Israel Fonasba Quality Standard Approvals Granted

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Israel Fonasba Quality Standard Approvals Granted 02/07/2018 FONASBA QUALITY STANDARD APPROVALS GRANTED FONASBA MEMBER ASSOCIATION: ISRAEL NO. HEAD COMPANY DATE AWARD ADRESS TELEPHON E-MAIL BRANCHES OFFICE 1 AA Shipping&Logistics Ltd Tel Aviv 29/04/2014 Tel Aviv, 6 Koifman str 972-3- [email protected] 5162388 2 A.Rosenfeld Shipping Ltd Haifa 19/05/2014 Haifa, 104 Ha'atzmauth 972-4- [email protected] Road 8613613 3 Allalouf & Co. Shipping Ltd Tel Aviv 23/03/2014 Tel Aviv, 6 Engel str 972-3- [email protected] Haifa 40 HaNamal str 5640202 Tel. 972-4- 8611811 Ashdod, Weizman str. Tel. 972-8- 8513333 4 Associated Maritime Agencies AMA Ltd Benei- 03/11/2013 Bnei Brak 1 Ben Gurion 972-3- [email protected] Haifa 31008, 2 Pal-Yam Brak Rd 5777555 Ave Tel. 972-4- 861100 [email protected] Ashdod, 3 HaBosem str Tel. 972-8- 8517900 5 Cargo Marine Ltd Tel Aviv 29/04/2014 Tel Aviv, 65 Yigal Alon 972-3- [email protected] Haifa, 2 Pal Yam Blvd str 5614131 972-4-8668090 6 Carmel International Shipping Services Haifa 23/03/2014 Haifa, 51 HaMeginim str 972-4- [email protected] Tel Aviv, 6 Kaufman str (1992) Ltd 8545454 Tel. 972-3- 5174311 Ashdod, 3 HaBosem str Phone 972-8- 8524811 7 Clipper Shipping Co. Ltd Haifa 19/05/2014 Haifa, 3 Bat Galim ave 972-4- [email protected] 8514297 8 Conmart (Ship Agents) Ltd Haifa 04/12/2013 Haifa, 54 HaMeginim str 972-4- [email protected] Ashdod, 27 Ha'Orgim 810880 str Tel. 972-8- 8620400 Herzelia, 11 Shenkar str Phone972-9- 8863000 9 Coral Maritime Services Ltd Haifa 03/11/2013 Haifa, Building 30, 972-4- [email protected] Ashdod, 27 Ha'Orgim MATAM center 8671266 str Tel. 972-8- 8520998 Tel Aviv, 6 HaTerutz str 10 Cosco Shipping Lines (Israel) Company Haifa 01/01/2017 Haifa, 51 HaMeginim str 972-73- [email protected] Tel Aviv, 6 Kaufman str 2016 Ltd 2631400 Tel. 972-73- 2631600 Ashdod, 3 HaBosem str Tel. 972-73- 2631500 11 Dynamic Shipping Services (DSS) Ltd Haifa 04/12/2013 Haifa, 3 Khayat str 972-4- agency@dynamic- Ashdod, Ashdod Port 8645745 shipping.com Tel. 972-8- 8524777 12 Arkor Shipping Ltd Haifa 04/12/2013 Haifa, 56 HaMeginim str 972-4- [email protected] Ashdod, 27 Ha'Orgim 8108822 str Tel. 972-8- 8620420 13 Gold Line Sipping Ltd Haifa 23/04/2014 Haifa, 16 HaBankim 972-4- [email protected] road 8562200 14 Green Shipping Ltd Haifa 14/05/2014 Haifa, HaBankim str 8 972-4- [email protected] 9507070 15 Israel Scandinavian Maritime Agency Ltd Haifa 04/03/2014 Haifa, 2 Khayat Square 972-4- [email protected] Ashdod, 35 Ha'Orgim 8643162/5 str Tel. 972-8- 8565117 16 J. Sassower Ltd Haifa 23/04/2014 Haifa, 37 HaAzmaut 972-4- [email protected] road 8608600 17 Kamor Shipping and Tanker Services Ltd Haifa 29/04/2014 Haifa, 53 HaMeginim str 972-4- [email protected] Ashdod, Ashdod Port 8681000 Tel. 972-8- 8530643 18 Lucy Borchard Shipping Ltd Tel Aviv 04/12/2013 Tel Aviv, 99 Ben Yehuda 972-3- [email protected] Haifa, 5 Pal Yam str str 5207500 Tel. 972-4- 8672295 Ashdod,Ashdod Port Build. 2 Tel. 972-8- 8532303 19 Maersk Israel Ltd Tel Aviv 29/04/2014 Tel Aviv, 65 Yigal Alon 972-3- [email protected] Ashdod, 3 HaBosem str str 6270000 Phone 972- 8 -86 28000 [email protected] Haifa, 2 Pal Yam Blvd Phone 972- 4- 86 19011 20 MSC ISRAEL Ltd Haifa 23/04/2014 Haifa, 157 Jaffa Road 972-4- [email protected] Bene Beraq, 1 Ben 8549000 Gurion str Tel. 972- 3- 5775500 [email protected] Ashdod, 3 Habosem Street Phone 972-8- 8511200 21 Mano Maritime Ltd Haifa 19/12/2016 Haifa, 2 Pal Yam blvd 972-4- [email protected] Ashdod, 11 Hamada 8606666 Street Phone 972-8- 8524011 22 Packer M Shipping Ltd Haifa 04/12/2013 Haifa, 54 HaMeginim str 972-4- [email protected] 8522527 23 Tiran Shipping (1997) Ltd Haifa 23/03/2014 Haifa, 44 Jaffo str 972-4- [email protected] Ashdod, 35 Ha'Orgim 8509000 str Tel. 972-8- 8633133 24 ZIM Integrated Shipping Services Ltd Haifa 14/05/2014 Haifa, Andrei Sakharov 972-4- [email protected] Tel Aviv, Karmanitzky str. 9 8652860 str. 6 Tel. Phone 972-3- 6255119 ZIM Israel Ltd Ashdod, Rear Port Area Tel. 972-8- 8511300 25 Crown Shipping Ltd Haifa 02/07/2018 Haifa, 2 Pal Yam blvd 972-4- Michael.Buber@crown-sh Ashdod, 11 Hamada 8606666 Street Phone 972-8- 8524011 רח. הנמל Hanamal St 55. ת.ד. P.O.B 33113. חיפה Haifa 31330 טל: Tele 04 8670455 פקס Fax 04 8670456 [email protected] l www.shipping.org.il ע.ר. 580005262 .
Recommended publications
  • The Effect of a National Lockdown in Response to COVID-19 Pandemic on the Prevalence of Clinical Symptoms in the Population
    medRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.27.20076000; this version posted December 28, 2020. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC 4.0 International license . The effect of a national lockdown in response to COVID-19 pandemic on the prevalence of clinical symptoms in the population *1,2 *1,2 *1,2 *1,2,3 *1,2 1,2 Ayya Keshet ,​ Amir Gavrieli ,​ Hagai Rossman ,​ Smadar Shilo ,​ Tomer Meir ,​ Tal Karady ,​ Amit 1,2 ​ 1,2 ​ 1,2 ​1,2 ​ 1,2 ​ 4 ​ 4 Lavon ,​ Dmitry Kolobkov ,​ Iris Kalka ,​ Saar Shoer ,​ Anastasia Godneva ,​ Ori Cohen, Adam Kariv ,​ Ori Hoch ,​ ​ 4 ​ 4 ​ ​5 5 ​ 2 6 ​ 4​ Mushon Zer-Aviv ,​ Noam Castel ,​ Anat Ekka Zohar ,​ Angela Irony ,​ Benjamin Geiger ,​ Yuval Dor ,​ Dorit Hizi ,​ 7 ​ 5, 8 ​ 1,2,☨ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Ran Balicer ,​ Varda Shalev ,​ Eran Segal ​ ​ ​ * Equal​ contribution 1 ​ Department of Computer Science and Applied Mathematics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel. 2 ​ Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel. 3 ​ Pediatric Diabetes Unit, Ruth Rappaport Children’s Hospital, Rambam Healthcare Campus, Haifa, Israel. 4 The​ public knowledge workshop, 26 Saadia Gaon st. Tel Aviv 5 ​ Epidemiology and Database Research Unit, Maccabi Healthcare Services, Tel Aviv, Israel. 6 School of Medicine-IMRIC-Developmental Biology and Cancer Research, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel. 7 ​ Clalit Research Institute, Clalit Health Services, Tel Aviv, Israel. 8 ​ School of Public Health, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
    [Show full text]
  • Israel National Report for Habitat III National Israel Report
    Israel National Report for Habitat III National Report Israel National | 1 Table of content: Israel National Report for Habitat III Forward 5-6 I. Urban Demographic Issues and Challenges for a New Urban Agenda 7-15 1. Managing rapid urbanization 7 2. Managing rural-urban linkages 8 3. Addressing urban youth needs 9 4. Responding to the needs of the aged 11 5. Integrating gender in urban development 12 6. Challenges Experienced and Lessons Learned 13 II. Land and Urban Planning: Issues and Challenges for a New Urban Agenda 16-22 7. Ensuring sustainable urban planning and design 16 8. Improving urban land management, including addressing urban sprawl 17 9. Enhancing urban and peri-urban food production 18 10. Addressing urban mobility challenges 19 11. Improving technical capacity to plan and manage cities 20 Contributors to this report 12. Challenges Experienced and Lessons Learned 21 • National Focal Point: Nethanel Lapidot, senior division of strategic planing and policy, Ministry III. Environment and Urbanization: Issues and Challenges for a New Urban of Construction and Housing Agenda 23-29 13. Climate status and policy 23 • National Coordinator: Hofit Wienreb Diamant, senior division of strategic planing and policy, Ministry of Construction and Housing 14. Disaster risk reduction 24 • Editor: Dr. Orli Ronen, Porter School for the Environment, Tel Aviv University 15. Minimizing Transportation Congestion 25 • Content Team: Ayelet Kraus, Ira Diamadi, Danya Vaknin, Yael Zilberstein, Ziv Rotem, Adva 16. Air Pollution 27 Livne, Noam Frank, Sagit Porat, Michal Shamay 17. Challenges Experienced and Lessons Learned 28 • Reviewers: Dr. Yodan Rofe, Ben Gurion University; Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • IDF Special Forces – Reservists – Conscientious Objectors – Peace Activists – State Protection
    Refugee Review Tribunal AUSTRALIA RRT RESEARCH RESPONSE Research Response Number: ISR35545 Country: Israel Date: 23 October 2009 Keywords: Israel – Netanya – Suicide bombings – IDF special forces – Reservists – Conscientious objectors – Peace activists – State protection This response was prepared by the Research & Information Services Section of the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) after researching publicly accessible information currently available to the RRT within time constraints. This response is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular claim to refugee status or asylum. This research response may not, under any circumstance, be cited in a decision or any other document. Anyone wishing to use this information may only cite the primary source material contained herein. Questions 1. Please provide information on suicide bombs in 2000 to January 2002 in Netanya. 2. Deleted. 3. Please provide any information on recruitment of individuals to special army units for “chasing terrorists in neighbouring countries”, how often they would be called up, and repercussions for wanting to withdraw? 4. What evidence is there of repercussions from Israeli Jewish fanatics and Arabs or the military towards someone showing some pro-Palestinian sentiment (attending rallies, expressing sentiment, and helping Arabs get jobs)? Is there evidence there would be no state protection in the event of being harmed because of political opinions held? RESPONSE 1. Please provide information on suicide bombs in 2000 to January 2002 in Netanya. According to a 2006 journal article published in GeoJournal there were no suicide attacks in Netanya during the period of 1994-2000. No reports of suicide bombings in 2000 in Netanya were found in a search of other available sources.
    [Show full text]
  • Israel (Includes West Bank and Gaza) 2020 International Religious Freedom Report
    ISRAEL (INCLUDES WEST BANK AND GAZA) 2020 INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT Executive Summary The country’s laws and Supreme Court rulings protect the freedoms of conscience, faith, religion, and worship, regardless of an individual’s religious affiliation. The 1992 Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty describes the country as a “Jewish and democratic state.” The 2018 Basic Law: Israel – The Nation State of the Jewish People law determines, according to the government, that “the Land of Israel is the historical homeland of the Jewish people; the State of Israel is the nation state of the Jewish People, in which it realizes its natural, cultural, religious and historical right to self-determination; and exercising the right to national self- determination in the State of Israel is unique to the Jewish People.” In June, authorities charged Zion Cohen for carrying out attacks on May 17 on religious institutions in Petah Tikva, Ashdod, Tel Aviv, and Kfar Saba. According to his indictment, Cohen sought to stop religious institutions from providing services to secular individuals, thereby furthering his goal of separating religion and the state. He was awaiting trial at year’s end. In July, the Haifa District Court upheld the 2019 conviction and sentencing for incitement of Raed Salah, head of the prohibited Islamic Movement, for speaking publicly in favor an attack by the group in 2017 that killed two police officers at the Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount. In his defense, Salah stated that his views were religious opinions rooted in the Quran and that they did not include a direct call to violence.
    [Show full text]
  • Asylum Seekers from Sudan and Eritrea - Situational Report, October 2020
    Physicians for Human Rights - Israel | Hotline for Refugees and Migrants | ASSAF-Aid Organization for Refugees and Asylum Seekers in Israel | The Association for Civil Rights in Israel | Worker’s Hotline | ARDC - African Refugee Development Center Asylum Seekers from Sudan and Eritrea - Situational Report, October 2020 “No Contracting State shall expel or return ("refouler") a refugee in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his life or freedom would be threatened on account of his race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion.” Article 33 in the International Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees According to the data of the Population and Immigration Authority there are currently 28,000 asylum seekers from Eritrea and Sudan residing in Israel (23,100 from Eritrea and 6,400 from Sudan). Israel recognizes that the lives of these refugees will be in danger if they are refouled to their countries of origin, and therefore has refrained from deporting them. Their residency in Israel in legal and regulated. They hold type 2A5 visas, which they must renew annually or every six months. Approximately 14,000 of the asylum seekers reside in south Tel Aviv. The rest (in considerably lower numbers) reside primarily in the cities: Ashdod, Eilat, Bnei Brak, Petah Tikva, Jerusalem and Beersheba. Despite having lived in Israel for nearly a decade (and some for more than this period) and despite the recognition that the asylum seekers would be in danger should they be deported to their countries of origin, Israel denies them recognition as refugees, and applications for asylum that have been submitted fail to be reviewed.
    [Show full text]
  • Regressing SARS-Cov-2 Sewage Measurements Onto COVID-19 Burden in the Population: a Proof-Of-Concept for Quantitative Environmental Surveillance
    medRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.26.20073569; this version posted May 1, 2020. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission. Regressing SARS-CoV-2 sewage measurements onto COVID-19 burden in the population: a proof-of-concept for quantitative environmental surveillance Itay Bar-Or1+, Karin Yaniv2+, Marilou Shagan2, Eden Ozer9, Oran Erster1, Ella Mendelson1,12, Batya Mannasse1, Rachel Shirazi1, Esti Kramarsky-Winter2, Oded Nir5, Hala Abu-Ali5, Zeev Ronen5, Ehud Rinott6, Yair E. Lewis7, Eran Friedler9, Eden Bitkover10 , Yossi Paitan11, Yakir Berchenko4* and Ariel Kushmaro2,3* 1 Central Virology Lab, Ministry of Health, Sheba Medical Center, Israel 2 Avram and Stella Goldstein-Goren, Department of Biotechnology Engineering, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel. 3 The Ilse Katz Center for Meso and Nanoscale Science and Technology, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Be'er Sheva 8410501, Israel. 4 Department of Industrial Engineering and Management, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer- Sheva 84105, Israel 5 Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research (ZIWR), Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Ben- Gurion University of the Negev, Sede Boker, 84990, Israel 6 Faculty of Health Science, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel 7 Faculty of Medicine, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Israel 8 Faculty of Civ. and Env. Eng., Technion-Israel Inst. of Technology; Haifa 32000, Israel 9 Department of Life Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel 10 Department of Chemical Engineering, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 32000, Israel 11 Clinical Microbiology Laboratory, Meir Medical Center, 44282, Kfar Saba, Israel.
    [Show full text]
  • Biale Rebbe of Bnei Brak Arrives in GREAT NECK
    Biale Rebbe of Bnei Brak arrives in GREAT NECK BS"D ONE OF ISRAEL'S GREATEST RABBIS, RENOWNED FOR HUNDREDS OF PHENOMENAL MIRACLES Its, happening again! Hardly a year has passed since the address. the Rebbe opened his door and his heart to the whole of klal yisrael. Welcoming them with his compassionate heart and Biale Rebbe of Bnei Brak has visited GREAT NECK, yet warm smile. People enter his room carrying a heavy load of troubles and worries however when they leave they are lighthearted and hundreds are excitedly anticipating the return of their hopeful. revered Rebbe. Although the Rebbe has been visiting Biale Chassidus' holy lineage stems from a holy sage named Rabbi Yaakov Yitzchok from Peshischa. This revered tzaddik lived some not one year and not two, annually for some years now, two hundred years ago and was known to all as the "holy Jew" – 'The Yid Hakadosh' from Peshischa. He was a disciple of the holy every year the sensation repeats itself. Every year when "Chozeh of Lublin" who was a direct fourth generation descendent of the holy Baal Shem Tov. The Yid Hakodosh was the greatest of the Rebbe arrives at the house where he lodges, the Polish Rabbis, Rabbi to the leaders of Gur, Kotzk, Alexander and other great luminaries. Generations of tzaddikim in succession place becomes a public source of attraction as continued the tradition of the "Yid Hakodosh". This chain was continued from father to son until the flame was kindled in our hundreds of people of various standards and types generation by the holy tzaddik and Rebbe – Reb Yechiel Yehoshua from Biale, may his holy memory be blessed.
    [Show full text]
  • Glinert Shilhav
    Language in Society 20, 59-86. Printed in the United States of America Holy land, holy language: A study of an Ultraorthodox Jewish ideology LEWIS GLINERT Department ofNear and Middle Eastern Studies School of Oriental & African Studies University of London YOSSEPH SHILHAV Department of Geography Bar llan University ABSTRACT This study explores the correlation between notions of language and ter­ ritory in the ideology of a present-day Ultraorthodox Jewish group, the Hasidim of Satmar, in the context of Jewish Ultraorthodoxy (Haredism) in general. This involves the present-day role of Yiddish vis-a-viS He­ brew. particularly in Israel. We first address the relative sanctity of a space that accommodates a closed Haredi lifestyle and of a language in which it is expressed, then contrast this with the absolute sanctity of the land of Israel and the language of Scripture both in their intensional (positive) and in their extensional (negative) dimensions, and finallyex­ amine the quasi-absolute sanctity with which the Yiddish language and Jewish habitat of Eastern Europe have been invested. Our conclusion is that three such cases of a parallel between linguistic and territorial ideology point to an intrinsic link. Indeed, the correlation of language and territory on the plane of quasi-absolute sanctity betokens an ongo­ ing, active ideological tie, rather than a set of worn, petrified values evoking mere lip-service. These notions of quasi-sanctity find many ech­ oes in reality: in the use of Yiddish and in the creation of a surrogate Eastern European lifestyle in the Haredi "ghettos." (Cultural geography, sociolinguistics, Judaism, Hasidism, religion, Israel, sociology of lan­ guage, Yiddish, sacred land, Hebrew, territory) ,This study addresses the ideology of a present-day Jewish Ultraorthodox l ,grouP.
    [Show full text]
  • Virtual Trade Mission to Israel
    Virtual Trade Mission to Israel May 17, 2012 11:00 AM – 12:30 PM EST Moderator: Jeff Wharton, IMPulse NC LLC, and Chair of the APTA Business Member International Business Development Subcommittee VTM Speakers: Michael Winter, Federal Transit Administration Alan Wielunski, U.S. Commercial Service, Tel Aviv Shlomo Katz, Yaki Perlstein, and Nadav Meroz, Ministry of Transport Itzhak Zuchman, NTA Mass Transit System Ilan Rozenfeld and Yevgeny Artsev, Israeli National Roads Company HELPING U.S. COMPANIES EXPORT U.S.-Israel Commercial Relations Alan Wielunski, Commercial Specialist, U.S. Embassy Tel Aviv U.S. Commercial Service The U.S. Commercial Service Israel, with offices in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, is part of the Department of Commerce’s worldwide network of approximately 200 offices. Our mission is to assist U.S. SMEs’ to export their products and services to Israel. Our staff are recognized experts in key industry sectors. During FY11, we helped U.S. companies generate about 100 export sales to Israel and the West Bank. Copyright US Commercial Services 2009 4 Israel at a Glance Population 8.1 million + 250,000 foreign workers Population growth rate: 2% vs 1% in USA 20% “secular” Jews; 55% "traditional" Jews; 17% Religious Affiliation: “religious zionists” and 8% “Haredi” Jews. 16% Muslims. 2% Christian (mostly Arabs) and 1.5 Druze Official Languages: Hebrew and Arabic Government: Parliamentary Democracy Year of Independence: 1948 GDP: About $241 billion Per capita GDP Almost $31,102 Crossroad for 3 Continents, Bordering the Geography Mediterranean Sea, between Egypt and Lebanon ICT, Pharma , Life sciences, Defense & Aerospace; Leading Industries Water Technologies Size Roughly the size of Silicon Valley / Bay Area.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Rabbi Elazar Ben Azarya and the Seder in Bnei-Brak by David
    Rabbi Elazar Ben Azarya and the Seder in Bnei-Brak By David Silverberg Towards the beginning of the maggid section of the seder we read the fifth Mishna of Masekhet Berakhot, which addresses the topic of zekhirat yetzi'at Mitzrayim – the obligation to make mention of the Exodus each day during the year: Rabbi Elazar ben Azarya said: Behold I am like seventy years old, and yet I was not privileged to mention the Exodus at nighttime, until Ben Zoma expounded [on the following verse]: "…in order that you remember the day you left Egypt all the days of your life" (Devarim 16:3) – "the days of your life" refers to the days, and "all the days of your life" refers to the nights. But the Sages said: "the days of your life" refers to this world, and "all the days of your life" serves to include the Messianic era. The Mishna records a debate between Ben Zoma and the other Sages in identifying the purpose served by the otherwise superfluous word "all" in the phrase, "all the days of your life" ( kol yemei chayekha ). Ben Zoma understood that the Torah here alludes to an obligation to verbally recall the Exodus even at nighttime, whereas the other Rabbis felt that the extra word serves to extend this obligation even to the Messianic era. Rabbi Elazar ben Azarya, the author of this Mishna, begins by expressing his bewilderment over his having never heard Ben Zoma's inference over the course of his many years of halakhic study. As a result, he lost the opportunity to mention the Exodus during the evening prayers for many years.
    [Show full text]
  • Letter from Israel Map������������������������������������4
    Letter from Israel Map 4 The Land 5 History 9 The State 16 People 21 Urban Life 23 Rural Life �������������������������� 27 Health 29 Social Services 32 Education 34 Science and Technology �������� 36 Economy 40 Culture and Leisure 46 And the children of Israel shall pitch their tents, every man by his own camp, and every man by his own standard. (Numbers 1:52) Israel in the World 54 Facts in Figures ������������������ 59 All stamps reproduced courtesy of the Israel Philatelic Service LEBANON Kiryt Shmona Golan Naharia Safed SYRIA Katzrin Akko Lake Haifa Galilee Kineret Mediterranean Sea Tiberias Nazareth Afula Beit She'an Map of the Holy Land by Gerard de Jode 1578 Hadera Jenin Samaria Natanya The Land Kalkilya Bnei Brak Nablus River Jordan Israel, land of the Bible and the historic homeland of the Tel Aviv – Yafo Petach Tikva Ariel Ramat Gan Jewish people, is situated in the Middle East, along the Bat Yam Holon eastern coastline of the Mediterranean Sea, and forms part Rishon Lezion Ramallah of a land bridge linking three continents: Asia, Africa and Ramallah Jericho Rehovot Europe. In this land, the Jewish people began to develop its Ashdod Jerusalem distinctive religion and culture some 4,000 years ago, and Ashkelon Beit Shemesh Bethlehem here it has preserved an unbroken physical presence, for Judea Gaza centuries as a sovereign state, at other times under foreign Hebron domination. Dead sea Netivot The total area of the State of Israel is 8,522.04 sq. miles Arad (22,072 sq.km.), of which 8,356.40 sq. miles (21,643 sq.
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae
    Date: January, 2015 Name: Miri Scharf CURRICULUM VITAE 1. Contact Information Office Telephone Number: 04-8249359 Cellular Phone: 0544-538806 Fax Number: 04-8240911 Electronic Address: [email protected] 2. Higher Education A. Undergraduate and Graduate Studies Period of Name of Institution Degree Year of Approval of Study and Department Degree 1977-1980 School of Social B.A 1980 Work, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel 1984-1989 School of Social M.A. 1989 Work, University of Haifa, Israel 1991- 1996 Department of Ph, D. 1996 Education, University of Haifa, Israel B. Post-Doctoral Studies . Period of Name of Degree Year of Completion Study Institution, Department and Host 1997-1998 Department of Post Doctoral 1998 Psychology, Bar Ilan Fellowship University, Ramat Gan, Israel - Prof. Shmuel Shulman 3. Academic Ranks and Tenure in Institutes of Higher Education 1 Dates Name of Institution and Rank/Position Department 1996-1997 University of Haifa, Faculty Instructor of Education 1998-2000 University of Haifa, Faculty Proposed rank - Lecturer of Education 2001-2004 University of Haifa, Faculty Lecturer of Education 2005-2013 University of Haifa, Senior Lecturer – tenure Department of Counseling and Human Development 2013- present University of Haifa, Associate Professor Department of Counseling and Human Development 4. Offices in University Academic Administration 2001-2009 Member of the Committee of the Teaching Department – Students’ affairs 2002-2004 Member of the B.A. Committee of the Department of Education 2003-2009 Coordinator of a new program of teaching certificate in psychology; developing the program, recruitment of suitable lecturers, disseminating information to students, and selecting suitable students.
    [Show full text]