  
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Hananya Naftali

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Chilling by the Western Wall. 😊 #Israel 
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46
תמונת הפרופיל של purplestareye Karen Jonesתמונת הפרופיל של leah aתמונת הפרופיל של Aceng Mildrenתמונת הפרופיל של Holy Jonson
7 תגובות
 
Hello my sister Leah a
How are you dear?
I hop everything well.
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Sibby

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Hospitals in Israel are no longer the 'moral space' free from discrimination that they claim to be.

Step 1: A scoop is born

On 29 March, a reporter revealed that some Israeli maternity wards segregate Jewish mothers from Arab ones after birth. In some hospitals, the staff talk about the practise in code, referring to Jewish mothers as “our own” as in: “I am bringing up from the delivery room to the ward one of our own."  Arab women are: “A (Arabic) speaker,” as in: “I am bringing to the ward an A speaker.”

Step 2: Thank god for the racist

The reaction was one of shock and disgust - on the whole. However Bezalel Smotrich, deputy speaker of the #Knesset, did not see anything wrong because, in his words “after giving birth, my wife wants to rest, she doesn’t want noisy visitors and parties.” For anyone doubting his meaning, he later clarified that “my wife would not want to lay next to someone who just gave birth to a baby that will want to murder her baby in 20 years.”

Step 3: The cleansing

Once out in mainstream media, everyone was appalled by what this racist member of the Knesset had said and felt good about themselves. We are not racists, we would never say anything so disgusting. Even the head of his own party said that he was shocked. He had just nursed his sick father in the hospital, who lay next to an Arab patient. They shared the same fate and desire to get well.

Step 4: Denial

In hospital we are all equal, or so we all believe. Hospitals are seen as a safe haven and to a large degree they are. As the debate continued, I was worried that the focus would remain on the comments of one racist, who would be outcast, thus allowing the rest of us to cleanse ourselves. In the process the more important debate about institutional racism and discrimination would be neglected.

It is easy to talk about “the ugly racist”. It is more complicated to talk about the system. Even medical professionals keep silent and buy into the myth that the “hospital is a moral space”.  It is not considered racist when patients ask to be with people who are ‘like them’. And what if a Jewish patient asks not to be treated by an Arab doctor or nurse? Is that where we are heading? 

Step 5: The role of media

Public radio picked up the debate and did not let it die. Morning news shows interviewed medical professionals and human rights activists. The racist MP opened the door to a discussion that refuses to be silenced.

Step 6: Learning about the issue

Separation is not new. I encountered it when I gave birth 20 years ago. Without asking, I was brought to the “Jewish room”. It was in the news in 2006, and again in 2012, following an extensive inquiry. In 2013 the Israeli human rights organisation Physicians for #HumanRights (PHR) conducted an investigation on separation in maternity wards which followed with an official complaint to the Israeli Medical Association. The written answer PHR received was that the association checked with the hospitals and there is no policy of separation. They wrote that women are given rooms according to their medical needs and not according to their identity. The association sees equality as an important value in the public medical services…in March 2016 PHR published a brave report called Racism in Medicine, including a chapter on maternity wards.

It seems that the health institutions are not ready to deal with the information that is being presented to them.

Separation is the symptom of a much bigger problem  - racist practices in public medicine. The PHR report describes racist practices in medicine through the years. Their report mentions the involvement of medical staff in the kidnapping of Yemenite-Jewish babies in the early 1950s, discriminatory practices toward Ethiopian-Jewish women, concerning birth control methods, and more.

Unlike some laws in Israel, in the field of health the letter of the law is clear - #discrimination of any kind is forbidden. The problem is not with the laws but with the gap between the #laws and daily life. When I say daily life, I am not referring to unfortunate, marginal incidents but to ongoing, unspoken practices.

The reason the issue of separation came up specifically with maternity wards is that hospitals compete over women who give birth. This is a good income for the hospitals, and in their attempt to get more “clients”, they try to  cater for women’s every desire, Including separate rooms.

Step 7: Separate but not equal

What have we learned? We learn that “separate but equal” does not work. It never did, and it’s a myth. The picture that was exposed is the tip of deeper discrimination. In her research on inequality in public health, Dr Nihaya Daoud showed how in Israel, like in other developed countries, there are ethnic gaps in health between the majority group and minority groups, be they indigenous, immigrant or gender minorities. She suggests that the first step is to acknowledge these gaps, and then to try and close them.

Her research showed that In #Israel, the health of Arab citizens has become better in the last decade. At the same time, the gaps between Jewish citizens and Arab citizens have become wider. The gaps are especially high when we look at infant #mortality, chronic diseases, and life expectancy.

Step 8: Some recognition

The racist of the week helped.  One week into the row,  the #Ministry of Health announced that it will call hospital directors to a meeting on the matter. Two weeks into the storm a parliament committee conducted an emergency meeting on the issue. This is when we learned that in addition to Jewish women who ask not to be with #Arab women, Arab women also ask for separate rooms because they are afraid of #Jewish women.  Religious Jewish women ask not to be with secular Jewish women, and white Jewish women ask not to be next to black women. The notion we got from the discussion was that if everyone wants it, it’s not racism.

Step 9: Local activism

One month later PHR together with a campaigning organization for social and political change put up a billboard against separation in one specific hospital.  After 24 hours the city council where the hospital is located asked to put the sign down because “it is offensive”.

Step 10: Acknowledgment

There is no doubt that the discussion was deeper and longer this time around. 

The Ministry of Health may have realised something about the symptoms, but has not acknowledged the problem. If the state discriminates, it is not likely that the health services will be remain immune from the overall toxic atmosphere. It seems that the ministry is waiting quietly for the issue to die. Seeing the depth of denial when it comes to racism, the ministry has a good reason to wait. We will probably need more than a good investigation, a morning radio show and a racist to create meaningful change.
#Racism #FreePalestine


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תמונת הפרופיל של aysha qamar
 
Dirty names .
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Michael Schobel

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
#Palestine   #Israel  .

An Israeli court ruled to end the administrative detention of hunger-striking Palestinian prisoner Sami Janazreh, the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society (PPS) said on Monday.
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Israeli court rules to end administrative detention for Palestinian hunger striker
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Max Coutinho

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
The International Law does not support the claim that #Israel  is occupying its own land, period. Saying otherwise is sheer intellectual dishonesty and cheap politics.
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Max Coutinho

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
#Israel   #LevyReport  
"Can socialists be trusted and was it truly PM Netanyahu's intention to work directly with them? The answer is no. Socialist can't be trusted because – along with their international friends – they have built an incredible anti-Israel industry over the years; an industry that involves huge amounts of donation money and widespread interests in Europe, the US, South Africa, New Zealand and Arab States."
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Is Israel Finally Implementing The Levy Report?
Prime Minister Netanyahu is seeking to broaden his coalition and to that effect he first invited Yitzkhak Herzog (Labour Party) and then re-invited Avigdor Liberman (Yisrael Beiteinu) to form a unity government. At first glance, these political manoeuvres i...
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Prime Minister Netanyahu is seeking to broaden his coalition and to that effect he first invited Yitzkhak Herzog (Labour Party) and then re-invited Avigdor Liberman (Yisrael Beiteinu) to form a unity government. At first glan...
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תמונת הפרופיל של Ariane Rabineauתמונת הפרופיל של Hannah Morganתמונת הפרופיל של Diana Brownתמונת הפרופיל של David Taylor
2 תגובות
 
And everywhere.
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Sabina Tariq

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
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תמונת הפרופיל של George Bootheתמונת הפרופיל של anonymous bill
 
Hey baby! Why would you want to surrender when you have committed no crime? The Palestinians have to be like the Martin Luther King led civil rights movement, like the Ghandi led movement, because that is the only way to win. 
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Rick Clark

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
#InsideIsrael: the 'coup' against Israel’s army

Replacing Ya'alon with Lieberman is another step in efforts by Israel’s new right-wing political elite to take over the state

A military coup is a known political phenomenon in both ancient and recent history. The army storms the government's palace and takes control. Yet what happened last week in Israel, with the dismissal of defense minister Moshe “Bogy” Ya'alon and his replacement with Avigdor Lieberman, may be best described as a civilian coup by a right-wing political class against an army that stood in its way.

The process that led to the dramatic political events was a long one. Tomer Persico, an expert on religion and a keen observer of Israeli society, defined it as "people standing against the state", putting ethnocentric (Jewish) values above all others.

Ethnic belonging and not citizenship has become the essence of being an Israeli.  The old elites in the public sector or in the press or cultural circles, seen as custodians of the outdated republican-like ideas such as the rule of law or human rights, have been under constant attack.

For many years, the army, the most prestigious and unifying organ in Jewish-Israeli society, was relatively immune from this kind of criticism. Yet this has changed. During the last war on Gaza in the summer of 2014, Naftali Bennet, head of the Jewish Home party and one of the bearers of this new revolution, became an open opponent of the military high command and its political representative in government, then-defense minister Ya'alon.

Based on information - probably from middle-ranking commanders, many educated in national-religious institutions - Bennet vehemently criticised the army's behavior in Operation Defensive Edge, accusing it of withholding crucial information from the government and hesitating in tackling Hamas. The fact that the army openly warned the government against occupying Gaza was seen almost as an act of cowardice.

But Bennet's criticism, shared partly by then-foreign minister Lieberman, was met by a tight coalition between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on the one hand and Ya'alon and the high military command on the other. Both preferred a limited military operation and an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire over the more ambitious goal of toppling Hamas and disarming its attacking capabilities.

Big military operations

Yet they had different reasons for their positions. Netanyahu is not enthusiastic about big military operations because they endanger the status quo, which allows Israel to maintain its control over the West Bank and continue its settlement project. The army is reluctant for large-scale offensives because it has come to the conclusion that it cannot secure a clear victory in the current circumstances of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a lesson learned from successive operations in Gaza and elsewhere.

At the same time, the high military command estimates that the chances of a political solution to the conflict are slim to non-existent. The preferred option, therefore, is to keep the conflict at a low intensity.

In a way, Bennet was right in his criticism. Despite its overwhelming advantage over the Palestinians and its annual budget of more than $15bn, the Israeli army still searches for shortcuts in every military confrontation in which it participates.

Eventually, Netanyahu, Ya'alon and the army had their way in the summer of 2014 and a ceasefire was reached without toppling Hamas or occupying Gaza. But the Israeli elections last March that saw the formation of an exclusively right-wing government, without the participation the centrist Yesh Atid party of Yair Lapid, changed the balance of power.

The new generation within the right wing parties was determined not only to govern, as they have almost uninterrupted since 1977, but also to change the nature of the state's institutions according to their political perceptions.  They wanted to complete the process to which Persico referred: put the Jewish ethnos above the state and push aside values such as the rule of law, good government, human rights and even  army regulations.

Bennet himself was nominated as the coalition’s education minister and began a process of rewriting school textbooks, especially those focused on history and political science. His party mate Ayelet Shaked was nominated as justice minister and set out in a battle to reduce the powers of the High Court and the judiciary system as a whole. Together with other ministers from the ever-rightist ruling #Likud party, they initiated a set of laws aimed at restricting the activities of human rights organisations.

Heightened tensions

The outbreak of the violent events in the West Bank and #Jerusalem at the end of last year heightened tensions already inflamed between the new emergent right-wing elite and the army. The army, loyal to its philosophy of low-level conflict, tried to contain the events. Instead of retaliating against the Palestinian civilian population, Ya'alon and the army pushed to relieve the pressure by giving more permits to work in Israel, for example.

This policy proved efficient, as it probably helped prevent clashes from spreading to larger sections of the Palestinian society, but it remained highly unpopular among right-wing circles who expected the army to "shoot to kill" whenever a Palestinian dared to attack or confront Israeli soldiers or civilians in the West Bank and elsewhere.

The turning point occurred in #Hebron, where an Israeli soldier, El'or Azaria, shot and killed Abdel Fattah al-Sharif, a wounded Palestinian laying in the street who had allegedly tried to stab a soldier in the occupied city. The incident was filmed, the video clip circulated, and Azaria was quickly arrested and charged initially with murder.

Soon enough, the army and Ya'alon were grilled for prosecuting Azaria. The soldier became a sort of popular hero, who “did the right thing” - killing a Palestinian who dared to challenge Israel's control in the West Bank. Bennet confronted Ya'alon in government and Lieberman, then a backbench MP after refusing to join Netanyahu's new coalition, even participated in a demonstration outside the military court where Azaria's hearing were held.

Yet despite this pressure, Ya'alon and the army did not back off and insisted on bringing Azaria to trial. It was not only a moral question. The army, so it seems, also feared that if it let Azaria off the hook, it would encourage other soldiers to follow his example, endangering its low-intensity strategy towards Palestinians. But the right wing saw it as just another sign of the army's weakness towards the #Palestinians.

A speech by General #YairGolan, deputy chief of staff, on the eve of Remembrance Day for the #Holocaust proved to be the tip of the iceberg. *Golan warned that the “horrific processes” that developed in Europe and Germany before the Second World War “find remnants … among us” today.*

Any comparison between the current situation in Israel and #Nazi Germany usually raises a huge uproar in Israel, but this time it was worse. It came from the mouth of one of Israel's top generals. For the right wing, and even for Netanyahu, this was the proof they needed that the army, instead of “fighting the enemy”, had become too political, wading into the business of giving moral lessons to Israeli society.

The events that led to Lieberman's nomination were partly accidental. Netanyahu wanted to enlarge his government. The negotiations with the #Zionist Camp led by Isaac #Herzog failed and Lieberman was an easy option. But they also have a more profound meaning.

Israel's new elites

Lieberman, an emigrant from :Moldavia who served only a few months in the army in the quartermaster's store that oversees the distribution of supplies and provisions, is an exemplar representative of Israel's new elites. Ya'alon, a vouched secular raised in a Labor youth movement who spent many years in a kibbutz, is a typical representative of the old guard. Yehuda #Glick, who will replace Ya'alon in parliament, is the leader of the “Temple Mount Loyalists”, one of the prominent movements of the new, unapologetic, religious right wing. Another member of the new elites.

Yet the significance of this turn of events is not merely symbolic. By replacing #Yaalon with Lieberman, the new right wing is taking a big step towards overrunning the largest and maybe the final bastion of #Israel's state organs – the army. The fact that many of its low- and middle-ranking officers are already sympathisers of this new ethnocentric thinking will certainly facilitate this process.

A crucial question remains: What will the new right-wing elite do with this freshly gained trophy? Will it use it to annex areas in the West Bank, as Bennet has preached for many years, or to occupy the #Gaza Strip and wipe out #Hamas' rule, as Lieberman has suggested more than once? Or will these right-wing enthusiasts discover that there is no real military solution for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?

For the moment, it seems that Netanyahu has no intention of going the way indicated by Bennet, #Lieberman and the likes of them. He still prefers the status quo. But coups have a tendency of toppling the ones who initiated them. #Netanyahu may well become the victim of his own revolution. 

Meron Rapoport is an Israeli journalist and writer, winner of the Napoli International Prize for Journalism for a inquiry about the stealing of olive trees from their Palestinian owners. He is ex-head of the News Department in Haaertz, and now an independent journalist.

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

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Replacing Ya'alon with Lieberman is another step in efforts by Israel’s new right-wing political elite to take over the state
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תמונת הפרופיל של Elizabeth Halloway
 
naturally
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הוסף תגובה...

Rick Clark

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
To Russia With Love: Six Reasons That Avigdor Lieberman Being Named Israel’s Defense Minister Is a Very Big Deal Here

The Obama administration has remained silent regarding the political makeover of Netanyahu’s coalition government, which is set to put right-wing leader Avigdor Lieberman in charge of Israel’s defense ministry and push out Moshe Yaalon, a former military chief of staff and Likud party pragmatist, from the position he’d been holding since 2013.

But as the swap is being finalized in negotiations between the 'Likud and Lieberman’s Israel Beitenu party, both Washington and American Jewry are looking closely into the planned changes, which portend bigger consequences that just another cabinet reshuffle. Here are six reasons why:

1. As foreign minister, Lieberman was practically persona non grata in Washington:

Lieberman’s extreme positions on the Israel – Palestinian conflict and occasional threats against Arab countries in the region have made the Obama administration do its best to avoid any contact with Lieberman. Among other things, Lieberman has suggested bombing Egypt’s massive Aswan Dam in the event of a conflict with that state; he has suggested, though he later partially backtracked, stripping Arab citizens of Israel of their citizenship en masse and transferring them to a future #Palestinian state, and he has staunchly supported the expansion of exclusively Jewish Israeli settlements in the West Bank.

Avoiding Lieberman was no easy task given his previous position as foreign minister, the person formally in charge of U.S.-Israel relations. But with some creative thinking and practical maneuvering, a solution was found. Lieberman hardly visited Washington as foreign minister, and the Obama administration channeled the top-level policy dialogue to then defense minister Ehud Barak, who, thanks to his close ties to then secretary of state Hillary 'Clinton, served as de-facto foreign minister, at least when it came to Israeli-American relations.

2. After the falling out between Obama and Netanyahu, U.S.-Israel relations rely mainly on defense cooperation:

With the lack of any viable Middle East peace process and given the fraught relationship between the White House and Israel’s prime minister’s office, defense relations remained the most steady and functioning channel of communication between the two nations. President Obama and his administration often praise defense ties with Israel, and even Netanyahu and his aides acknowledged that when it comes to security and defense, the Obama administration has been just great. But will this last-standing pillar of the relationship remain intact with Lieberman as Israel’s top defense official? That remains to be seen. Ties between defense establishments on both sides are deep and multi-faceted, but much also depends on the personality and ideology of the person at the top.

3. Yaalon had his issues with the Obama administration, but learned to overcome:

Back in 2014, Moshe #Yaalon, known as a straight shooter who lacks a sense of diplomatic decorum, had some choice words for secretary of state John #Kerry, who was trying at the time to promote an #Israeli-Palestinian peace deal. He called him “obsessive and messianic” and suggested Kerry “win a Nobel Prize and leave us in peace.” The Obama administration offered its revenge several months later, when Yaalon visited Washington: The Israeli minister found closed doors at the White House and State Department and was not able to meet any senior official outside the Pentagon. But Yaalon and the Obama administration overcame the incident. The Israeli defense minister apologized, the Americans accepted and Yaalon went on to forge what former Pentagon official Dov Zakheim described as an “excellent relationship” with #defense secretary Ash Carter and his predecessor Chuck Hagel.

4. A huge challenge for Israeli-American defense relations is just around the corner:

Negotiations are have been underway for six months on a massive ten-year Memorandum of Understanding establishing new levels of military aid to Israel. The talks are in their final stage. As defense minister, Yaalon was a key player in negotiating the deal with the #Obama administration, and that task that will now shift to Lieberman. Given the significant differences still remaining between the two sides, on the size of the American aid package and how it can be used, negotiations will require delicate diplomacy and a measure of flexibility, not necessarily fields considered to be Lieberman’s forte.

5. Lieberman has shown a preference to Russia over the United States:

Soviet-born, Russian-speaking Lieberman has never made a secret of his desire to improve ties between Israel and Putin’s Russia. As doors shut in Washington, Lieberman focused his work as foreign minister on improving ties with Russia and found a warm welcome in the #Kremlin.

Lieberman has stressed that he does not view ties with Russia as a substitute to Israel’s alliance with the United States, but spoke frequently of the need to expand Israel’s circle of allies to include #Russia. With friction between #Washington and Moscow on the rise after the Russian invasion of Ukraine and its involvement in the Syrian civil war, Lieberman’s approach isn’t likely to buy him many friends in Washington.

6. He has a complicated relationship with American Jews:

At a high-profile forum in Washington last December, when asked whether he cared about the increasing alienation of young liberal American Jews from #Israel under its rightward drift and what he thought could be done about it, Lieberman answered forthrightly, “To speak frankly, I don’t care.”

In fact, Lieberman’s views on issues close to the heart of American Jews are all over the place. He does not come from a long tradition of ties with American Jewish institutions, but did manage to forge a working relationship with many in his years in politics.

Reform and Conservative leaders found in him, at times, a surprising ally in the battle over easing Israel’s strict Orthodox-controlled conversion rules. But then there were his views on the Israeli Arabs and his hallmark legislation proposing a mandatory “loyalty pledge” to the state, crafted with its #Arab citizens in mind, that turned off many liberal-leaning Jewish leaders.

He also reached out to the #Russian speaking #Jewish community in New York, a move that set him apart from most other top Israeli politician, but which was not followed by other actions to improve the community’s ties with #Israel.
 ·  תרגם
Avigdor Lieberman as Israeli Defense Minister is a big deal for U.S.-Israel relations and for American Jewry
1
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Michael Lederman

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Celebrate 68 Years Of Israel
#celebrate68yearsofisrael   #israel   #museums  
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Lucas Goodwin

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
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With a media blitz, the Islamic State has set its sights on Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula as the next shot at expanding its empire and establishing a base from which to attack neighboring Israel.
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Hananya Naftali

שותף באופן ציבורי  - 
 
Enjoying my Hummus in Tel Aviv. :) #Israel
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תמונת הפרופיל של Menorah Oתמונת הפרופיל של VERNA CROWTHER
2 תגובות
 
Pretty good analogy! Could be either. Here in Canada we have dips for everything (Hummus has become very common, here, too.).
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