ATTENZIONE, CADUTA MASSONI! – BOSSI-SHOW! “LA MASSONERIA INTERNAZIONALE VUOLE METTERE LE MANI SUI SOLDI DELLA GENTE, FAR PERDERE DI VALORE LE NOSTRE BANCHE, IN MODO CHE SE LE POSSANO COMPRARE FACILMENTE FRANCIA E GERMANIA” – “LA BCE VOLEVA CHE NOI TAGLIASSIMO LE PENSIONI” - PROTAGONISTI DEL COMPLOTTO, OLTRE A BANKITALIA, ANCHE IL PD E ADDIRITTURA NAPOLITANO IN PERSONA…
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BREAKING TABOOS
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Concerns Mount in Germany Over ECB Bond Buys
The euro drama is escalating in Berlin. In order to save the common
currency, the European Central Bank is now purchasing large volumes of
Italian government bonds. German central bankers and politicians in
Chancellor Merkel's government oppose the move, which they see as a
dangerous threat to the ECB's independence.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,780258,00.html#ref=nlint
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A POLITICALLY DANGEROUS PROPOSAL
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Europe Pressures Merkel to Accept Euro Bonds
Angela Merkel has been steadfastly opposed to euro bonds so far, but
Germany's Nein no longer seems set in stone. French President Nicolas
Sarkozy may have changed his mind too after the market turmoil last
week. However, euro bonds present a serious domestic political risk for
Merkel.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,780284,00.html#ref=nlint
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SPIEGEL INTERVIEW WITH GEORGE SOROS
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'You Need This Dirty Word, Euro Bonds'
In a SPIEGEL interview, billionaire investor George Soros criticizes
Germany's lack of leadership in the euro zone, arguing that Berlin must
dictate to Europe the solution to the currency crisis. He also argues in
favor of the creation of euro bonds as a way out of the turbulence.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,780189,00.html#ref=nlint
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THE WORLD FROM BERLIN
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Euro Bonds 'More a Band-Aid Than a Miracle Cure'
The issue of euro bonds will loom large at German Chancellor Angela
Merkel's crisis meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy on
Tuesday. German editorialists on Monday are divided on whether the
troubled bloc should pool its debt to shore up investor confidence.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,780299,00.html#ref=nlint
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GERMAN FINANCE MINISTER WOLFGANG SCHÄUBLE
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'There Is No Unlimited Support'
In a SPIEGEL interview, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble talked
about his opposition to euro bonds, the limits to European solidarity
and the need for governments to reduce their debt burdens.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,780248,00.html#ref=nlint
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'I DOUBT DOMSCHEIT-BERG'S INTEGRITY'
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Top German Hacker Slams OpenLeaks Founder
Former WikiLeaks deputy Daniel Domscheit-Berg has been expelled from
Germany's top hacker group, the Chaos Computer Club. In an interview,
the group's spokesman Andy Müller-Maguhn told SPIEGEL how he lost faith
in Domscheit-Berg and his new whistleblowing project OpenLeaks.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,780289,00.html#ref=nlint
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GLORIFYING COMMUNIST 'ACHIEVEMENTS'
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Left-Wing Newspaper Gives Thanks to Berlin Wall
Universal education, no unemployment and "lusty sex:" These are some of
the things that East Germans should be grateful for, according to a
far-left German newspaper which listed 13 good things about the Berlin
Wall on its front page. The cover has prompted harsh criticism from a
prominent historian.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,780298,00.html#ref=nlint
--------------------
Photo Gallery: Berlin Remembers 50 Years of the Wall
http://www.spiegel.de/fotostrecke/fotostrecke-71616.html#ref=nlint
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EU-UKRAINE AGREEMENT AT RISK
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Germany Leverages Ties For Fair Tymoshenko Trial
As alarm grows in the West over the trial against former Ukrainian Prime
Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, German politicians are threatening to
withdraw their support for an agreement that would strengthen ties
between the European Union and the former Soviet Republic.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,780265,00.html#ref=nlint
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SECRET DOCUMENTS RELEASED
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Adenauer Wanted to Swap West Berlin for Parts of GDR
It was already clear before the construction of the Berlin Wall in
August 1961 that the West would not take action in response, secret
documents show. West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer even proposed
handing West Berlin to the Soviets in exchange for parts of East
Germany.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,780385,00.html#ref=nlint
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CDU ROCKED BY RESIGNATION
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Conservative Politician Quits Over Affair with Teen
Christian von Boetticher, the head of the conservative CDU party in the
northern German state of Schleswig-Holstein, bowed to pressure to resign
on Sunday after confirming media reports that he had a relationship with
a 16-year-old girl last year.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,780352,00.html#ref=nlint
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PICTURE THIS
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kooky Corks
http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,780339,00.html#ref=nlint
Monday, Aug 15 '11, Av 15, 5771
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1. US Helps Pay PA Terrorists Who Murdered Americans
by Gil Ronen
Every single Palestinian Authority terrorist held in an Israeli jail receives a monthly salary from the PA. Terrorists who committed the most heinous crimes – and therefore received longer sentences – receive the most money, according to a report in Israeli paper Yisrael Hayom.
Citing a report received by a senior government official in Jerusalem, the paper says that the terrorists' salaries are paid from the PA's "public budget," which accounts for about 3.5 percent of its total budget.
The PA treasury receives cash from two main sources: the US pays about 50 percent of the money, and the rest is mostly from European Union member nations.
Prisoners who were jailed for periods of up to five years receive 1,400 to 2,000 NIS per month. However, terrorists serving 10 to 15 years receive 6,000 shekels, the ones serving 15 to 20 years receive 10,000 shekels, and those serving 20 to 30 years get 12,000 shekels. These are people who planned, directed and took part in the intentional sadistic slaughter of civilian men, women and children, at point blank range.
Since some of the victims of PA terror are American citizens, the information means that US taxpayers pay monthly salaries to the people who murdered their fellow citizens. The latest US citizen who was a victim of PA terror is Ben Yosef Livnat, who was gunned down in Shechem.
The terrorists' wives and children receive additional cash, and prisoners with Israel citizenship get a bonus.
Comment on this story
by Gil Ronen
Every single Palestinian Authority terrorist held in an Israeli jail receives a monthly salary from the PA. Terrorists who committed the most heinous crimes – and therefore received longer sentences – receive the most money, according to a report in Israeli paper Yisrael Hayom.
Citing a report received by a senior government official in Jerusalem, the paper says that the terrorists' salaries are paid from the PA's "public budget," which accounts for about 3.5 percent of its total budget.
The PA treasury receives cash from two main sources: the US pays about 50 percent of the money, and the rest is mostly from European Union member nations.
Prisoners who were jailed for periods of up to five years receive 1,400 to 2,000 NIS per month. However, terrorists serving 10 to 15 years receive 6,000 shekels, the ones serving 15 to 20 years receive 10,000 shekels, and those serving 20 to 30 years get 12,000 shekels. These are people who planned, directed and took part in the intentional sadistic slaughter of civilian men, women and children, at point blank range.
Since some of the victims of PA terror are American citizens, the information means that US taxpayers pay monthly salaries to the people who murdered their fellow citizens. The latest US citizen who was a victim of PA terror is Ben Yosef Livnat, who was gunned down in Shechem.
The terrorists' wives and children receive additional cash, and prisoners with Israel citizenship get a bonus.
Comment on this story
2. Barak Puts Stamp on Expansion in City of Ariel in Samaria
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who heads the left-wing flank of the coalition government, approved on Monday the construction of 277 more apartments in Ariel, located in central Samaria.
The announcement furthers Israel’s unofficial policy that in any future Palestinian Authority state, Israel will surrender most of Judea and Samaria but not Ariel and other large Jewish population centers.
Ariel, located several miles east of metropolitan Tel Aviv, is home to more than 18,000 Jews and a fast-growing university. Approximately 100 of the new apartments in Ariel are to house victims of the expulsion of Jews from Gaza in 2005.
The announcement of another 277 apartments is bound to draw criticism from the Palestinian Authority, the European Union and the Obama administration, all of whom demand that Israel work toward eliminating any Jewish presence in Judea and Samaria, as well in large parts of Jerusalem, to satisfy PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas’ conditions for creating the Palestinian Authority as a new Arab state.
Last week, Israel announced advancement in the lengthy bureaucratic process to build 1,600 new homes for Jews in Jerusalem’s Ramat Shlomo neighborhood, claimed by the Palestinian Authority. European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said the announcement "threatens the viability of an agreed two-state solution" and "undermines ongoing efforts to resume negotiations."
However, several PA officials have admitted in Arab media that the PA rejects the “two-state solution” and sees itself as including approximately a million and a half Arabs holding Israeli citizenship.
Riyad Mansour, Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United Nations, and chief Palestinian Negotiator Saeb Erekat recently wrote to the United Nations that the beguiling projects in Ramat Shlomo as well in Har Homa, in southern Jerusalem, “are illegal.”
The United States government has accepted the PA position almost since the aftermath of the Six-Day War in 1967, when Judea, Samaria and Gaza and all of Jerusalem were restored to Israel.
President Barack Obama, since taking office two years ago, has called the Jewish presence in these areas, including Jerusalem, “illegitimate” and has labeled large Jewish neighborhoods in eastern, southern and northern Jerusalem as “settlements.
Comment on this story
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who heads the left-wing flank of the coalition government, approved on Monday the construction of 277 more apartments in Ariel, located in central Samaria.
The announcement furthers Israel’s unofficial policy that in any future Palestinian Authority state, Israel will surrender most of Judea and Samaria but not Ariel and other large Jewish population centers.
Ariel, located several miles east of metropolitan Tel Aviv, is home to more than 18,000 Jews and a fast-growing university. Approximately 100 of the new apartments in Ariel are to house victims of the expulsion of Jews from Gaza in 2005.
The announcement of another 277 apartments is bound to draw criticism from the Palestinian Authority, the European Union and the Obama administration, all of whom demand that Israel work toward eliminating any Jewish presence in Judea and Samaria, as well in large parts of Jerusalem, to satisfy PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas’ conditions for creating the Palestinian Authority as a new Arab state.
Last week, Israel announced advancement in the lengthy bureaucratic process to build 1,600 new homes for Jews in Jerusalem’s Ramat Shlomo neighborhood, claimed by the Palestinian Authority. European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said the announcement "threatens the viability of an agreed two-state solution" and "undermines ongoing efforts to resume negotiations."
However, several PA officials have admitted in Arab media that the PA rejects the “two-state solution” and sees itself as including approximately a million and a half Arabs holding Israeli citizenship.
Riyad Mansour, Permanent Observer of Palestine to the United Nations, and chief Palestinian Negotiator Saeb Erekat recently wrote to the United Nations that the beguiling projects in Ramat Shlomo as well in Har Homa, in southern Jerusalem, “are illegal.”
The United States government has accepted the PA position almost since the aftermath of the Six-Day War in 1967, when Judea, Samaria and Gaza and all of Jerusalem were restored to Israel.
President Barack Obama, since taking office two years ago, has called the Jewish presence in these areas, including Jerusalem, “illegitimate” and has labeled large Jewish neighborhoods in eastern, southern and northern Jerusalem as “settlements.
Comment on this story
3. Do Israeli Judges 'Look Down' on Jewish Civil Law?
by Elad Benari
According to a new study by Dr. Aviad Hacohen, Dean of the Shaarei Mishpat College, despite the talk by officials in Israel’s judicial system about the importance of Jewish law and its integration into the Israeli legal system, in practice no use is made of it and those who use it are looked down upon.
Justice Minister Yaakov Ne’eman has called in the past to incorporate mishpat ivri (Jewish civil law) into Israel’s law procedures. He is the present-day representative of a long tradition in the religious Zionist sphere, of those who hoped for mishpat Ivri to be the law of the Land.
These included Rabbi Kook, Rabbi Maimon and the hareidi-religious Rabbi Eliezer Waldenburg (the latter, in his book Hilchot Medinah, referred to it as "atchalta d'Geulah, the start of the redemption, in the arising of our own state on part of our Holy Land, with our own independent government," page 8).
While some criticized the idea, including opposition leader Tzipi Livni, others supported Ne’eman, including former Justice Minister Moshe Nissim, who is an observant Jew and son of a former Sephardic Chief Rabbi.
There have also been calls to make Jewish monetary law a part of Israeli law. The values and ethics in mishpat ivri are seen as placing it a notch above precedent-based law, as Jewish civil law has the stated objective of building a healthy, caring and just society.
But as Hacohen told Arutz Sheva on Sunday, the trend as can be seen from his research is a move away from Jewish law rather than toward it.
“The phenomenon of not using halakah is not a new phenomenon,” he said, pointing out that there have been a few exceptions but that in general the Supreme Court does not heed Jewish law in its rulings.
The problem, however, said Dr. Hacohen, is that “not only is there no use of Jewish law in court rulings, but judges actually make fun of the Jewish law.”
For example, he said, according to some guidelines that were distributed to judges, there is no need for an Israeli judge to have proven knowledge of Jewish law. He added that this is as evidence of a perception that judges who chose to rely on Jewish law may be not be promoted because of this fact.
Dr. Hacohen said that this attitude permeates the legal system, as judges and other individuals with senior positions in the judicial system say that young students should not “waste their time” studying Jewish law since it has no real chance of being used.
He brought another example of a judge who noticed that his friend was engaged in Jewish law and asked him, “Why did you dive into the deep waters of the Jewish law?”, or in other words: why are you engaged in something which has no real legal need?
Dr. Hacohen pointed out that these and other examples go against the Israeli law which requires a judge to turn to halakhic sources, especially when making decisions concerning fundamental rights, which Israeli law states must be based on Israel’s Jewish and democratic values.
There are judges who do quote Jewish civil law in their rulings, but they are becoming few and far between. This was a point of divergence between former Chief Justice Menachem Elon, who championed the use of Jewish civil law, and former Chief Justice Aharon Barak, who based his rulings on non-Jewish sources.
It is out of this concern that the Shaarei Mishpat College, which Dr. Hacohen heads, has launched a graduate program that will approach and make use of Jewish law from the start and not in retrospect.
Bar Ilan University's law department has mandatory courses in mishpat ivri as well as the opportunity for advanced degrees specializing in it. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem has a Mishpat Ivri Research Institute, once headed by former Chief Justice Elon.
Comment on this story
by Elad Benari
According to a new study by Dr. Aviad Hacohen, Dean of the Shaarei Mishpat College, despite the talk by officials in Israel’s judicial system about the importance of Jewish law and its integration into the Israeli legal system, in practice no use is made of it and those who use it are looked down upon.
Justice Minister Yaakov Ne’eman has called in the past to incorporate mishpat ivri (Jewish civil law) into Israel’s law procedures. He is the present-day representative of a long tradition in the religious Zionist sphere, of those who hoped for mishpat Ivri to be the law of the Land.
These included Rabbi Kook, Rabbi Maimon and the hareidi-religious Rabbi Eliezer Waldenburg (the latter, in his book Hilchot Medinah, referred to it as "atchalta d'Geulah, the start of the redemption, in the arising of our own state on part of our Holy Land, with our own independent government," page 8).
While some criticized the idea, including opposition leader Tzipi Livni, others supported Ne’eman, including former Justice Minister Moshe Nissim, who is an observant Jew and son of a former Sephardic Chief Rabbi.
There have also been calls to make Jewish monetary law a part of Israeli law. The values and ethics in mishpat ivri are seen as placing it a notch above precedent-based law, as Jewish civil law has the stated objective of building a healthy, caring and just society.
But as Hacohen told Arutz Sheva on Sunday, the trend as can be seen from his research is a move away from Jewish law rather than toward it.
“The phenomenon of not using halakah is not a new phenomenon,” he said, pointing out that there have been a few exceptions but that in general the Supreme Court does not heed Jewish law in its rulings.
The problem, however, said Dr. Hacohen, is that “not only is there no use of Jewish law in court rulings, but judges actually make fun of the Jewish law.”
For example, he said, according to some guidelines that were distributed to judges, there is no need for an Israeli judge to have proven knowledge of Jewish law. He added that this is as evidence of a perception that judges who chose to rely on Jewish law may be not be promoted because of this fact.
Dr. Hacohen said that this attitude permeates the legal system, as judges and other individuals with senior positions in the judicial system say that young students should not “waste their time” studying Jewish law since it has no real chance of being used.
He brought another example of a judge who noticed that his friend was engaged in Jewish law and asked him, “Why did you dive into the deep waters of the Jewish law?”, or in other words: why are you engaged in something which has no real legal need?
Dr. Hacohen pointed out that these and other examples go against the Israeli law which requires a judge to turn to halakhic sources, especially when making decisions concerning fundamental rights, which Israeli law states must be based on Israel’s Jewish and democratic values.
There are judges who do quote Jewish civil law in their rulings, but they are becoming few and far between. This was a point of divergence between former Chief Justice Menachem Elon, who championed the use of Jewish civil law, and former Chief Justice Aharon Barak, who based his rulings on non-Jewish sources.
It is out of this concern that the Shaarei Mishpat College, which Dr. Hacohen heads, has launched a graduate program that will approach and make use of Jewish law from the start and not in retrospect.
Bar Ilan University's law department has mandatory courses in mishpat ivri as well as the opportunity for advanced degrees specializing in it. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem has a Mishpat Ivri Research Institute, once headed by former Chief Justice Elon.
Comment on this story
4. 'Slapping-Defender' Col. Virov to be Head Infantry Officer
by Gil Ronen
The former commander of Kfir Brigade, Col. Itai Virov, will be promoted to the rank of brigadier-general and become the IDF's Chief Infantry and Paratrooper Officer.
The decision was made by Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz.
Virov was reprimanded by his higher-ups after he testified for the defendant in the case against Adam Malul, an officer who was accused of slapping an Arab suspect. Virov testified on Malul's behalf, saying that in the course of military operations, relatively light violence like "a slap in the face, a blow to the back of the neck or the chest, a knee or a choke" are often necessary for "achieving calm" and "completing the mission."
He did not mention outright that it might save soldiers' lives as well, but parents who reacted to his words in the media said it for him.
Major General Gadi Shamni reprimanded Virov and the Military Prosecution launched an investigation against him. The investigation was called off last week when a military court of appeals decided that it was unjustified and could be seen as an attempt to influence the legal proceedings against Malul.
Comment on this story
by Gil Ronen
The former commander of Kfir Brigade, Col. Itai Virov, will be promoted to the rank of brigadier-general and become the IDF's Chief Infantry and Paratrooper Officer.
The decision was made by Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz.
Virov was reprimanded by his higher-ups after he testified for the defendant in the case against Adam Malul, an officer who was accused of slapping an Arab suspect. Virov testified on Malul's behalf, saying that in the course of military operations, relatively light violence like "a slap in the face, a blow to the back of the neck or the chest, a knee or a choke" are often necessary for "achieving calm" and "completing the mission."
He did not mention outright that it might save soldiers' lives as well, but parents who reacted to his words in the media said it for him.
Major General Gadi Shamni reprimanded Virov and the Military Prosecution launched an investigation against him. The investigation was called off last week when a military court of appeals decided that it was unjustified and could be seen as an attempt to influence the legal proceedings against Malul.
Comment on this story
5. Tu B'Av Dance Festival Celebrates Expression Through Dance
by Elad Benari
Tu B’Av, the Jewish holiday of nuptials, is on Monday, and it brings with it a unique annual festival in Shilo, located in the Binyamin region, that combines Talmudic tradition with the more modern expressions of dance for women.
The festival renews an ancient tradition brought in the Mishna, written 2,000 years ago, which explains that Tu B'Av is a very festive minor holiday, on which Jewish maidens used to go out to the vineyards to dance wearing borrowed white clothing, so as not to embarrass those who did not have fine garments of their own. The young women would say, "Young man, lift up your eyes and appreciate whom you are selecting [to marry]. Look not at beauty, but rather at the family..."
Avital Horesh, artistic director of the festival, told Arutz Sheva on Sunday the festival aims to be an open house which presents the rapidly growing Jewish dance world.
“This is the third year that we are holding the festival on Tu B’Av, but it’s the first year it will be this big with about 1,000 women expected to attend,” she said.
Horesh, a dance teacher and motion therapist, is married with three children and lives in the community of Kida. She runs the festival along with Michal Weizman.
“The festival program is rich and varied,” said Horesh. “The women will be able to choose two workshops out of ten workshops that are available. The workshops offer a variety of styles - Oriental Dance, hip hop, African dance and more. After the workshops the women will enjoy dance performances and a musical performance of from famous Israeli singers such as Etti Ankri and Mika Karni.”
The idea behind the festival, said Horesh, is “to preserve an ancient tradition of the women who would come out and dance in the vineyards on Tu B’Av. Originally the girls were out looking for a partner, but we take the concept of dancing in the vineyards out of a belief that it creates a connection between man and his wife, between one woman and another and between a woman and herself.”
She added, “The festival connects the ends of the population and is designed for all women, both religious and non-religious. The festival is meant for everyone.”
Horesh added that even religious women who are not used to dancing will find their place in the festival.
“The festival has all kinds of workshops and styles and anyone can find what she likes,” she said. “The workshops are held in small, intimate groups and create a personal atmosphere for each participant.”
She explained that “part of being women is to get to know our body not only through the experiences of pregnancy and childbirth. The festival is the place to get to know the body from a different place. This year more women are signed up. And everything is conducted in accordance with the required rules of modesty.”
Finally, she said, “I feel like managing the festival is a mission. I do it with love and joy. It’s really a dream come true and I promise all who come an unforgettable experience.”
Comment on this story
by Elad Benari
Tu B’Av, the Jewish holiday of nuptials, is on Monday, and it brings with it a unique annual festival in Shilo, located in the Binyamin region, that combines Talmudic tradition with the more modern expressions of dance for women.
The festival renews an ancient tradition brought in the Mishna, written 2,000 years ago, which explains that Tu B'Av is a very festive minor holiday, on which Jewish maidens used to go out to the vineyards to dance wearing borrowed white clothing, so as not to embarrass those who did not have fine garments of their own. The young women would say, "Young man, lift up your eyes and appreciate whom you are selecting [to marry]. Look not at beauty, but rather at the family..."
Avital Horesh, artistic director of the festival, told Arutz Sheva on Sunday the festival aims to be an open house which presents the rapidly growing Jewish dance world.
“This is the third year that we are holding the festival on Tu B’Av, but it’s the first year it will be this big with about 1,000 women expected to attend,” she said.
Horesh, a dance teacher and motion therapist, is married with three children and lives in the community of Kida. She runs the festival along with Michal Weizman.
“The festival program is rich and varied,” said Horesh. “The women will be able to choose two workshops out of ten workshops that are available. The workshops offer a variety of styles - Oriental Dance, hip hop, African dance and more. After the workshops the women will enjoy dance performances and a musical performance of from famous Israeli singers such as Etti Ankri and Mika Karni.”
The idea behind the festival, said Horesh, is “to preserve an ancient tradition of the women who would come out and dance in the vineyards on Tu B’Av. Originally the girls were out looking for a partner, but we take the concept of dancing in the vineyards out of a belief that it creates a connection between man and his wife, between one woman and another and between a woman and herself.”
She added, “The festival connects the ends of the population and is designed for all women, both religious and non-religious. The festival is meant for everyone.”
Horesh added that even religious women who are not used to dancing will find their place in the festival.
“The festival has all kinds of workshops and styles and anyone can find what she likes,” she said. “The workshops are held in small, intimate groups and create a personal atmosphere for each participant.”
She explained that “part of being women is to get to know our body not only through the experiences of pregnancy and childbirth. The festival is the place to get to know the body from a different place. This year more women are signed up. And everything is conducted in accordance with the required rules of modesty.”
Finally, she said, “I feel like managing the festival is a mission. I do it with love and joy. It’s really a dream come true and I promise all who come an unforgettable experience.”
Comment on this story
6. Egypt Claims: Mossad Spy in Custody
by Maayana Miskin
Arab media outlets are reporting the arrest of a man in Egypt for allegedly working with Israel's Mossad. The detainee is a Jordanian citizen who has been identified as Bashar Abu-Zeid.
The Al-Jareeda paper reported that Abu-Zeid had been working for a Mossad agent known as Ofir Harari.
The Mossad agent managed to escape the country when the spy ring was uncovered, the paper said.
Abu-Zeid has been indicted for “harming Egypt's national security.” He is accused of working with “Harari” to infiltrate media networks in Egypt, in exchange for payment.
Egypt is also holding a young American-Israeli man, Ilan Grapel, on suspicions of spying. Many Egyptians are mocking the Grapel “spy” saga as fiction.
Last year Egypt turned to Interpol with a request for help in capturing an “Israeli spy ring.” Egyptian officials accused the “spy ring” of plotting to attack tourists in the Sinai Peninsula.
A short time earlier, an Egyptian official accused the Mossad of involvement in shark attacks in Sinai.
Comment on this story
by Maayana Miskin
Arab media outlets are reporting the arrest of a man in Egypt for allegedly working with Israel's Mossad. The detainee is a Jordanian citizen who has been identified as Bashar Abu-Zeid.
The Al-Jareeda paper reported that Abu-Zeid had been working for a Mossad agent known as Ofir Harari.
The Mossad agent managed to escape the country when the spy ring was uncovered, the paper said.
Abu-Zeid has been indicted for “harming Egypt's national security.” He is accused of working with “Harari” to infiltrate media networks in Egypt, in exchange for payment.
Egypt is also holding a young American-Israeli man, Ilan Grapel, on suspicions of spying. Many Egyptians are mocking the Grapel “spy” saga as fiction.
Last year Egypt turned to Interpol with a request for help in capturing an “Israeli spy ring.” Egyptian officials accused the “spy ring” of plotting to attack tourists in the Sinai Peninsula.
A short time earlier, an Egyptian official accused the Mossad of involvement in shark attacks in Sinai.
Comment on this story
7. Danon: Turkey Should Apologize, Not Israel
by Gil Ronen
Likud MK Danny Danon castigated Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan in an opinion piece in the Washington Times, for "the audacity" to demand that Israel apologize for the May 2010 incident involving the Gaza-bound ship Mavi Marmara.
"In fact, the Turkish government owes Israel an apology for this attack, along with other recent actions that have threatened the lives of Israeli citizens," argues Danon.
Turkey "should apologize for encouraging the sending, under false pretenses, of anti-Israel activists into the country’s sovereign territory," the prominent freshman MK explains. "These supposedly peaceful activists, who were in fact carrying a cache of illegal weapons, attacked Israeli soldiers without provocation. Furthermore, Turkey has been using the flotilla as an opportunity to establish itself as a superpower within the Muslim world. The Turkish government also should apologize for turning the flotilla incident into a platform intended to present Israel as aggressive
and barbaric."
"Most of all, Mr. Erdogan should apologize for continuing to support the flotilla and maintain connections with Hamas and other Islamic extremist groups," Danon says, noting Turkey's growing closeness to Syria and Iran.
Since Erdogan took office, Danon claims, his goal has been "to flex his country’s muscles and prove its ability to lead the Muslim world. Unfortunately, this has been done at Israel’s expense. As a result, he is positioning Turkey’s relationship with Israel on shaky ground."
The United States and other allies, writes Danon, should lead the call for Turkey to apologize to Israel for its repeated insults and provocations.
Comment on this story
by Gil Ronen
Likud MK Danny Danon castigated Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan in an opinion piece in the Washington Times, for "the audacity" to demand that Israel apologize for the May 2010 incident involving the Gaza-bound ship Mavi Marmara.
"In fact, the Turkish government owes Israel an apology for this attack, along with other recent actions that have threatened the lives of Israeli citizens," argues Danon.
Turkey "should apologize for encouraging the sending, under false pretenses, of anti-Israel activists into the country’s sovereign territory," the prominent freshman MK explains. "These supposedly peaceful activists, who were in fact carrying a cache of illegal weapons, attacked Israeli soldiers without provocation. Furthermore, Turkey has been using the flotilla as an opportunity to establish itself as a superpower within the Muslim world. The Turkish government also should apologize for turning the flotilla incident into a platform intended to present Israel as aggressive
and barbaric."
"Most of all, Mr. Erdogan should apologize for continuing to support the flotilla and maintain connections with Hamas and other Islamic extremist groups," Danon says, noting Turkey's growing closeness to Syria and Iran.
Since Erdogan took office, Danon claims, his goal has been "to flex his country’s muscles and prove its ability to lead the Muslim world. Unfortunately, this has been done at Israel’s expense. As a result, he is positioning Turkey’s relationship with Israel on shaky ground."
The United States and other allies, writes Danon, should lead the call for Turkey to apologize to Israel for its repeated insults and provocations.
Comment on this story
8. Jewish Housing Project Again May End Up in Arab Hands
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
Jerusalem supermarket owner Rami Levy says a disagreement has forced him to pull out of a deal to keep the Nof Tzion housing project in Jerusalem out of Arab hands.
Levy acted several months ago to save the troubled project from being taken over by American-Arab Bashar al-Masri, who was set to buy out the assets of the development initiated by Digal Investment and Holdings.
The project was built for 395 Jewish families, but only 91 people so far have bought apartments, leaving Digal in financial difficulties with banks.
News that the project for Jews in eastern Jerusalem was about to be bought out by a pro-Palestinian Authority investor prompted Levy to step into the breach. He and Australian Kevin Bermeister agreed to buy Digal’s assets, including Nof Tzion, for 123 million shekels ($35 million).
However, Globes reported Monday that Digal told the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange that Levy and Bermeister said, "There were material differences regarding the information provided by Digal about the assets up for sale."
Digal rejected the claim and added that after the offer to buy its assets, the company reached a settlement on its debt with Bank Leumi, its largest creditor.
If Levy and Bermeister do not solve their dispute, and if no other Jewish investors turn up, al-Masri may return with a bid to takeover Nof Tzion.
Comment on this story
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu
Jerusalem supermarket owner Rami Levy says a disagreement has forced him to pull out of a deal to keep the Nof Tzion housing project in Jerusalem out of Arab hands.
Levy acted several months ago to save the troubled project from being taken over by American-Arab Bashar al-Masri, who was set to buy out the assets of the development initiated by Digal Investment and Holdings.
The project was built for 395 Jewish families, but only 91 people so far have bought apartments, leaving Digal in financial difficulties with banks.
News that the project for Jews in eastern Jerusalem was about to be bought out by a pro-Palestinian Authority investor prompted Levy to step into the breach. He and Australian Kevin Bermeister agreed to buy Digal’s assets, including Nof Tzion, for 123 million shekels ($35 million).
However, Globes reported Monday that Digal told the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange that Levy and Bermeister said, "There were material differences regarding the information provided by Digal about the assets up for sale."
Digal rejected the claim and added that after the offer to buy its assets, the company reached a settlement on its debt with Bank Leumi, its largest creditor.
If Levy and Bermeister do not solve their dispute, and if no other Jewish investors turn up, al-Masri may return with a bid to takeover Nof Tzion.
Comment on this story
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Un député assidu fait-il un bon député ?
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Heurts entre police et manifestants à Tunis
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Alors qu'une marche pacifiste autorisée avait lieu ce lundi, une autre manifestation anti-gouvernementale a elle été bloquée et dispersée. |
David Cameron pointe "l'effondrement moral" de la société
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Un mois supplémentaire à l'isolement pour Anders Behring Breivik ?
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L'auteur de la fusillade d'Utoeya, qui a fait 69 morts, est actuellement détenu dans une prison de haute sécurité près d'Oslo. |
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La gauche appelle à nouveau au retrait des troupes d'Afghanistan
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Un lieutenant français a été tué dimanche, portant à 74 le nombre de soldats morts dans le pays depuis fin 2001. |
Viol d'une jeune fille à Marseille : deux hommes présentés au parquet
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Meurtre des Françaises en Argentine : un 8e suspect arrêté
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La revue de presse de Challenges.fr. Dans les journaux également, l'attractivité de la Turquie qui ne connait pas la crise, les casinos de Las Vegas, et Facebook qui investit les téléphones mobiles... |
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Pékin interrompt ses projets de TGV
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Le gouvernement a décidé de suspendre tout nouveau projet de construction pour redéfinir les normes de sécurité de son réseau. |
Apple devient le champion du monde de la Bourse
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En trois mois, le CAC 40 a chuté de 20%. Ancien analyste financier, Jean-Yves Léger enseigne à l'université de Paris-Ouest-Nanterre La Défense. Il détaille les conséquences de ce krach rampant pour les managers et les salariés actionnaires. |
Pourquoi Samsung va avoir du mal à concurrencer l'iPad en Europe
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Apple vient de remporter une nouvelle victoire dans la guerre des brevets qui l'oppose à Samsung. Le Sud-Coréen s'est vu provisoirement interdire la commercialisation de sa tablette Galaxy dans l'Union européenne. |
Evasion fiscale: Berne et Berlin font la paix
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La Suisse et l'Allemagne ont signé un accord de double imposition qui met désormais un terme à la discorde entre les deux pays sur l'évasion fiscale. |
Le palmarès des grandes fortunes
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Pour la quinzième édition de notre classement, nous avons évalué le patrimoine des principaux actionnaires individuels français à partir des comptes de leurs sociétés, au terme d'une procédure contradictoire. Le classement intègre les non-résidents de nationalité française. Sont exclus des évaluations les biens immobiliers détenus à titre personnel, les œuvres d'art et les signes extérieurs de richesse non durables. |
"Les conditions sont réunies en France pour de nouvelles émeutes"
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Le mouvement de contestation britannique peut-il s'étendre jusqu'à la France ? Interrogé par Challenges, le sociologue et directeur de recherche au CNRS, Laurent Mucchielli le redoute. |
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