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Women in Israel
Women in Israel Esther Carmel-Hakim Course Number: Office Hours: 15:00 - 16:00 by appointment Semester: Spring 2019 Location: Class Time: 12:00 – 15:00 Phone: 04-9898262 Class Location: 463 Educaion Building E-Mail: [email protected] Course Description For several decades historians have been adding female experiences and female accomplishments to our picture of the past. In this course we shall survey this new historical narrative and test the “myth of equality between men and women” in pre-state Israel and in the State of Israel. We will study the lives and status of women in the light of the reality of women’s lives and different types of settlements in the following periods: the end of the Ottoman Empire, the British Mandate and the State of Israel. Students will read, view and discuss a wide variety of primary and secondary texts. We will explore ways in which women acted creatively to affect social change, and the projects and organizations they formed to combat gender prejudice and discrimination. We will one field trips: to meet with ultra orthodox women, then meet with Arab women and then visit kibbutz Kibbutz Mishmar Haemek, and meet with Kibbutz women. Course requirements Weekly Reading Assignments and Transcription Notes 15% Field Trip Report 10% Mid-term Paper (3-4-pages): 25% Final Exam 50% 25% Take home essay questions 25% in class final Weekly Reading Assignments and Transcription Notes- 15% For each text read, students will be required to hand in Transcription Notes. This means you are to choose and write out in their entirety two (2) sentences or paragraphs or verses which you consider especially significant to understanding the work being discussed that week in class. -
The Israel/Palestine Question
THE ISRAEL/PALESTINE QUESTION The Israel/Palestine Question assimilates diverse interpretations of the origins of the Middle East conflict with emphasis on the fight for Palestine and its religious and political roots. Drawing largely on scholarly debates in Israel during the last two decades, which have become known as ‘historical revisionism’, the collection presents the most recent developments in the historiography of the Arab-Israeli conflict and a critical reassessment of Israel’s past. The volume commences with an overview of Palestinian history and the origins of modern Palestine, and includes essays on the early Zionist settlement, Mandatory Palestine, the 1948 war, international influences on the conflict and the Intifada. Ilan Pappé is Professor at Haifa University, Israel. His previous books include Britain and the Arab-Israeli Conflict (1988), The Making of the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1947–51 (1994) and A History of Modern Palestine and Israel (forthcoming). Rewriting Histories focuses on historical themes where standard conclusions are facing a major challenge. Each book presents 8 to 10 papers (edited and annotated where necessary) at the forefront of current research and interpretation, offering students an accessible way to engage with contemporary debates. Series editor Jack R.Censer is Professor of History at George Mason University. REWRITING HISTORIES Series editor: Jack R.Censer Already published THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION AND WORK IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY EUROPE Edited by Lenard R.Berlanstein SOCIETY AND CULTURE IN THE -
Izraelský Kaleidoskop
Kaleidoscope of Israel Notes from a travel log Jitka Radkovičová - Tiki 1 Contents Autumn 2013 3 Maud Michal Beer 6 Amira Stern (Jabotinsky Institute), Tel Aviv 7 Yael Diamant (Beit ‑Haedut), Nir Galim 9 Tel Aviv and other places 11 Muzeum Etzel 13 Intermezzo 14 Chava a Max Livni, Kiryat Ti’von 14 Kfar Hamakabi 16 Beit She’arim 18 Alexander Zaid 19 Neot Mordechai 21 Eva Adorian, Ma’ayan Zvi 24 End of the first phase 25 Spring 2014 26 Jabotinsky Institute for the second time 27 Shoshana Zachor, Kfar Saba 28 Maud Michal Beer for the second time 31 Masada, Brit Trumpeldor 32 Etzel Museum, Irgun Zvai Leumi Muzeum, Tel Aviv 34 Kvutsat Yavne and Beit ‑Haedut 37 Ruth Bondy, Ramat Gan 39 Kiryat Tiv’on again 41 Kfar Ruppin (Ruppin’s village) 43 Intermezzo — Searching for Rudolf Menzeles (aka Mysteries remains even after seventy years) 47 Neot Mordechai for the second time 49 Yet again Eva Adorian, Ma’ayan Zvi and Ramat ha ‑Nadiv 51 Věra Jakubovič, Sde Nehemia — or Cross the Jordan 53 Tel Hai 54 Petr Erben, Ashkelon 56 Conclusion 58 2 Autumn 2013 Here we come. I am at the check ‑in area at the Prague airport and I am praying pleadingly. I have heard so many stories about the tough boys from El Al who question those who fly to Israel that I expect nothing less than torture. It is true that the tough boy seemed quite surprised when I simply told him I am going to look for evidence concerning pre ‑war Czechoslovak scout Jews in Israeli archives. -
1948 Arab‒Israeli
1948 Arab–Israeli War 1 1948 Arab–Israeli War מלחמת or מלחמת העצמאות :The 1948 Arab–Israeli War, known to Israelis as the War of Independence (Hebrew ,מלחמת השחרור :, Milkhemet Ha'atzma'ut or Milkhemet HA'sikhror) or War of Liberation (Hebrewהשחרור Milkhemet Hashikhrur) – was the first in a series of wars fought between the State of Israel and its Arab neighbours in the continuing Arab-Israeli conflict. The war commenced upon the termination of the British Mandate of Palestine and the Israeli declaration of independence on 15 May 1948, following a period of civil war in 1947–1948. The fighting took place mostly on the former territory of the British Mandate and for a short time also in the Sinai Peninsula and southern Lebanon.[1] ., al-Nakba) occurred amidst this warﺍﻟﻨﻜﺒﺔ :Much of what Arabs refer to as The Catastrophe (Arabic The war concluded with the 1949 Armistice Agreements. Background Following World War II, on May 14, 1948, the British Mandate of Palestine came to an end. The surrounding Arab nations were also emerging from colonial rule. Transjordan, under the Hashemite ruler Abdullah I, gained independence from Britain in 1946 and was called Jordan, but it remained under heavy British influence. Egypt, while nominally independent, signed the Anglo-Egyptian Treaty of 1936 that included provisions by which Britain would maintain a garrison of troops on the Suez Canal. From 1945 on, Egypt attempted to renegotiate the terms of this treaty, which was viewed as a humiliating vestige of colonialism. Lebanon became an independent state in 1943, but French troops would not withdraw until 1946, the same year that Syria won its independence from France. -
Israeli Settler-Colonialism and Apartheid Over Palestine
Metula Majdal Shams Abil al-Qamh ! Neve Ativ Misgav Am Yuval Nimrod ! Al-Sanbariyya Kfar Gil'adi ZZ Ma'ayan Baruch ! MM Ein Qiniyye ! Dan Sanir Israeli Settler-Colonialism and Apartheid over Palestine Al-Sanbariyya DD Al-Manshiyya ! Dafna ! Mas'ada ! Al-Khisas Khan Al-Duwayr ¥ Huneen Al-Zuq Al-tahtani ! ! ! HaGoshrim Al Mansoura Margaliot Kiryat !Shmona al-Madahel G GLazGzaGza!G G G ! Al Khalsa Buq'ata Ethnic Cleansing and Population Transfer (1948 – present) G GBeGit GHil!GlelG Gal-'A!bisiyya Menara G G G G G G G Odem Qaytiyya Kfar Szold In order to establish exclusive Jewish-Israeli control, Israel has carried out a policy of population transfer. By fostering Jewish G G G!G SG dGe NG ehemia G AGl-NGa'iGmaG G G immigration and settlements, and forcibly displacing indigenous Palestinians, Israel has changed the demographic composition of the ¥ G G G G G G G !Al-Dawwara El-Rom G G G G G GAmG ir country. Today, 70% of Palestinians are refugees and internally displaced persons and approximately one half of the people are in exile G G GKfGar GB!lGumG G G G G G G SGalihiya abroad. None of them are allowed to return. L e b a n o n Shamir U N D ii s e n g a g e m e n tt O b s e rr v a tt ii o n F o rr c e s Al Buwayziyya! NeoG t MG oGrdGecGhaGi G ! G G G!G G G G Al-Hamra G GAl-GZawG iyGa G G ! Khiyam Al Walid Forcible transfer of Palestinians continues until today, mainly in the Southern District (Beersheba Region), the historical, coastal G G G G GAl-GMuGftskhara ! G G G G G G G Lehavot HaBashan Palestinian towns ("mixed towns") and in the occupied West Bank, in particular in the Israeli-prolaimed “greater Jerusalem”, the Jordan G G G G G G G Merom Golan Yiftah G G G G G G G Valley and the southern Hebron District. -
Aliyah Programs for Youth 2020.Pdf
Unit for Aliya, Klita and Special Missions Aliya Programs for Youth 2020 Date Arrival date Program name Location Price* Meals Level of Hebrew Ages program – as of starts In Kibbutz Ulpan Kibbutz Yagur NIS 5,800 – 5 Kosher Beginners/Advanced 18 ‐30 coordination months + deposit 3 Meals a Individuals day with Ulpan and married 05.01.20 director up couples to 2 weeks before Ulpan Etzion Jerusalem NIS 7,200 – 5 Kosher – All levels Academics months + deposit lunch + 22 – 35 15.01.20 13.01.20 dinner Individuals and married couples Kibbutz Ulpan Kibbutz Maagan NIS 5,800 – 5 Not kosher A, B, C, D 18 ‐30 Michael months + deposit 3 Meals a Individuals day and married 30.01.20 27.01.20 couples (by advance coordination) Kibbutz Ulpan Kibbutz Naan NIS 5,800 – 5 Kosher A, B 18 ‐30 months + deposit 3 Meals a Individuals 13.02.20 11.02.20 day and married couples Kibbutz Ulpan Kibbutz Sde NIS 5,800 – 5 Kosher – A, B 18 ‐30 Eliyahu months + deposit religious Individuals 23.0.20 20.2.20 3 Meals a and married day couples TAKA Etzion Accommodation No meals Studies at Azrieli Eligibility – Jerusalem‐ Jerusalem based on space College of Student In (Hadassah Beit Canada available Engineering Authority College) NIS 1,100 at 25.2.20 coordination with Etzion Jerusalem + 28.7.20 absorption deposit or NIS center 1,250 including Friday night dinners Etzion Ramla Ramla NIS 950 per No meals A, B 22 – 35 month including Individuals expenses and and married deposit couples 11.02.2020 06.02.20 1 person per room, free admission to the pool and gym Ulpan Etzion Raanana NIS -
A Small Youth Movement in a Sea of History. the Hashomer Hatzair Antwerp (1920-1948)
Master thesis History Department University of Ghent 2012-2013 Be Strong and Brave! A small youth movement in a sea of history. The Hashomer Hatzair Antwerp (1920-1948) Janiv Stamberger Promotor: Prof. Dr. R. Van Doorslaer Acknowledgements There are lots of people without whose help and support this thesis could not possibly have been written and while each of them should be accorded a bit of space or a kind line I have had to restrict myself to a select group of people. I express my sincere apologies to the people I forgot to mention, but I rest assured that they know that no spite or harm was intended and that they know that their help and assistance was and is warmly appreciated. First and foremost I would like to thank my promoter Prof. Doc. Rudi Van Doorslaer who first introduced me to this wonderful subject and whose patient guidance and advice helped shape the contents and outline of this thesis. I also would like to thank Pascale Falek and Gertjan Desmet for their help in introducing me to the various archives in Belgium where information regarding the movement is kept. In Israel I would like to thank the staff of Yad Ya’ari in Givat Haviva for their kind help and the wonderful soup that was each time offered to me kindly. I would also like to thank Daniela of the Moreshet archive, also in Givat Haviva, for her help. In Jerusalem I would like to thank the staff of the Central Zionist Archives and the staff of the Hebrew University Oral History department. -
Does Air Pollution Really Suppress Precipitation in Israel?’’
AUGUST 2009 N O T E S A N D C O R R E S P O N D E N C E 1733 Comments on ‘‘Does Air Pollution Really Suppress Precipitation in Israel?’’ AMIR GIVATI Israeli Hydrological Service, Jerusalem, Israel DANIEL ROSENFELD The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel (Manuscript received 15 October 2007, in final form 20 December 2008) ABSTRACT Alpert et al. in a recent paper challenged the quantification of the suppression of orographic precipitation that was shown in two recent papers by Givati and Rosenfeld to occur in Israel. Their main claim was that the results were determined by the selection of the rain gauges. In this comment, it is demonstrated that when an objective selection of the rain gauges is applied to all of the rain gauges that were used by Alpert et al. and Givati and Rosenfeld, the outcome replicates the results of Givati and Rosenfeld and provides additional insights. At the final account, this comment further enhances the confidence that orographic precipitation has been suppressed over Israel. The direct evidence to the cause is still lacking. 1. Method by AHL08 for their Figs. 3 and 4 that indicated in- creasing tends of Ro and the gauges used by GR04 The main claim of Alpert et al. 2008 (hereinafter and GR05 for their figures that indicated decreasing AHL08) is that Givati and Rosenfeld (2004, 2005, trend of Ro. hereinafter GR04 and GR05, respectively) used rain 2) We paired all possible combinations between these gauges selectively to obtain a decreasing trend of the ratio hill and plains gauges, separately for the north and for between hilly (called ‘‘mountain’’ in AHL08) and plains the center, and retained only the pairs for which at (called ‘‘shore’’ and ‘‘inland’’ in AHL08) rain gauges. -
ISRAEL@70 TOUR Young Leadership Experience
Jewish National Fund ISRAEL@70 TOUR Young Leadership Experience April 12–19, 2018 Optional Extension: April 19–22 Chairs Civia Caroline and Jason Zenner Professionals Anna Richlin, Senior Campaign Executive, Central New Jersey Jessica Milstein, Associate Director, Mountain States Thursday, April 12 – Arrival / Tel Aviv AM Welcome to Israel! Upon individual flight schedules, transfer to the Herods Hotel in Tel Aviv, Israel’s most cosmopolitan city located along the shores of the Mediterranean Sea. PM Option for early arrivals: take time to wander the narrow streets of the chic Neve Tzedek neighborhood. Built in 1909, and considered Tel Aviv’s first neighborhood, Neve Tzedek was neglected for years, but today has been transformed into one of Tel Aviv’s most popular places to live, work, and shop. This picturesque area is filled with galleries, artists’ studios, cafés, restaurants, and unique shops. Your journey will officially commence with a welcome dinner in the evening at a local restaurant in Tel Aviv. Overnight Herods Hotel, Tel Aviv Tel Aviv Itinerary is subject to change. Friday, April 13 – Tel Aviv AM Enjoy a delicious buffet breakfast at the hotel before visiting the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, home to Israel’s most extensive collections of modern, contemporary and Israeli art. Continue to the Palmach Museum, a state-of-the-art multimedia experience that allows a glimpse into this elite strike-force unit of the Haganah, Israel’s pre-State army, and the fight for Israeli independence. PM Have lunch on own and spend the afternoon exploring Tel Aviv’s most iconic areas: • The Nachlat Binyamin Arts & Crafts Fair: a festival of arts, crafts, pottery, and street performances. -
Israel a History
Index Compiled by the author Aaron: objects, 294 near, 45; an accidental death near, Aaronsohn family: spies, 33 209; a villager from, killed by a suicide Aaronsohn, Aaron: 33-4, 37 bomb, 614 Aaronsohn, Sarah: 33 Abu Jihad: assassinated, 528 Abadiah (Gulf of Suez): and the Abu Nidal: heads a 'Liberation October War, 458 Movement', 503 Abandoned Areas Ordinance (948): Abu Rudeis (Sinai): bombed, 441; 256 evacuated by Israel, 468 Abasan (Arab village): attacked, 244 Abu Zaid, Raid: killed, 632 Abbas, Doa: killed by a Hizballah Academy of the Hebrew Language: rocket, 641 established, 299-300 Abbas Mahmoud: becomes Palestinian Accra (Ghana): 332 Prime Minister (2003), 627; launches Acre: 3,80, 126, 172, 199, 205, 266, 344, Road Map, 628; succeeds Arafat 345; rocket deaths in (2006), 641 (2004), 630; meets Sharon, 632; Acre Prison: executions in, 143, 148 challenges Hamas, 638, 639; outlaws Adam Institute: 604 Hamas armed Executive Force, 644; Adamit: founded, 331-2 dissolves Hamas-led government, 647; Adan, Major-General Avraham: and the meets repeatedly with Olmert, 647, October War, 437 648,649,653; at Annapolis, 654; to Adar, Zvi: teaches, 91 continue to meet Olmert, 655 Adas, Shafiq: hanged, 225 Abdul Hamid, Sultan (of Turkey): Herzl Addis Ababa (Ethiopia): Jewish contacts, 10; his sovereignty to receive emigrants gather in, 537 'absolute respect', 17; Herzl appeals Aden: 154, 260 to, 20 Adenauer, Konrad: and reparations from Abdul Huda, Tawfiq: negotiates, 253 Abdullah, Emir: 52,87, 149-50, 172, Germany, 279-80, 283-4; and German 178-80,230, -
RESOLUTIONS 18Th ZIONIST CONGRESS
RESOLUTIONS OF THE 18th ZIONIST CONGRESS PRAGUE, AUGUST 21st to SEPTEMBER 3rd, 1933 WITH A SUMMARY REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS [ I ISSUED BY THE CENTRAL OFFICE OF THE ZIONIST ORGANISATION 77, GREAT RUSSELL STREET, W.C.1 LONDON, 1934 PRICE FOURPENCE ־****momsT ARCHIVE AN3 MB 41 EAST 42nd STREET *BW-VQRK.B.Y. American Jewish Committee LIBRARY RESOLUTIONS OF THE 18th ZIONIST CONGRESS PRAGUE, AUGUST 21st to SEPTEMBER 3rd, 1933 WITH A SUMMARY REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS ISSUED BY THE CENTRAL OFFICE OF THE ZIONIST ORGANISATION 77, GREAT RUSSELL STREET, W.C.1 LONDON, 1934 PRICE FOURPENCE i »! :it;<׳ z CONTENTS :׳!,)A־! Introduction : Summary Report of Proceedings ... ... ... 5 Part I: Resolutions of Congress : A. Political. I. The Jewish Question in Germany... 9 II. Land and Development Policy ... 13 III. Arab-Jewish Relations ... ... 14 IV. Requests to the Administration ... 15 V. Russia ••• 16 VI. National Symbols 16, VII. Use of Force for Political Purposes 17 B. Colonisation. זI. Agricultural Colonisation ... ... 8 II. I'rhat) Colonisation ... ... ... 21 III. Land 25 C. Budget 27 I). Financial Institutions and Collections. I. Keren Hayesod ... ... ... 29 II. Keren Kayemeth Leisrael ... ... 30 III. League of Nations Loan ... ... 32 E. Immigration and Labour. I. Immigration ... ... ... ... 32 II. Labour Questions ... ... ... 36 F. Health Work 39 G. Education and Cultural Work.., ... ... 40 FI. Organisation ... ... ... ... ... 45 Part II: Result of Elections ... ... .. ... 50 ZIONIST ARCHIVES,:AND LIBRARY 41 EAST 42nd STREET NEW YORK, N. Y, INTRODUCTION. SUMMARY REPORT OF PROCEEDINGS. -held in Prague, be ׳THE Eighteenth Zionist Congress was ginning on August 21 st and closing on September 3rd, 1933. It consisted of 347 members, of whom 318 were elected delegates (representing 153,184 shekel-payers of the year 5692, and 682,689 shekel-payers of the year 5693), and 29 were members of the Zionist General Council (without voting rights). -
Ron Tzur, Ph.D. Professor – Colorado University at Denver E-Mail: [email protected] Phone: (303) 315-4992
Curriculum Vita Ron Tzur, Ph.D. Professor – Colorado University at Denver E-Mail: [email protected] Phone: (303) 315-4992 EDUCATION 1995 The University of Georgia Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Mathematics Education Athens, Georgia Dissertation: Interaction and Children's Fraction Learning 1992 Technion - Israel Institute Master of Science (M.S.) in Mathematics Education of Technology Thesis: Influence of Cumulative Assessment Schema on the Haifa, Israel Teaching and Learning of Mathematics of Non College- Bound Students 1986 University of Haifa Bachelor of Science (B.S.) in Mathematics and Geography Haifa, Israel Mathematics Teaching Certificate (7-12) with emphasis in social education PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE 1. TEACHING 2009- University of Colorado Professor of Education (Mathematics Education) present Denver • District Professor (new) role in the Professional Development School system of UCD, assumed in fall 2013 to provide support to mathematics education agenda in Aurora Public Schools • Developer of new master’s degree in mathematics education (MSEd), including 3 new core courses (listed below) and a thesis option (I currently serve as advisor of six theses). These courses were then upgraded and cross-listed for doctoral students (I currently serve as chair of 8 PhD students and co- chair of 4 others) • Developer of new Math education Certificate in collaboration with Community Partners (MTED 5619, MTED 5620, MTED 5621, MTED 5622, MTED 5623) • Developer and Chair/Instructor of STEM/PL EdD Thematic Dissertation Group (DSEP 8994)