Diplomatic List 2012
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General Assembly 9 February 2018
United Nations A/72/CRP.1 General Assembly 9 February 2018 English only List of delegations to the seventy-second session of the General Assembly The information in this document is presented as submitted by delegations, without formal editing. I. Member States ................................................... 4 BURUNDI ........................................................ 27 AFGHANISTAN ................................................. 4 CABO VERDE ................................................. 28 ALBANIA ........................................................... 5 CANADA ......................................................... 29 ALGERIA ........................................................... 6 CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC ................... 30 ANDORRA ......................................................... 7 CHINA ............................................................. 31 ANGOLA ............................................................ 8 COLOMBIA ..................................................... 33 ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA .............................. 9 COSTA RICA ................................................... 34 ARGENTINA .................................................... 10 COTE D'IVOIRE .............................................. 35 ARMENIA ........................................................ 11 CROATIA ......................................................... 36 AUSTRALIA .................................................... 12 CUBA .............................................................. -
Chanukah Celebrations Abound
Jewish Federation of Reading Non-Profit Organization Jewish Cultural Center U.S. Postage PAID PO Box 14925, Reading, PA 19612-4925 Permit No. 2 www.ReadingJewishCommunity.org Reading, PA Change Service Requested Jewish Federation of Reading Non-Profit Organization Jewish Cultural Center U.S. Postage PAID JewishPO Box Federation 14925, Reading, of Reading PA 19612-4925 Non-Profit OrganizationPermit No. 2 Jewishwww.ReadingJewishCommunity.org Cultural Center U.S. PostageReading, PAID PA POChange Box 14925, Service Reading, Requested PA 19612-4925 Permit No. 2 www.ReadingJewishCommunity.org Reading, PA Change Service RequestedSHALOM The Journal of the Reading Jewish Community Published as a community service by the Jewish Federation of Reading, Pa. JewishVolume Federation 40 of No.Reading 3 MARCH 2010 Adar-NisanNon-Profit Organization 5770 Jewish Cultural Center U.S. Postage PAID PO Box 14925, Reading, PA 19612-4925 Permit No. 2 www.ReadingJewishCommunity.orgINSIDE Reading, PA Change Service RequestedSHALOM1100 Berkshire Boulevard The Journal ofSHALOM the Reading JewishIt’s been Community an Publishedincredible as a community year. service Hope by you’ve the Jewish beenFederation here! of Reading, Pa. TThehe JJournalournal ofof the ReadingIt is hardJewish to believe Community.Community that a year Published Published has gone as as by a a since community community we relocated service service to the by by Jewish the the Jewish Jewish Cultural Federation Federation Center at of1100 of Reading, Reading, Berkshire Pa. Pa. Volume 40 No.Boulevard 5 in Wyomissing. If you haven’tMAY been here,2010 we hope to see you in the very near future.Iyar-Sivan For those of you 5770 who VolumeVolume 45, 40 No. -
Western Suicide Via Anti-Semitism
CANADIAN INSTITUTE FOR JEWISH RESEARCH L’I NSTITUT CANADIEN DE RECHERCHES SUR LE JUDAÏSME .. IDecembeSRAFAXr 3, 2018 25 Kislev 5779 Volume XXVII, Number 297 e t t e z a G t s o P / y e l m i W a r d n a x e l A : o t o h P P.O. Box 175, Station H, Montreal, Quebec H3G 2K7 Tel: (514) 486-5544 Fax: (514) 486-8284 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.isranet.org Editorial Jerusalem: City of Peace Fiddling on the Roof: Coping With Baruch Cohen the Old, and the New, Anti-Semitism O Jerusalem, shining and bright Frederick Krantz Embraced forever with your people’s love On Wednesday, 14 November, the New York Times recounts, at the end of the O my people, I would sing my heart first act of Fiddler on the Roof at the Hippodrome Theater in Baltimore, Md., On this night of glory after Russian antisemites stage a pogrom against residents of a Jewish shtetl cel - My city of love on whose ebrating a wedding , a man jumped up in the balcony, repeatedly yelling “Heil Hills my father Abraham’s Hitler! Heil Trump!”. Painful trial Several theater-goers feared a mass shooting—the Pittsburgh synagogue mur - The tears of generations of my people ders, after all, occurred only a short time before. One man, “frightened and dis - Have not dared extinguish turbed”, shrank in his seat, fearing that “this guy [may have] a gun”. Another, The flames of eternal sacrifice noting that several audience members ran for the exits, said “I was waiting to The flames of infinite love. -
KIVUNIM Academic Program 2018-19
KIVUNIM ACADEMIC PROGRAM 2018-2019 STUDY THE PAST • EXPERIENCE THE PRESENT • BUILD THE FUTURE 300 Central Park West Suite 12J2 New York, NY 10024 917-930-3092 Israel Office: Beit Shmuel. 6 Eliyahu Shama Street, Jerusalem 94108 [email protected] WWW.KIVUNIM.ORG BUILDING WORLD CONSCIOUSNESS Page 2 Table of Contents INTRODUCTION 3 MISSION STATEMENT 4-5 TEACHING ON KIVUNIM 6-7 ACADEMIC PROGRAM – Credit Assignment 8 CIVILIZATION AND SOCIETY: HOMELANDS IN EXILE? 8 Unit I -- Ancient & Modern Greece * Bulgaria * Albania 11 Unit II - Islam ……………………………………………………………………….…21 Unit III - India……………………………………………………………………..….…22 Unit IV - Medieval Spain…………………………………………………………..….26 Unit V - Morocco…………………………….…………………………………..…….30 Unit VI - Eastern & Central Europe: Germany • The Czech Republic * Italy…………………………………………………………………….………34 LAND, PEOPLE, IDEAS: THE CHALLENGES OF THE MIDDLE EAST 41 ARABIC AND HEBREW LANGUAGES 64 Arabic Language………………………………………………………………………65 Arabic Language and Culture……………………………………..………………..69 Hebrew Language……………………………………………………………………..73 VISUAL THINKING: THE ART OF SEEING 80 KIVUNIM AND THE ARTS: MUSEUMS / MUSIC / FILM 85 AGENTS OF SOCIAL CHANGE 89 SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY 97 ISRAEL PROGRAMMING: ENCOUNTERING THE COMPLEXITIES OF ISRAEL……………………..….…103 YEDIAT HA’ARETZ: Exploration of the physical Israel……………………….106 ARAB-JEWISH CO-EXISTENCE EDUCATION AND EXPERIENCE…………..114 FACULTY AND STAFF BIOGRAPHIES……………………………………………118 Page 3 INTRODUCTION KIVUNIM combines a universal international education with a more particularistic Jewish education through an intensive academic and experiential encounter with Middle Eastern, North African, Asian and European cultures (Greece, Albania, Bulgaria, Turkey, India, Morocco, Portugal, Spain, Germany, the Czech Republic, Italy, and Israel). KIVUNIM enhances the development of students’ leadership abilities while expanding their world-consciousness and their knowledge of cultures and traditions of peoples from around the world. -
Arabs in Israel
Arabs in Israel Israel, an Apartheid state – IS IT SO ?!? The text was written and the images were selected by Aron Albahari Introduction As of early 2013, the total population of Israel has been about eight million people. About six million among them are Jews (75 percent), around 1,300,000 Muslim Arabs, 150,000 Christian Arabs, 140,000 Druze, 60,000 Bedouins, whereas 350,000 people belong to the ‘others’ category (non-Arab Christians, Circassians, Armenians, etc.). Both formally and legally, as Israeli citizens, they have equal rights and obligations, and this, naturally, also applies to Arabs. The only obligation that does not apply to Arabs is military service, except if they wish to opt for it. Although they are Muslims, Druze, Bedouins and Circassians do serve the military service. Since May 14, 1948, and the formation (reinstatement) of Israel as a state, despite political and other connotations regarding the relationship between the Arabs and Israeli Jews typical of this period, the Arab population in Israel has grown in number by ten times, or by more than 1000 percent: from 190,000 to about two million. One of the major reasons for this has been the overall standard and quality of life within the Israeli society and state, regardless of personal affinities, political or other views and attitudes and an individual’s experience of the life in the predominantly Jewish society. Compared to other Arabs living in 22 Arab Muslim countries, the Israeli Arabs, as the largest non-Jewish population in Israel, have on average the longest life expectancy (both men and women), the lowest mortality rate among the newborns, the lowest illiteracy rate and the highest rate of university-educated people (both among men and women). -
Rabbisconnect 5777 Rosh Hashanah
1 Israel and the Power of Our Storiesi A Sermon for Second Day Rosh Hashanah By Rabbi Susan Grossman Beth Shalom Congregation www.beth-shalom.net Shanah Tovah I remember when I was very little, my father of blessed memory brought home a few oranges. They were the biggest oranges I had ever seen. But that is not what made them special. What made them special was they were Jaffa Oranges. They had come all the way from Israel. I lifted the orange to my nose and smelled it. To my young self, I was smelling the Holy Land. As I ate a slice, I was miraculously, if only momentarily, transported to the land of miracles. This was in the early 1960s. Israel had only recently been born on the heels of the destruction of six million Jews in the Holocaust. My parents viscerally understood, deep in their gut, why a Jewish State was necessary. They knew that if Israel had existed in the 1930s or 40s, the Holocaust never would have happened. Israel would have accepted the refugees the rest of the world rejected and would have bombed the rail lines to Auschwitz the Americans had refused to bomb. They had heard their grandparents’ stories of a Europe for centuries rife with violent anti-Semitism so they knew my brothers and I were safer, even in the U.S., because the Jewish State had been reborn. Most of us in this sanctuary never knew a time in our lives in which Israel did not exist. For most of us, rising anti-Semitism is not a daily experience. -
Alterity As a Perspective for Peace
Sociology Study, January 2015, Vol. 5, No. 1, 53‐59 D doi: 10.17265/2159‐5526/2015.01.006 DAVID PUBLISHING Ubuntu: Alterity as a Perspective for Peace Flora Strozenberga, Willis Santiago Guerra Filhoa, Luiz Otávio Ferreira Barreto Leitea, Edna Raquel Santos Hogemanna, Milanna Nagiba, Hellen Cristina Silva de Oliveiraa, Matheus Novais da Silvaa, Ana Carolina Antãoa Abstract This paper looks for deepening the connections among peace, intercultural dialogue, and communalism in the light of Ubuntu, an ethical concept that emphasizes the alliances constructed between people and the relations established by them, and is seen as fundamental to the African thought of the groups that adopt Bantu languages. It develops an original exercise in diatopical hermeneutics—a methodology proposed by Raimon Panikkar, taking as the main goal to approach the Western ethical and political thought to the epistemic and ontological category of Ubuntu, recognized in the Zulu maxim umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu (a person is a person through other persons). It chooses as the basis of such study some contemporary thinkers as Lévinas, Bauman, Ramose, Chuwa, Kunene, and Nussbaum, who show a common concern with reverting a context of war and disregard of the integrity of human beings, connected to an ethics of alterity, zealous of the values of conviviality and respect for the cultural differences. It reveals the political dimension of Ubuntu and the impacts of this conception on the process of facing the problems of human rights in post Apartheid South Africa. Grounded on such transdisciplinary reflexion, it tries to point through a path to the implementation of policies for peace based on interculturality and communalism within different cultures. -
Jews of Former Cossack Fort Irkutsk Mark 200 Years of Prosperity And
NCSEJ WEEKLY TOP 10 Washington, D.C. November 21, 2018 Jews of Former Cossack Fort Irkutsk Mark 200 Years of Prosperity and Persecution By Rossella Tercatin Times of Israel, November 17, 2018 https://www.timesofisrael.com/jews-of-former-cossack-fort-irkutsk-mark-200-years-of-prosperity-and- persecution/ Today, this frigid city of just over half a million in eastern Siberia is best known for being a convenient starting point from which to visit Lake Baikal — a popular destination for hiking and winter sports a short 70 kilometers (43 miles) away that contains one-fifth of the world’s unfrozen fresh water. But Irkutsk also holds the key to an unexpected piece of Jewish history spanning back over two centuries. Irkutsk’s first Jew on record, a merchant named Israel Fershter, arrived in the city located off the silk road in 1818. Founded in 1661 as a Cossack garrison, at the beginning of the 19th century Irkutsk was a cultural and intellectual hub for elites sent into exile for their part in the Decembrist revolt against Tsar Nicholas I. The city was also well on its way to becoming a prominent commercial center. Officially, no Jews were allowed to reside in Siberia — or anywhere in the Russian Empire outside of the Pale of Settlement, an area established in 1791 which included parts of today’s Poland, Ukraine and Latvia, as well as Belarus, Lithuania and Moldova. Practically though, there were exceptions. Not only did Fershster move to Irkutsk, but he also set out to put together a minyan — a quorum of 10 adult men necessary for public prayer according to traditional Judaism. -
Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR LIST MINISTRY FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF ICELAND DEPARTMENT OF PROTOCOL REYKJAVÍK December 2013 2 MINISTRY FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS Raudarárstígur 25 IS-150 Reykjavík ICELAND Open: 08:30-16:00 (Mon-Fri) (GMT all year around) Tel.: (+354) 545 9900 Tel.: (+354) 545 9925 (Emergency No. - outside office hours) Fax: (+354) 562 2373 / 562 2386 e-mail: [email protected] / [email protected] Website: www.mfa.is / www.utn.stjr.is PROTOCOL DEPARTMENT Dir. Tel.: (+354) 545 9920 Dir. Fax: (+354) 552 6247 e-mail: [email protected] 3 CONTENTS Ambassadors in order of Precedence .................................................................4 Diplomatic Missions and Consulates ................................................................. 13 Other Missions and Representations .............................................................. 165 National Days .................................................................................................. 167 Icelandic Flag Days 2014-2017 ....................................................................... 170 Icelandic National Holidays 2014-2017 ........................................................... 171 4 Order of precedence of Heads of Missions *Russian Federation His Excellency Mr Andrey Vasilyevich Tsyganov (Dean of the Diplomatic Corps) 23.03.2010 - - - - - - - - - - - - Cape Verde His Excellency Mr Olívio Melício Pires 11.02.2003 El Salvador His Excellency Mr Martin Rivera Gómez 26.10.2005 Argentina His Excellency Mr Juan Manuel Ortiz de Rozas 11.10.2006 State of Qatar -
Jesus Christ! Election
ECRWSS Liberty News & Views Recording history as it happens and keeping you informed! Over 1.5 million free news papers mailed! Page POSTAL CUSTOMER PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE 44146 & 44139 PAID CLEVELAND, OH PERMIT # 406 July 2017 & Views LIBERTYDeclaration of Independence 1776: We hold these truths to be self-evident,NEWS that all men (and women) are created equal, that they are Liberty News & Views Established 1984 endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. Happy 4th of July America: of the people, by the people and for the people! For all Back issues of Liberty New & Views go to: www.Libertyohio.org Trump Lays Out the SHOCKING Truth About Commencement Address from Bedford High School Obamacare – Are You Listening? Principal Samuel J. Vawters at the Cleveland State President Trump said that Americans who have been University Wolstein Center June 1, 2017 struggling to make ends meet under the tyrannical law of Obamacare should be furious at Democrats, who have formed an Welcome to Bedford High School’s 132nd commencement. ironclad coalition to oppose any effort to make American health care We ask that family members better for business owners, families, and individuals suffering under remain seated throughout the current state of affairs. Trump, after meeting with two Wisconsin the ceremony. Board families who have been through hell and back because of Obama’s President Mr. Stevens, failed experiment in socialized healthcare, said it was now up to the members of the board of Donald J. Trump Senate to do everything possible to put a reform bill on his desk education, Superintendent 45th President of the before things get worse. -
Armenian-Azerbaijani Conflict Over Nagorno-Karabakh: Geopolitical Implications
Maj Gen P K Mallick, VSM (Retd) | 1 Armenian-Azerbaijani Conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh: Geopolitical Implications Maj Gen P K Mallick, VSM (Retd), Consultant, VIF © Vivekananda International Foundation Published in 2021 by Vivekananda International Foundation 3, San Martin Marg | Chanakyapuri | New Delhi - 110021 Tel: 011-24121764 | Fax: 011-66173415 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.vifindia.org ISBN: 978-81-952151-3-3 Follow us on Twitter | @vifindia Facebook | /vifindia Cover Image: Armored personnel carriers of the Russian peacekeeping forces drive along a road near Lachin in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, on November 13, 2020. | Reuters All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the publisher. Contents Foreword 5 Abstract 7 Introduction 9 Part 1: Background 13 Part 2: Clash of Civilisations? 22 Part 3: The Geopolitical Dimension 25 Part 4: The Cease Fire Deal 30 Part 5: The Stakeholders 44 Conclusion 85 Foreword The region of Nagorno-Karabakh is sandwiched between Iran, Turkey, Russia and Georgia. It lies at an intersection of political, ethnic and religious borders. At stake in this conflict is Russian, Turkish and Iranian regional influence, an ethnic battle with memories of genocide and a religious component of Christian Armenia, Shia Azerbaijan and Sunni Turkey. Samuel Huntington’s theory of “Clash of Civilizations?” has come into focus. Religiously, Azerbaijan is more closely related to Iran as both are Shia-majority countries, unlike the Sunni-majority Turkey. -
Ministry of Foreign Affairs State Protocol Department
REPUBLIC OF AZERBAIJAN MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS STATE PROTOCOL DEPARTMENT DIPLOMATIC LIST BAKU, 2019 DIPLOMATIC LIST EMBASSIES CONTENTS ALPHABETICAL ORDER OF THE MISSIONS AFGHANISTAN ............................................................................................. 16 ALBANIA ........................................................................................................ 17 ALGERIA ........................................................................................................ 18 ANGOLA ......................................................................................................... 19 ARGENTINA .................................................................................................. 20 AUSTRALIA ................................................................................................... 21 AUSTRIA ......................................................................................................... 22 BAHRAIN ........................................................................................................ 23 BANGLADESH ............................................................................................... 24 BELARUS ........................................................................................................ 25 BELGIUM ....................................................................................................... 26 BENIN .............................................................................................................. 27 BOSNIA AND