Box Folder 41 2 Israel Education Fund. 1972

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Box Folder 41 2 Israel Education Fund. 1972 MS-763: Rabbi Herbert A. Friedman Collection, 1930-2004. Series H: United Jewish Appeal, 1945-1995. Subseries 4: Administrative Files, 1945-1994. Box Folder 41 2 Israel Education Fund. 1972. For more information on this collection, please see the finding aid on the American Jewish Archives website. 3101 Clifton Ave, Cincinnati, Ohio 45220 513.487.3000 AmericanJewishArchives.org The Israel Education Fund The Pre-Kindergarten Program of the Un ited Jewish Appeal ,I The Need The Israel Education Fund waseslabllshed In 196410 hel p provide despera tely needed comprehensive and vocational high schools lor the people of Israel. However, pioneering al/orts In pre­ kindergarten ed ucation In Israel have shown Ihallull ed ucal lonal lnleg ralion 01 a diverse population must slart before the primary level. It must beg in with pre-kinde rgarten schooling. Israeli ed ucators found that a child's ability to absorq quality ed ucation unm istakably starts al tha age of Ihree. It was further found thai a child of thai age who Is poorly stimulated with loys and games and Is not introduced to abstract concepts and Imagery In speech will be al a severe disadvantage. The " head-start" which pre-kindergarten training provides children Is crucial to thei r fu ture growth and Intellectual development. Starting children on the path to a meaningful education, as early as their first one or two years, is vital if they are to reach thei r potential and take advantage of fu tu re educational opportunities. Many children from areas In Asia and North Africa, requ ire a pre-kindergarten Introd uction to the world of learning If they are to keep up wi th the children from the educationally advan taged countries of the west. The Israet Educallon Fund Pre­ Kindergarten schools are designed to double as day care cenlers permlnlng mothers who must work the opporlunlty to become producllve citizens In a I dynamically growing country. Such ulllizalion of the pre-kindergarten schools has significant Impact on the living standards ot lam Illes using Israel Education Fund facilities. In effect, each school becomes a vital early life center for 70 boys and girls. Initially, the pre­ kindergarten program will only Involve three and lour yea r aids. But expansion to Include one and two year aids Is anticipated. It Is Ihe goal at the Israel Education Fund 10 provide al leasl one ctau room pre-kindergarten schoot In every development lawn and Imm igrant seclor. The Isra el Edu cation Fund seeks donors for 1,000 pre-kindergarten schools. All are needed within the next three yea rs. I 83 leel The minimum subscription is $100,000 for three schools. Classrooms are designed for maximum Total square leel: 2, 161 group and Individualized Instruction . Playground equI pment Is pl anned to encourage creative play . Each school Is equipped with a full working kitchen to provide one hot meal. Each school will have a protectrve sheller. The . EF WM .mblishld in 1964 10","1 I'" shOlU" 01 wfJIPfehln.lYl .... d VOQtlonJol IIlgh ilChOOlI In 1,,"1. Thl. i. whal rhe lund II .. lIOI;omplishld III 01 1971. Communlly CU II Utlr & .,. Youlh SPOilt Ki nd • •• 5<11001 L.IO ... , .. C."I... Fld"ll.. ,1111" r0111 Fec,1I1111 , , 65 COI'119II1«1 " " ". Feclllti•• undo, eonu",ellon 3 66 S,.,.lng wllhln 6 " " " mon,hl , 3 • " Sliti ing whhln , " on. v.... • " TOil' " " " 6 ". 260 Much 1TlOf. II needed 110_,. We mull p<ovlCM: 35 High School• • 1.000 Pt.... Kindl'plln., 2 l ib<ane... 20 Comtnunily Cuhut.. and Youth Cenl"I. 20 S4:IorIi Fecililift., 10 Communily ColleQOl'IIWIS FOIIII ScIlOOl •. The Illrael Educa tion Fund Philip Zin man, President 51 West 51s t Street New York, N. Y. 10019 A program of lhe United Jewish Appeal Israel Education Fund 01 the United Jewish Appeal Visitors Directory Spring 1972 Acre (7) Mizrs (23) Alula (25) Naharia (4) Arad (69) Nazaret lIIit (17) Ashdod (64) Nechalim (48) Ashkelon (66) Ness Ziona (57) Bat Yam (51 ) Neti vo t (70) Bee r Yaacov (59) Nuerim (32) Beersheba (73) Olakim (72) Bet Shean (21 ) Or Aklva (26) Bet Shemesh (58) Or Yehuda (50) Caesaria (28) Pardess Han na (27) Carmiel (8) Ramie (52) Dimona (74) Ramot Hasharon (38) Even Ha'azer (56) Ri shon Le Zion (54) Eilat (78) Rosh Ha'ayin (39) Emek Hayarden (24) Sated (6) Em ek Hefer (31) Sde Boker (76) Gaders (62) Shatlr (65) Ganel Tikva (45) Shderoth (68) Givat Brenner (60) Shfayim (34) Glvat Olga (30) Shlomi (3) Gival Shmuel (40) Tel Aviv (41 ) Givatayim (43) Tel Aviv-South (42) Hade ra (29) Tel Hai (1 ) Haifa (12) Tiberias (16) Hatzor (9) Tirat Carmel (18) Havat Hashomer (15) West Galilee (10) Herzliya (36) Yahud (49) Jaff a (44) Yavne (61 ) Jerusalem (55) Yavniel (22) Klar Satya (33) Yerucham (75) KlarSaba (35) Yilat (20) Kiryat Ata (14) Klryat Bi alik (13) Kiryat Gal (67) Kiryat Malachi (63) Klryat Ono (46) Kiry at Shemona (2) Ki ryat Yam (11 ) Lad (47) Maale Habsor (71 ) Maslol (5) Magdlel (37) Migdal Ha'Emek (19) Mitzpe Ramon (77) Location Donor Type 0' Facility Donor's Home City Beerthlb. Rubin, Samuel Musical Academy/Cullural Cenler New YOlk City, N, Y. Blersheba Zarin, Jacob {Estate} Comprehensive HISh School Washington, Oistrict 01 Columbia Bee rlheba Zinman, Philip Pre-Kindergarten Sc hoo l Ca mden, New Jersey Beer Yaacov FUrst, Sol & Hilda (FOundation) You l h Aliya Vocational H, S, New York City, N. Y. Bet Shea n Grossman, Mrs. louis Pre-Kindergarten School New York City, N. Y. Bet Shean Jacobs, leslie l. Pre-Kindergarten ScOOoI Dallas, Tex.s Bet Shea n len, Mrs. eart Pre-Kindergarten School New York Ci ty, N. Y. Bet Shein Women's Division Religious Comprehensive, New York City, N. Y. Comprehensive High School BIt Shlan Women's Division Community Center New Yo rk Ci ty, N. Y. B8\ Shu n WOlllen 's Division Pre- Kindergarten SChOOl New York City. N. Y. Bet Shu n Wornen's Oivilion Pre-Kinde,sarten School New Yark C!ly, N, y, Bet Shem " h furst, Jose ph (Es tate) Religious COmprehensive H, S. Boslon, Massachusetts Bet Shemesh FriendS of Edward Ginsberg Pre·Kinderprten School Clevehllnd, Ohio Bet Shemesh K1 ingenst.;n. Mr, & Mrs. Paul Pre-Kindersarten School New York City, N. Y. Caenru GinsbllfS, Alan H. Nautical Center Lans[nll, MlchlSan Carmiel Horowitl: Foundation, Pre·Kindergarten School l ouis J, & Mary E. Harrison, New YOlk Carmia' t(aUman, Mr, & Mrs. Julius pre·t(indersarten School Omaha, Nebraska Dimona App1eman, Mr. & Mrs. Harry RelisiOtJs COmprehensiV'e H. S. (Founeation! New YOlk City, N. Y. Dimon. Danciller, Dan & Sad ie (Estate) Pre-Klndersarlen SChool Kanus City, Missouri Dimon. Janson, Mfi. Marion A. Pre-Kinderga rten School los Anlleles, Calif. Dlmona Robinson, Donald M. Pre·Kindergarten School Pittsburgh, Penn. Dimon. Wishnlck, John Pre- Kindergarten School New York City, N, Y. Dimon. Wi shnick, Robert Pre-Klndorgarten School New York City, N. Y. Dimona f reeman, Betty (Wishnick) Pre-t(indergarten School New YOlk City, N. Y. Dimona Women's Division Community center New York City, N. Y. Dimon. Women's Division Comprehensive HISh School New YOlk City, N. Y. Dimon. Zinman, PhiUp Comprehensive High Schoo l Camden, New Jersey Eben Ha- El:er Furst, Joseph (Estate) Religious ComprehensiVe H, S. Boston, Massachusetts THE MAYOR OF JERUSAtEM MR. TEDDY KOLLEK CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO nlE DEDICATION CEREMONY OF THE SECONDARY BOARDING SCHOOL FOR GIRLS MIDRASHIAT AMALIA ON SUNDAY MARCH FIfTH 1972. AT 3 P.M. IN THE PRESENCE OF REi"RESENTATIVES OF THE GOVERNMENT OF ISRAEL THE JEWISH AGEN CY THE ISRAel EDUCATION FUND CITY COUNCILLOR S AND THE DONORS Mr. and Mrs. LUDWIG JESSELSON THE CONSTRUC TI ON OF THE BOARDING SCHOOL WAS MADE POSSIBLE WITH THE HELP OF THE MATANAH FOUNDATION OF NEW YORK BY THE LATE SIGFR IED ULlMANN. LUDWIG JESSELSON AND LEO FORCHHEIMER A PROJECT OF THE ISRAEL EDUCATION FUND OF THE UNITED JEWISH APPEAL U.S.A. THE CEREMONY W ILL TAKE PLACE AT THE SCHOOL HAIM HELLER ST., GIVAT MORDECHAI, JERUSAlEM P7'lP "u .,}J '):J nK PlJTil? '):JnlJ mJ)? iT'lJ'J!li'n ,':JmiT .,!lOiT n') n::mn OPU7 ~ , ., !3 11 r" 1U ., ., !3 m!lnnlOiT) 7K.,IO' n7\V7:ll'J 'l'YJ n"'iT'iT nU:;'lOiT 7K.,IO" ,U't'liT np iT''''lliT nYYll'J ,.,)t'l e'1J."niT mn:J1J)1 ~ iTJnO '''P ~ n.,T,Y) '}JPliT iI'1J'J!lin "!lOil n') (i1J"iT:J.,'!l lK'7' nt'O' 1"'" . iT ~ Y 10"K ".,!ll'T ' ~ 11) 'K.,W" ,'JniT '''P '10 n'J:Jn n,mK7:liI n"'iT'iT n')l1JiI ,,'W .1l\lJK" el') e"pn' OpUiI ( 5 .3.72) .:J, -'wn ."K) U ~ ' iI"}JlI' n'Ill"')J) Y ~ ilnK 3 .00 iTl1\lJ) ~N'W' ~'") 2'1'''';'1'1'1 J'Iu~'on THE EXECUTIVE OF THE JEWISH AGENCY ISRAEL EDUCATION FUND ~N''O'~ l'lnil l'i' Tel Aviv, 17 Kaplan Street 17 l)gp 'n , · .3 ' 3 H-)n P.O.B. 7053 - Tel. 253104, 25&211 258211 ,253104 ,)U - 7053 :r .n Cables; JEVAGENCY, TEl·AVIV Ref. No. 7539/72 THE J E,iISH AGENCY FOR ISR..J51 January 12, 1971 SUMMARY STATUS OF I SRAEL EDUC TION FUND PROJECTS Community , Cultural , Pre- Status of &> Youth Sports kindcr- Construction Schools lLibraries Center s Facilities gartens TOTAL Complet ed 54 7 10 2 51 124 Under construction 23 2 11 - 24 60 I , Starting within 6 months 9 2 I 9 ~ - 13 33 Starting in 6 - 12 months 8 - 1 4 5 18 Total 94 11 31 6 93 235 a (, !I!'- This figure does not include Non- .tUllericlln Donor s (sea page 15) COtl~TaUCT ION COl'lPLETED Comprehens ive High School i n Acre Darsky " " " Arad Zi mt baum " " " 11 0" in Ashdod Rogoein " " " Beersheba Himmelfar b " " " Dimona IN'omen ' s Divi.Bion " " " EUat Goldwater Group " " " Haif a, iltage A (Stage B under construction) Leo Baeck Group " " " Kiryat ta Rogosi n " " " Kiryat Bialik Levinson " " " Kiryat Gat Rogosin " " " Kir yat l1alachi Loan " " " Kiryat Yam Rodman " " " rofaal e RabBor Woldenberg " " " Migdal Ha ' emek Rogosin " " " Natzrat IlUt Sharett Group " " " Or Yehuda Fer kauf " " " Ramla Racoosin- Rubin " " " ~derot Git"irth Estat e " " " Tirat Carmel Shiffman " " " JerusalHm ~enmark Group .
Recommended publications
  • 2015 the NACOEJ/Edward G
    2015 The NACOEJ/Edward G. Victor High School Sponsorship Program We’re delighted to bring you the 10th issue of Bridges, In 1997 the Kasai family left their village in created especially for you. Gondar, embarking on a long, ʅ Besides enjoying the stories There they were welcomed at the NACOEJ here, we hope you will also Compound, which included a serve as an Ambassador for school for their children, food, adult Ethiopian-Israeli high school education, employment and a synagogue for students by passing this the family. Their daughter Rivka was born in newsletter to friends and family Addis Ababa. who might want to support our students. Your endorsement Not until Israel Independence Day in 2005 will help ensure that more was the family able to immigrate to Israel, deserving Ethiopian teens get starting their new life in an absorption center the good education that is the in Safed where Rivka entered 3rd grade. key to success in their futures. Leah Barkai (left) and Rivka Kasai (right) continued inside Questions? Comments? Call Karen Gens at 212-233- 5200, Ext. 230 or email her at [email protected]. She’ll answer questions, contact potential sponsors, and chat (Right) Diana Yacobi shares a special with you about the joys of high moment with one of her sponsored high school sponsorship (she’s been school students, Leah Mekonen. a sponsor for years). And if Diana and her husband Avi visited Leah you have news to share about and their other students at the AMIT your sponsored student, please School in Kiryat Malachi.
    [Show full text]
  • The Mediterranean Coast of Israel Is a New City,Now Under
    University of Rhode Island DigitalCommons@URI Theses and Major Papers Marine Affairs 12-1973 The editM erranean Coast of Israel: A Planner's Approach Sophia Professorsky University of Rhode Island Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.uri.edu/ma_etds Part of the Natural Resources Management and Policy Commons, and the Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology Commons Recommended Citation Professorsky, Sophia, "The eM diterranean Coast of Israel: A Planner's Approach" (1973). Theses and Major Papers. Paper 146. This Major Paper is brought to you for free and open access by the Marine Affairs at DigitalCommons@URI. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Major Papers by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@URI. For more information, please contact [email protected]. l~ .' t. ,." ,: .. , ~'!lB~'MEDI'1'ERRANEAN-GQAsT ~F.~"IsMt~·;.·(Al!~.oS:-A~PROACH ::".~~========= =~.~~=~~~==b======~~==~====~==.=~=====~ " ,. ••'. '. ,_ . .. ... ..p.... "".. ,j,] , . .;~ ; , ....: ./ :' ",., , " ",' '. 'a ". .... " ' ....:. ' ' .."~".,. :.' , v : ".'. , ~ . :)(A;R:t.::·AF'~~RS'· B~NMi'»APER. '..":. " i . .: '.'-. .: " ~ . : '. ". ..." '-" .~" ~-,.,. .... .., ''-~' ' -.... , . ", ~,~~~~"ed .' bYr. SOph1a,Ji~ofes.orsJcy .. " • "..' - 01 .,.-~ ~ ".··,::.,,;$~ld~~:' ·to,,:" f;~f.... ;)J~:Uexa~d.r . -". , , . ., .."• '! , :.. '> ...; • I ~:'::':":" '. ~ ... : .....1. ' ..~fn··tr8Jti~:·'btt·,~e~Mar1ne.~a1~S·~r~~. ", .:' ~ ~ ": ",~', "-". ~_"." ,' ~~. ;.,·;·X;'::/: u-=" .. _ " -. • ',. ,~,At:·;t.he ,un:lvers:U:~; tif Rh~:<:rs1..J\d. ~ "~.; ~' ~.. ~,- -~ !:).~ ~~~ ~,: ~:, .~ ~ ~< .~ . " . -, -. ... ... ... ... , •• : ·~·J;t.1l9ston.l~~;&:I( .. t)eceiDber; 1~73.• ". .:. ' -.. /~ NOTES, ===== 1. Prior to readinq this paper, please study the map of the country (located in the back-eover pocket), in order to get acquain:t.ed with names and locations of sites mentioned here thereafter. 2.- No ~eqaJ. aspects were introduced in this essay since r - _.-~ 1 lack the professional background for feedinq in tbe information.
    [Show full text]
  • The Tragedy of the Remaining Palestinian Families in Kuwait Â
    SPECIAL FILE The Palestinians in Kuwait 1. Nowhere to Go: The Tragedy of the Remaining Palestinian Families in Kuwait ��â Introduction The first wave of Palestinian workers who settled in Kuwait arrived in 1948- 49. 1 They included teachers and civil servants who "helped create the bureaucratic underpinnings of the new state." 2 Then Palestinian community grew in size over the decades - by 1965, Palestinians comprised over 16 percent of the total population in Kuwait and almost a third of the foreign-resident population. 3 Between 1965 and 1975, the Palestinian population almost tripled, to over 204,000, with almost half of them females. 4 At the time of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August 1990, an estimated ��â This report was prepared by Middle East Watch, a Committee of Human Rights Watch, based in New York, N.Y. The principal author of this report is Virginia N. Sherry, associate director of Middle East Watch. John Valery White, an Orville Schell Fellow with Middle East Watch, wrote the legal section. Eric Rosenthal, a legal intern with Middle East Watch during the summer of 1991, conducted the July 1991 interviews in Amman, Jordan, that are cited in the report. The report, released on October 23, 1991, is reproduced with permission. 1. Kuwait's modernisation began in the early 1950s, following the discovery of oil in 1938 and the accumulation of substantial revenue from oil exports, which began in 1948. (see Rosemarie Said Zahlan, The Making of the Modern Gulf States, Unwin Hyman, London: 1989, at 30-31.) 2. Ann M.
    [Show full text]
  • Combined Loss of LAP1B and LAP1C Results in an Early Onset Multisystemic Nuclear Envelopathy
    ARTICLE https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08493-7 OPEN Combined loss of LAP1B and LAP1C results in an early onset multisystemic nuclear envelopathy Boris Fichtman1, Fadia Zagairy1, Nitzan Biran1, Yiftah Barsheshet1, Elena Chervinsky2, Ziva Ben Neriah3, Avraham Shaag4, Michael Assa1, Orly Elpeleg4, Amnon Harel 1 & Ronen Spiegel5,6 Nuclear envelopathies comprise a heterogeneous group of diseases caused by mutations in genes encoding nuclear envelope proteins. Mutations affecting lamina-associated polypep- 1234567890():,; tide 1 (LAP1) result in two discrete phenotypes of muscular dystrophy and progressive dystonia with cerebellar atrophy. We report 7 patients presenting at birth with severe pro- gressive neurological impairment, bilateral cataract, growth retardation and early lethality. All the patients are homozygous for a nonsense mutation in the TOR1AIP1 gene resulting in the loss of both protein isoforms LAP1B and LAP1C. Patient-derived fibroblasts exhibit changes in nuclear envelope morphology and large nuclear-spanning channels containing trapped cytoplasmic organelles. Decreased and inefficient cellular motility is also observed in these fibroblasts. Our study describes the complete absence of both major human LAP1 isoforms, underscoring their crucial role in early development and organogenesis. LAP1-associated defects may thus comprise a broad clinical spectrum depending on the availability of both isoforms in the nuclear envelope throughout life. 1 Azrieli Faculty of Medicine, Bar-Ilan University, Safed, Israel. 2 Genetic Institute, Emek Medical Center, Afula, Israel. 3 Department of Human Genetics, Shaare Zedek Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel. 4 Monique and Jacques Roboh Department of Genetic Research, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel. 5 Department of Pediatrics B’, Emek Medical Center, Afula, Israel.
    [Show full text]
  • Emergency in Israel
    Emergency in Israel Emergency Update on Jewish Agency Programming May 16, 2021 The recent violent events that have erupted across the country have left us all surprised and stunned: clashes with Palestinians in Jerusalem and on the Temple Mount; the deteriorating security tensions and the massive barrage of missiles from Gaza on southern and central Israel; and the outbreak of unprecedented violence, destruction, and lynching in mixed cities and Arab communities. To say that the situation is particularly challenging is an understatement. We must all deal with the consequences of the current tensions. Many of us are protecting family, coworkers, or people under our charge while missiles fall on our heads night and day, forcing us to seek shelter. We have all witnessed the unbearable sights of rioting, beating, and arson by Arab and Jewish extremists in Lod, Ramla, Acre, Kfar Qassem, Bat Yam, Holon, and other places. As an organization that has experienced hard times of war and destruction, as well as periods of prosperity and peace, it is our duty to rise up and make a clear statement: we will support and assist populations hit by missile fire as we did in the past, after the Second Lebanon War and after Operations Cast Lead and Protective Edge. Together with our partners, we will mobilize to heal and support the communities and populations affected by the fighting. Our Fund for Victims of Terror is already providing assistance to bereaved families. When the situation allows it, we will provide more extensive assistance to localities and communities that have suffered damage and casualties.
    [Show full text]
  • Pdf, 366.38 Kb
    FF II CC SS SS Field Information and Coordination Support Section Division of Operational Services Israel Sources: UNHCR, Global Insight digital mapping © 1998 Europa Technologies Ltd. As of December 2009 Israel_Atlas_A3PC.WOR Dahr al Ahmar Jarba The designations employed and the presentation of material on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the 'Aramtah Ma'adamiet Shih Harran al 'Awamid Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, Qatana Haouch Blass 'Artuz territory, city or area of its authorities or concerning the delimitation of its Najha frontiers or boundaries LEBANON Al Kiswah Che'baâ Douaïr Al Khiyam Metulla Sa`sa` ((( Kafr Dunin Misgav 'Am Jubbata al Khashab ((( Qiryat Shemons Chakra Khan ar Rinbah Ghabaqhib Rshaf Timarus Bent Jbail((( Al Qunaytirah Djébab Nahariyya El Harra ((( Dalton An Namir SYRIAN ARAB Jacem Hatzor GOLANGOLAN Abu-Senan GOLANGOLAN Ar Rama Acre ((( Boutaiha REPUBLIC Bi'nah Sahrin Tamra Shahba Tasil Ash Shaykh Miskin ((( Kefar Hittim Bet Haifa ((( ((( ((( Qiryat Motzkin ((( ((( Ibta' Lavi Ash Shajarah Dâail Kafr Kanna As Suwayda Ramah Kafar Kama Husifa Ath Tha'lah((( ((( ((( Masada Al Yadudah Oumm Oualad ((( ((( Saïda 'Afula ((( ((( Dar'a Al Harisah ((( El 'Azziya Irbid ((( Al Qrayyah Pardes Hanna Besan Salkhad ((( ((( ((( Ya'bad ((( Janin Hadera ((( Dibbin Gharbiya El-Ne'aime Tisiyah Imtan Hogla Al Manshiyah ((( ((( Kefar Monash El Aânata Netanya ((( WESTWEST BANKBANK WESTWEST BANKBANKTubas 'Anjara Khirbat ash Shawahid Al Qar'a'
    [Show full text]
  • Israel-Hizbullah Conflict: Victims of Rocket Attacks and IDF Casualties July-Aug 2006
    My MFA MFA Terrorism Terror from Lebanon Israel-Hizbullah conflict: Victims of rocket attacks and IDF casualties July-Aug 2006 Search Israel-Hizbullah conflict: Victims of rocket E-mail to a friend attacks and IDF casualties Print the article 12 Jul 2006 Add to my bookmarks July-August 2006 Since July 12, 43 Israeli civilians and 118 IDF soldiers have See also MFA newsletter been killed. Hizbullah attacks northern Israel and Israel's response About the Ministry (Note: The figure for civilians includes four who died of heart attacks during rocket attacks.) MFA events Foreign Relations Facts About Israel July 12, 2006 Government - Killed in IDF patrol jeeps: Jerusalem-Capital Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Eyal Benin, 22, of Beersheba Treaties Sgt.-Maj.(res.) Shani Turgeman, 24, of Beit Shean History of Israel Sgt.-Maj. Wassim Nazal, 26, of Yanuah Peace Process - Tank crew hit by mine in Lebanon: Terrorism St.-Sgt. Alexei Kushnirski, 21, of Nes Ziona Anti-Semitism/Holocaust St.-Sgt. Yaniv Bar-on, 20, of Maccabim Israel beyond politics Sgt. Gadi Mosayev, 20, of Akko Sgt. Shlomi Yirmiyahu, 20, of Rishon Lezion Int'l development MFA Publications - Killed trying to retrieve tank crew: Our Bookmarks Sgt. Nimrod Cohen, 19, of Mitzpe Shalem News Archive MFA Library Eyal Benin Shani Turgeman Wassim Nazal Nimrod Cohen Alexei Kushnirski Yaniv Bar-on Gadi Mosayev Shlomi Yirmiyahu July 13, 2006 Two Israelis were killed by Katyusha rockets fired by Hizbullah: Monica Seidman (Lehrer), 40, of Nahariya was killed in her home; Nitzo Rubin, 33, of Safed, was killed while on his way to visit his children.
    [Show full text]
  • Timeline of Shīʿī History in Palestine
    Timeline of Shīʿī History in Palestine Umayyads – Early second/eighth century: People from Palestine send a convoy to the Imām Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq. ʿAbbāsids – Second half of the third/ninth century: The geographer al-Yaʿqūbī mentions the settlement of the Shīʿī ʿĀmila tribe in the Jund Filasṭīn. – 271/884: Muḥammad b. Ḥamza, a descendant of al-ʿAbbās b. ʿAlī, is murdered in Tiberias by Ṭughj b. Juff the Ikhshīdid. – 289–90/902–03: The Ismāʿīlī mahdī of Salamiyya, ʿAbdallāh al-Mahdī, hides in Ramla. – First half of the fourth/tenth century: The Persian Shīʿī poet Kushājim sojourns in Ramla. Fāṭimids – Second half of the fourth/tenth century: The geographer Muḥammad al-Maqdisī complains that all Tiberias, half of Nablus, and Qadas are Shīʿīs. – 360–67/970–77: The Qarmaṭī invasion of Palestine is centered in Ramla. – 363–64/973–74: Authorities imposed Shīʿī customs in Palestine, two Sunnīs from Ramla and Jerusalem who opposed it were detained and tortured. – 386/996: Shīʿī messianic rebellion of Abū l-Futūḥ Ḥasan b. Jaʿfar, the amīr of Mecca in Ramla. – First half of the fifth/eleventh century: – Shīʿī genealogist Najm al-Dīn al-ʿUmarī travels through Ramla, and mentions several Ṭālibiyyūn (descendants of the Imāms) in Jerusalem, Tiberias, and Ramla. – The Sunnī Ibn Ḥazm al-Andalusī complains that all of Urdunn (that is, Galilee), mainly Tiberias, is controlled by the Nuṣayrīs (now ʿAlawīs). – Druzes/Ḥākimī spread propaganda in Galilee (al-Buqayʿa) and Ḥamza’s oppo- nents are mentioned in Acre. © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2020 | doi:10.1163/9789004421028_015 Yaron Friedman - 9789004421028 Downloaded from Brill.com09/28/2021 04:13:15AM via free access Timeline 203 – Mid-fifth/eleventh century: The traveler Nāṣir Khusraw mentions Shīʿīs in Tiberias and Fāṭimid investment and construction projects in Palestine.
    [Show full text]
  • PAZ OIL COMPANY LTD. Second Quarter 2015 Financial Results
    PMdesigners LTD. OIL COMPANY PAZ Second Quarter 2015 Financial Results .. PAZ OIL COMPANY PAZ OIL COMPANY LTD. Euro Park, Holland Building Second Quarter 2015 Yakum 6097200, Israel Financial Results www.paz.co.il WorldReginfo - 8f850467-2904-45ba-8208-c70bba334b4f Disclaimer This document is a convenience translation from the Hebrew original of the separate financial data dated June 30, 2015 (the "Statements") issued by Paz Oil Company Ltd. (the "Company"). Only the Hebrew original of the Statements is legally binding. No reliance may by placed for any purpose whatsoever on the completeness, accuracy or fairness of information contained in this document. No warranty or representation, express or implied, is made or given by or on behalf of the Company or any of its directors, officers or employees or any other person as to the accuracy, completeness or fairness of the information contained in this document and no responsibility or liability is accepted by any person for such information. WorldReginfo - 8f850467-2904-45ba-8208-c70bba334b4f PAZ OIL COMPANY LTD. Table of Contents A Director’s Report on the State of the Company’s Affairs B Major Changes and Developments in the Description of the Company’s Business C Condensed Consolidated Interim Financial Statement WorldReginfo - 8f850467-2904-45ba-8208-c70bba334b4f A Director’s Report on the State of the Company’s Affairs WorldReginfo - 8f850467-2904-45ba-8208-c70bba334b4f Paz Oil Company Ltd. Report of the Board of Directors on the State of Affairs of the Corporation Report of the Board of Directors on the State of Affairs of the Corporation for the Period of Six Months ended June 30, 2015 We are pleased to present the report of the Board of Directors of Paz Oil Company Ltd.
    [Show full text]
  • Israel and the Occupied Territories 2015 Human Rights Report
    ISRAEL 2015 HUMAN RIGHTS REPORT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Israel is a multiparty parliamentary democracy. Although it has no constitution, the parliament, the unicameral 120-member Knesset, has enacted a series of “Basic Laws” that enumerate fundamental rights. Certain fundamental laws, orders, and regulations legally depend on the existence of a “state of emergency,” which has been in effect since 1948. Under the Basic Laws, the Knesset has the power to dissolve the government and mandate elections. The nationwide Knesset elections in March, considered free and fair, resulted in a coalition government led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Civilian authorities maintained effective control over the security services. (An annex to this report covers human rights in the occupied territories. This report deals with human rights in Israel and the Israeli- occupied Golan Heights.) During the year according to Israeli Security Agency (ISA, also known as Shabak) statistics, Palestinians committed 47 terror attacks (including stabbings, assaults, shootings, projectile and rocket attacks, and attacks by improvised explosive devices (IED) within the Green Line that led to the deaths of five Israelis and one Eritrean, and two stabbing terror attacks committed by Jewish Israelis within the Green Line and not including Jerusalem. According to the ISA, Hamas, Hezbollah, and other militant groups fired 22 rockets into Israel and in 11 other incidents either planted IEDs or carried out shooting or projectile attacks into Israel and the Golan Heights. Further
    [Show full text]
  • 251573 December 15, 2020 Annex 1 General Description of the HN LRT
    December 15, 2020 Annex 1 General Description of the HN LRT Project 1. General 1.1. The HN LRT Project is promoted under National Infrastructure Plan (‘Tatal’) 56, in line with the policy set by the GOI in Governmental Decision no. 1838 (the “Decision”), in which it ascribed the HN LRT Project the status of “National Infrastructure Project”. It is a key strategic national mega-project, which is intended to: Promote the use of public transportation in Israel; Strengthen the connection between the Haifa Metropolitan Area and the peripheral region to the east of it; Support investment in the development of Israel’s northern regions; Support development of the Galilee; Increase access to employment; and Stimulate economic growth. 1.2. The Decision stipulates that TRI shall lead the HN LRT Project pursuant to an agreement to be signed between the GOI and TRI, including with respect to securing a governmental budget for the execution of the HN LRT Project. 1.3. The HN LRT Project is to include the finance, design, construction, operation and maintenance of the LRT Project in the Haifa Metropolitan Area between Haifa and Nazareth. The exact terms of the PPP Tender shall be as determined in the Tender Documents at the Tender Selection Stage. Currently, it is expected to include a development phase for design and financing, a construction phase, and an Operation and Maintenance phase. 1.4. The concession period is currently expected to be for up to 25 years. 1.5. The Decision further stipulates that the HN LRT Project is to be delivered in two discrete stages: 1.5.1.
    [Show full text]
  • Architect Joseph Klarwein Was the Winner of the 1957 Contest for Planning the Knesset Building on Givat Ram
    Handout 1 Knesset Architect Joseph Klarwein was the winner of the 1957 contest for planning the Knesset building on Givat Ram. His initial proposal presented at the contest was ultimately very different than the building that was inaugurated on August 30th 1966. In fact, it was influenced by different architects that were involved in different parts of the planning and construction throughout its nine years, and among them were architect Dov Carmi and his son Ram. In textbooks written on the Knesset building, it is claimed that the planners intended to build a construction similar to the Greek Acropolis. Those who worked on the building programs before the contest had very little idea on how they wanted the building to look, and the result – an architectural mixture – surprisingly resembled the building of the United States’ embassy in Athens. The embassy was designed by the renowned Bauhaus architect Walter Gropius, which was later considered as a specimen of the “International Style.” Klarwein’s original model was comprised of a rectangular construction with 20 columns on its front and back, 15 columns on each side, and two internal yards on the eastern and western sides of the plenum hall found at the center of the building. The entrance to the building was to be on its northern front. The constructed building was square, with 10 columns on all sides, and with no internal yards; the plenum is not at its center, but on its eastern part; and west to the plenum hall there is a reception hall. This hall is named “Chagall State Hall,” as it is decorated with art created by the Russian-born Jewish artist, Marc Chagall.
    [Show full text]