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‘This is our country, there is no other,’ says teary-eyed Aharish in Arabic

(photo: screen capture: Channel 2)

(photo: screen capture: Channel 2)

By Jonathan Beck - April 22, 2015

Originally appeared here in the Times of Israel

Lucy Aharish, an Israeli-Arab news anchor and actress, was among the 14 torch lighters in the official ceremony kicking off Israel’s celebrations of 67 years of independence on Wednesday night. Almost breaking down at the ceremony, she was the only one of the honorees to give part of her brief address in Arabic.

Aharish, 33, a Muslim Arab whose parents hail from Nazareth but who was educated in Jewish institutions, instantly became a target of far-right criticism when it was announced earlier this month that she had accepted the honor of lighting a torch at the state Independence Day ceremony.

Some left-wing critics said her accepting the honor constituted an agreement to serve as a fig leaf of the government.

From the extreme right — Lehava, a group acting to prevent intermarriage and other integration by non-Jewish citizens in Israeli life — was prevented by the police from protesting against Aharish’s involvement in the event.

The group was planning to demonstrate outside the Mount Herzl cemetery in Jerusalem, where the ceremony took place, but did not receive police approval for the protest.

Aharish was teary-eyed when she took her turn at the ceremony, saying she was lighting the torch “for all human beings wherever they may be who have not lost hope for peace, and for the children, full of innocence, who live on this Earth.

“For those who were but are no more, who fell victim to baseless hatred by those who have forgotten that we were all born in the image of one God. For Sephardim and Ashkenazim, religious and secular, Arabs and Jews, sons of this motherland that reminds us that we have no other place. For us as Israel, for the honor of mankind, and for the glory of the State of Israel,” she said. Read More

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Nano-bullet tech shoots down brain cancer in Tel Aviv U study

(photo credit: Nati Shohat/Flash90)

(photo credit: Nati Shohat/Flash90)

By David Shamah - April 12, 2015

Originally appeared here in the Times of Israel 

The worst form of brain cancer, glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), is considered largely incurable by doctors. Victims generally die within a year and a half of being diagnosed with the tumors. It’s such a devastating disease that the National Academy of Sciences calls it “the Terminator.” But an innovative nanotech-based “end-run” around cancer cells by Tel Aviv University researchers could provide doctors with a new way to treat – or even cure – GBM and other malignant killer cancers.

The technique, developed by Prof. Dan Peer of TAU’s Department of Department of Cell Research and Immunology and Scientific Director of TAU’s Center for NanoMedicine, has proven itself in the past: It’s based on the “cancer bullet” system Peer and other TAU researchers developed that delivers chemotherapy directly to cancer cells, using bioadhesive liposomes (BALs), consisting of regular liposomes reduced to nano-sized particles that attach themselves to the cancerous cells. Peer and Prof. Rimona Margalit, with whom he developed the method, have published several studies showing its effectiveness.

That research was done on ovarian cancer tumors, and it proved to be effective – but that wasn’t the case when it came to GBM, which is far less responsive to chemotherapy. Prof. Zvi R. Cohen, Director of the Neurosurgical Oncology Unit and Vice Chair at the Neurosurgical Department at Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer Hospital in central Israel, contacted Peer to discuss whether anything could be done for individuals suffering from the aggressive and fatal form of brain cancer. Read More

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Grandson of Righteous Among the Nations now saves children in Israel

By Itamar Eichner - April 18, 2015

Originally appeared here in Ynetnews

Coss Weber's grandfather and grandmother saved Jews during the Holocaust and were named Righteous Among the Nations. Now, at age 51, Weber lives in Israel and works to save the lives of Israeli children with severe disabilities. On top of that, in order to mark Holocaust Remembrance Day, Weber will embark on a 750 kilometer bike ride, starting at the Bergen-Belson camp, to commemorate his grandfather who died during the war.

Weber, who moved to Israel 26 years ago, begins his journey to honor his grandfather on Holocaust Remembrance Day and will end it on Israel's Independence Day.

The journey will retrace the path that Weber's grandfather took on the "Lost Train" before he died of typhus.
 
The "Lost Train" refers three trains that departed from Bergen-Belsen on April 9, 1945. The trains were intended to take the remaining Jews to gas chambers in Theresienstadt but the trains never arrived due to bombings by the Allied Forces. Read More

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Israelis find cancer-suppressing proteins in scientific breakthrough

(photo: Shutterstock) 

(photo: Shutterstock) 

By Abigail Klein Leichman - April 14, 2015

Originally appeared here in Israel21c 

A particular protein that defies the cell’s normal system of tagging and banishing defective or no longer needed proteins seems to play a significant role in suppressing malignant growth, according to Israeli researchers.

The study was conducted at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in the laboratory of Professor Aaron Ciechanover, who won a Nobel Prize in chemistry in 2004 with colleague Avram Hershko and Irwin Rose of the University of California-Irvine.

Led by Dr. Yelena Kravtsova-Ivantsiv, the research team included students and physicians from Rambam, Carmel and Hadassah medical centers. They found the previously unknown p50 protein  during ongoing research on the ubiquitin system, which rids cells of earmarked proteins by sending them for destruction in the cell’s proteasome area.

They discovered that p105, a long precursor of a key cell regulator called NF-κB, sometimes fails to be completely broken down in the proteasome. In those cases, p105 is only shortened and becomes a protein they dubbed p50.

Using samples of human tumors and models of human tumors grown in mice, they then attempted to decipher the decision-making mechanism that determines whether the tagged p105 gets fully degraded or transformed into p50.

The decision between these two options has important implications. Read More 

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IsraAID seeks to help Kenya deal with grief management after mass killing

(photo: REUTERS)

(photo: REUTERS)

By Ariel Cohen - April 9, 2015 

Originally appeared here in the Jerusalem Post 

Following the horrific massacre by the radical Muslim terror group al-Shabab from Somalia which killed over 150 Christian students in Kenya, the Israeli relief group IsraAID is helping Kenyan government officials deal with the tragedy.

IsraAID is currently holding discussions with Kenyan government counterparts as well as with the local Kenyan Red Cross and UN officials in hopes of creating a grief and disaster management plan for the government, modeled off the Israeli plan. 

Were basing it on the Israeli model,”  founding director of IsraAID, Sachar Zahavi told The Jerusalem Post. “IsraAIDs focus would be to provide post trauma training and treatment to help the affected community and service providers cope with their grief.” Read More

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7-year-old Syrian boy tries matzo in Israeli hospital - and loves it

 (Photo: Ziv Medical Center)

 (Photo: Ziv Medical Center)

By Ahiya Raved - April 7, 2015

Originally appeared here in Ynetnews

A wounded Syrian boy hospitalized at the Ziv Medical Center in Safed got to taste matzo for the first time in his life this week - and loved it.

The 7-year-old boy, who suffered serious wounds to his legs from a shell hit seven months ago, enjoyed the matzo so much that he has been asking the hospital's staff to give him matzo to eat at every opportunity he gets.
 
Hospital staff told the boy and his mother about Passover and the holiday's meaning, and the two Syrians found parallels to their own situation in the story of Israel's exodus from Egypt.

In Syria, the boy underwent 17 operations under difficult conditions due to the constant fighting between the Syrian Army loyal to President Bashar Assad and rebels trying to oust him.
 
Syrian doctors told the boy's mother they have done all they could for him, and that he will not be able to walk again. Read More

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New Jordanian think tank seeks to understand the reality of Israel

(photo: Avi Lewis/Times of Israel)

(photo: Avi Lewis/Times of Israel)

By Avi Lewis - April 6, 2015

Originally appeared here in the Times of Israel 

AMMAN – As Israelis headed to the ballot boxes on March 17, a number of journalists and politicians gathered for a workshop detailing the various political parties, their platforms and campaigns. This pre-election seminar, however, was not held in Hebrew for the disgruntled Israeli voter. It was entirely in Arabic and in the unlikeliest of places — neighboring Jordan

The initiative, among others, was spearheaded by the Amman-based Center for Israel Studies, an independent nonprofit think tank established in late 2014 that seeks to combat media misinformation surrounding the Jewish state and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by presenting an alternative, neutrality-driven view of Israel in Arabic for Jordan’s decision makers, journalists and wider public.

One of the first of its kind in the Arab world – small Israel-studies circles exist in Egyptian academia — the center hosts lectures, programs, conferences and debates that signal a growing openness to understanding Israeli society amid a post-Arab Spring internet-savvy generation thirsty for a balanced, more objective view of their oft-maligned and misunderstood neighbor west of the Jordan river. Read More

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Watch Passover from Jerusalem… in 1913!

By Rachel Neiman - April 5, 2015

Originally appeared here in Israel21c

In 1913, delegates to the 11th Zionist Congress in Vienna, Austria were busy discussing settlement activities in Palestine and the work of the organization’s office in Jaffa. Chaim Weizmann — who had in 1912 successfully lobbied for the foundation of the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology — now, together with Jewish National Fund head Menachem Ussishkin, won the support of Congress for the establishment of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

The delegates were also treated to a motion picture; an hour-long documentary, The Life of the Jews in Israel, produced by Odessa’s HaMizrah Society and directed by businessman and loyal Zionist Noah Sokolovsky. Following the premiere, the film went on to be enjoy popularity throughout Europe and Russia.

The movie presents the viewer with a portrait of Jewish life in what was then known as Ottoman Palestine, starting with the journey from Odessa to Tel Aviv via the Black Sea, and on through Jerusalem and other cities, villages, and rural settlements. It was filmed over two months that included celebrating the Passover holiday in Jerusalem at the Western Wall. Read More 

 

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Israel's Haim sisters conquer Arab music world

(photo: Facebook)

(photo: Facebook)

By Viva Sarah Press - March 30, 2015

Originally appeared here on Israel21c

The Haim sisters are rocking the Arab world. No, not the American pop-rock sister act but rather the Israeli siblings Tair, Liron and Tagel. The official release of their music video, Habib Galbi, has propelled them to celebrity status throughout parts of Asia, Europe and the Middle East.

It’s not every day that a Muslim site highlights an Israeli band. But two days after its release, their Habib Galbi clip was chosen “video of the day” on the Mipsterz – Muslim Hipsters Facebook page.

The French media outlet Clique also featured the music video as “clip of the day.”

The singing Israeli Haim sisters front A-WA (pronounced “Ay-wa,” meaning “yes” in Arabic), a band that mixes traditional Yemenite folk songs with modern electronic grooves.

“We wanted to give our roots a modern revamp,” Tair Haim, the eldest sister, told Agenda magazine, about the music that features hip-hop beats layered on Yemenite melodies.

Of course, it’s not the first time an Israeli band soars in the Arab music world. Heavy-metal band Orphaned Land counts a huge following in Arabic-speaking countries. Read More

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Firm cancels Belgian Jewish kindergarten’s insurance due to 'high risk' of anti-Semitic attack

(photo: AFP)

(photo: AFP)

By Shlomo Papirblat - April 1, 2015

Originally appeared here in Haaretz 

An insurance company has refused to renew the policy of a Jewish kindergarten in Brussels, claiming that the risk of doing so is too high, given the clear threat of anti-Semitic attacks.

The European Jewish Kindergarten, whose enrollment usually ranges from 20-30 children, is located in the same district as the European Union headquarters.

A spokesperson for the European Jewish Association, a federation of Jewish organizations on the continent, reports, “The insurance agent contacted us a few days ago with the unpleasant news that the insurance company we’ve worked with up to now is not prepared to extend the kindergarten’s insurance policy, in the current situation, due to the high risk entailed by a Jewish institution.” Read More

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Knesset Now 'Greenest' Parliament Anywhere

(photo: Miriam Alster/Flash 90)

(photo: Miriam Alster/Flash 90)

By Moshe Cohen - March 29, 2015

Originally appearer here in Arutz Sheva 

The Knesset building is now the “greenest” parliamentary building in the world. As of Sunday, the building's roof, with near 5,000 square meters of solar panels, is set to generate enough electricity to power the building's lights, and much of its air conditioning, heating, and computing needs. On Sunday, the plenum celebrated the completion of a photovoltaic installation, a project started a year ago.

Celebrating the event was Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein, who said that "What is happening before our very eyes is indeed exciting, a true revolution. It is not just the solar panels; it is the message, the idea, the new path. This is not merely a revolution in energy-saving; it is also a turning point with regards to the environmental awareness revolution that we have been promoting.”

The project is supposed to be a showcase for Israel's commitment to alternative energy. A government policy adopted some years ago calls for 20% of Israel's electrical output to be generated by solar and other alternative power sources by 2020. Read More

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US campus activists unite against anti-Semitism in Europe

(photo: Elan Kawesch/ The Times of Israel)

(photo: Elan Kawesch/ The Times of Israel)

By Matt Lebovic - March 31, 2015,

Originally appeared here in The Times of Israel 

BOSTON — Two months ago, Brandeis University senior Ryan Yuffe took special note of Martin Luther King Day on his campus, including the emotional involvement of students from many backgrounds

Having already been thinking about the growing tide of anti-Semitism in Europe, the 22-year-old organizer had an “activist’s epiphany,” as he told The Times of Israel.

“We should organize the same kind of thing on campus, but for European Jews,” Yuffe remembers thinking.

Flash forward to Monday night, when more than 100 Brandeis students attended a vigil in solidarity with European Jewry, as well as the creation of a Brandeis student-led movement to focus on battling anti-Semitism in Europe.

At the start of  the vigil outside Boston, 20 students read aloud the details of anti-Semitic incidents in Europe since the start of February, ranging from physical assaults to desecration of Jewish cemeteries. Simultaneous to the Brandeis gathering, vigils were held at Philadelphia’s Drexel University, Rutgers University in New Jersey, and the University of Rochester in New York.

Soon after Yuffe’s Martin Luther King Day vision, he and nine other Brandeis undergraduates decided to focus efforts on holding European governments accountable for promises made to combat anti-Semitism. Vigils were one thing, but the students — who named themselves the Coalition Against Anti-Semitism in Europe (CAASE) — had even bigger plans in mind. Read More

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What is it like being a Christian in Israel?

(photo: Facebook)

(photo: Facebook)

By Father Gabriel Naddaf / JNS - March 29, 2015

Originally appeared here in The Jerusalem Post 

My name is Gabriel Naddaf, and I have the privilege of being a Greek Orthodox priest from Nazareth in the Galilee. My people have mistakenly been called “Christian Arabs,” but the reality is that we are Arameans—descendants of people who lived here in Israel since biblical times.

Recently, Israel’s Interior Ministry recognized us as the “Aramean nation,” following a lengthy public campaign. Partners in this effort include a number of Israeli Zionist organizations.

In the past three years, I have become a controversial figure in Israel for the simple reason that I embrace Zionism, Jewish sovereignty in Israel, and the tolerance, respect, and opportunity that has grown out of that sovereignty for all. I believe that our youths—Christian youths—should fully integrate into Israeli society. Part and parcel of that integration includes serving in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) or undertaking some other form of national service that Israel routinely provides for teenagers.

In 2012, a few Christian IDF officers and I founded the Israeli Christians Recruitment Forum (ICRF). My efforts have had mixed results. On the positive side, hundreds of Arab or Aramean Christian youths have heeded my call and have served their country with distinction. They have been embraced by their fellow soldiers, who regard them as comrades in arms, and not as strangers in their midst.

On the downside, the blowback, as it were, from my efforts among rejectionist elements in the Christian and the Muslim Arab community has been intense. Christian soldiers have been harassed by their neighbors, and in many cases, by their own families. These soldiers are forced to change out of their IDF uniforms before returning into their home towns, for fear that they may be harassed on their way home.

Another example came in 2012, when a conference was held in Nazareth by supporters of Christian recruitment to the IDF. A local leader, attorney Abir Kopty from the Mossawa Center, attacked the participants and accused them of persecution of Palestinians. Kopty also suggested that integrating Christians into the army was an attempt to divide Arab society in their national struggle against Israel. 

Following the conference, a campaign of harassment began against the conference’s organizers. Students who participated were also threatened, isolated, and suffered humiliation via social networks and in the Arab media. A Zionist organization that supports us, Im Tirtzu, subsequently published a report detailing statements made against Christians who encouraged Christian enlistment in the IDF. 

Personally, my conviction and actions have led to numerous death threats against me, my excommunication by the Orthodox Church Council, and the prevention of my entrance to the Church of Annunciation.

None of this has anything to do with the Israeli government or the Jewish community. The assertion of Israel as a so-called “apartheid state” is complete nonsense. My successes and challenges speak loudly as to where the real problems lie for my fellow Christians.

It pains me to say this, but it must be said. The incitement against me, my campaign, and all those Christians who have sought to integrate into Israeli society has been led by Arab leaders from Israel and abroad, and even by some Arab members of Israel’s Knesset legislature. MK Hanin Zoabi wrote to me on official Knesset letterhead and accused me of “helping the enemy of the Palestinian people” and “collaboration with occupying forces.” She pressured me “to fight against the loyalists of the regime.” Of course, all this creates an atmosphere of incitement against me and anyone who is interested in integrating the Christian minority into the national service frameworks in Israel. Read More

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How troubled Israeli teens become goodwill envoys

By Abigail Klein Leichman - March 30, 2015

Originally appeared here on Israel21c

Stav was hanging out with the wrong crowd and getting into trouble. And then he joined a neighborhood club, Sayeret Chesed Yechudit (SAHI) – in English, the Special Grace Unit  – which empowers disenfranchised Israeli teens by turning them into anonymous goodwill ambassadors.

Through SAHI and its founders, Avraham Hayon and Oded Weiss, Stav became attuned to people in need and how to help them discreetly.

When Stav noticed a boy out in winter in short sleeves, he called Hayon for guidance. Hayon said, “Get his size.” Stav introduced himself and invited the boy to play soccer. Purposely throwing the game, he embraced the boy in a victory hug, surreptitiously noting the size on the tag inside his thin shirt. The next day, Stav left four coats at the boy’s door.

“My mom thinks that ever since I started going to SAHI, I’ve become more mature and I know what it means to give. I’ve started taking my life in my own hands,” says Stav in a video about the work of this voluntary organization, which started with seven teens in Kiryat Gat and now encompasses 400 teenagers in 15 clubs throughout several cities. Read More

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Jews counted among Abraham Lincoln’s closest confidants

(photo: public domain via wikipedia)

(photo: public domain via wikipedia)

By Beth Kissileff - March 27, 2015

Originally appeared here in the Times of Israel 

JTA – A whopping 16,000 books have been written about President Abraham Lincoln. But a new book and an exhibit at the New York Historical Society tell a previously untold story about Lincoln: his relationships with Jews.

Benjamin Shapell has been collecting documents relating to Lincoln and the Jews for over 35 years, housing them in the in the archives of the Shapell Foundation. For the 150th anniversary of Lincoln’s assassination, Shapell persuaded Jonathan Sarna, the Joseph H. and Belle R. Braun Professor of American Jewish History at Brandeis University, who had authored a book about Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and the Jews and co-edited a Civil War reader, to help organize the material so it could be shared with a wider audience.

Interestingly for a project connected with physical archives, the Internet proved a boon. The American Jewish newspapers from Lincoln’s time are all online now, so for any name mentioned in a document, a search could be made in contemporary newspapers. Read More

 

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Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein urges Jews to fight rising anti-Semitism

(photo: Reuters)

(photo: Reuters)

By Ari Soffer - March 26, 2015

Originally appeared here in Arutz Sheva

Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein has urged Jews to fight anti-Semitism "like the mafia", in a no-holds-barred speech at Tuesday night's Simon Wiesenthal Center's National Tribute Dinner.

The 63-year-old producer, who received the Simon Wiesenthal Center's Humanitarian Award at the event, said Jews should take a concerted, proactive and aggressive approach to fighting Jew-hatred.

"We better stand up and kick these guys in the ass," Weinstein said, according to The Hollywood Reporter. 

"We're gonna have to get as organized as the mafia... We just can't take it anymore [from] these crazy bastards."

The Inglorious Bastards producer drew applause with his call to arms. "Too bad movies can't all be like Inglourious Basterds, where Hitler gets what he deserves," he added.

Lamenting the rising levels of anti-Semitism in Europe in particular, which peaked alarmingly last summer and has triggered talk of a mass Jewish exodus from the continent, Weinstein insisted the answer was to fight, not run. Read More

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Get a sneak peek at Facebook’s new office in Tel Aviv

(photo: Geektime)

(photo: Geektime)

By Roy Latke - March 23, 2015

Originally appeared here on Geektime

Facebook hopes to grow its center in Tel Aviv by 50% this year. As part of this effort, Facebook took the Field of Dreams‘ saying, “If you build it, they will come,” quite literally: they moved their office to a sparkly new tower in central Tel Aviv.  Of the 28 floors in the tower located on 22 Rothschild Boulevard, one of the poshest streets in Tel Aviv — and because of its pricey real estate, the 2011 housing protest leaders decided to pitch their tents there — four stories belong to Facebook Tel Aviv’s 60 current employees.

The 22 Rothschild tower has a glass elevator facing the boulevard, a lobby with a strikingly high ceiling and a breathtaking view of Tel Aviv’s streets all the way to the sea in the west and Jaffa in the south. Read More

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Kim Kardashian and Kanye West set to visit Israel

(photo: REUTERS)

(photo: REUTERS)

By Micki Levine / Maariv Hashavua - March 25, 2015

Originally appeared here in The Jerusalem Post 

One of the most famous couples in the world is expected to touch down in Israel soon.

Reality television star Kim Kardashian and rapper Kanye West will be arriving in Israel on a personal visit for a couple of days. The famous couple reserved rooms at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in Jerusalem around the dates of April 12 and 13. 

They also hired, among other things, the services of a personal security company that specializes in celebrity visits in Israel.

The couple's representatives made sure to make everyone involved in the plans sign a confidentiality agreement to prevent leaks to the media on their dream vacation. Read More 

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Israel’s Arab Minority Integrating Politically and Economically

(Photo: Mark Neyman / GPO) 

(Photo: Mark Neyman / GPO) 

By Anav Silverman - March 23, 2015

Originally appeared here in The Jewish Press

Throughout late February and March, “Israeli Apartheid Week” took place across 200 cities around the world, from the UK and South Africa to Canada and the USA. Anti-Israel events have been held on university campuses and academic institutions, with the official aim, according to the organizers’ website, to build Boycott, Divestment and Sanction (BDS) campaigns against Israel while educating about Israel’s apartheid policies.

Meanwhile in Israel, the March 17th elections for the Jewish state’s 20th Knesset brought 13 seats to the Joint Arab List, making the united Arab party the third largest faction in the Israeli parliament.

The new Knesset will have 16 Members of Knesset who are Arab, four more than the previous Knesset. Among the 16 are four Arab parliamentarians who represent Zionist parties including Druze MK Hamad Amar of Avigdor Lieberman’s party, Yisrael Beitenu as well as Arab MKs from Likud, Meretz, and Zionist Union. Read More

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Israel sends aid to cyclone-hit Vanuatu

(Photo: IsraAID)

(Photo: IsraAID)

By Nicky Blackburn - March 23, 2015

Originally appeared here in Israel21c

Israel is sending additional aid to the tiny Pacific island nation of Vanuatu, after it was ravaged by a category 5 cyclone earlier this month.

The archipelago, which has a population of nearly 300,000 scattered over 65 inhabited islands, was hit by the devastating Cyclone Pam on March 13. Winds of 320 kilometers per hour wreaked havoc on the tiny islands, killing 17 people and leaving an estimated 65,000 homeless.

Two days after the storm, Vanuatu, a former French colony, declared a state of emergency, and the nation’s president, Baldwin Lonsdale, called for international aid at a conference in Japan attended by UN agencies and the Israeli relief agency IsraAID.

IsraAID responded immediately, sending an emergency relief team to the area with supplies of food and water. The team traveled to the village of Eratap to meet the president and assess the situation, and also spent time in the capital, Port Vila, to coordinate efforts with government officials and UN agencies. Read More

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