Zionism is Humanization - Israel the land of Zion

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long live Indo Israel Relationship and Israel is our most trusted ally
ive liked your post and the idea

but im not so sure anyone is a trusted ally - ive heard they are also supplying high tech to pak and china ?

i think we are our own trusted ally - at least some day when we unite and get our act together - im hoping, that will happen asap
 

SajeevJino

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ive liked your post and the idea
Thanks Ma'am

but im not so sure anyone is a trusted ally - ive heard they are also supplying high tech to pak and china ?
Israel denies the Report ..but they supplied some Tech to China but they are not worthy to compare

i think we are our own trusted ally - at least some day when we unite and get our act together - im hoping, that will happen asap
Till the Vote bank and Caste System ASAP is Too long way
 

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The City of Chicago is looking towards Israel for help in curing its water shortage.


A research initiative between the University of Chicago and Israel's Ben-Gurion University, enjoyed some rare political star power as both Israeli President Shimon Peres and Mayor Rahm Emanuel attended a signing ceremony in Jerusalem to celebrate the new agreement.




The two schools will soon begin funding a number of research projects aimed at creating nanotechnology that address water scarcity in arid climates. The aim of the project is to find new materials and processes for making fresh, clean drinking water more abundant and less expensive by 2020.

"We believe it is essential for leading scientists to address the challenges of water resources worldwide, and which will only worsen over time," University President Robert J. Zimmer said in a statement. "Our purification challenges of the Great Lakes right now are different from the challenges facing some of our colleagues at Ben-Gurion, but our combined experience will be a great asset in transforming emerging technologies into innovative solutions that may have applications beyond local issues," he also said.

Zimmer signed the agreement with Ben-Gurion President Rivka Carmi, in a ceremony at the President's residence in Jerusalem.
The event marked Rahm Emanuel's last public appearance in Israel, where he traveled earlier this month to celebrate the bat mitzvah of his youngest daughter, Leah. During his trip, Emanuel also spoke at the Israeli Presidential Conference along with former President Bill Clinton and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair.

He was scheduled to leave Israel on Sunday. In the video below you can see Mayor Rahm Emanuel attending a public question and answer conference in Israel.

» Chicago Looks To Israel To Cure Its Water Crisis
 

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Alicia Keys in Tel Aviv last night. The critics: "Unforgetable!"


 

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Swiss banks' Shoah fund 'paid out $1.24B'


Holocaust survivors, victims' heirs received money from fund set up after scandal over dormant accounts of Jews killed in World War II, Jewish weekly reports


Holocaust survivors and victims' heirs have received $1.24 billion from a Swiss fund set up after a scandal over dormant accounts of Jews killed in World War II, a magazine said Monday.

The Swiss-Jewish weekly Tachles said the figure was contained in a report by New York judge Edward Korman, who oversees the management of the fund.

Korman's report summed up operations since a landmark 1998 deal between the World Jewish Congress and Swiss banks.

The banks were accused of keeping money owned by Jews who had hidden funds in secret accounts in neutral Switzerland but then perished in the Holocaust, and of having given heirs the cold shoulder when they tried to track down the money.

Under the 1998 accord, the banks paid a $1.25 billion settlement, which was transformed into US government bonds.

Payouts were then overseen by Korman and the Swiss-based Claims Resolution Tribunal, which wrapped up its operations in 2012.

Within the fund, a total of $800 million were destined for account holders and their heirs.

According to Korman's report, Tachles said, $726 million have been paid out since then, with $426 million of that related to claims on 4,600 dormant accounts.

In addition, the fund gave a flat-rate sum of $5,000 each to 12,300 claimants whose cases were deemed "plausible but undocumented."

Another goal of the settlement was to provide money to survivors of Nazi German persecution, whether or not they had held accounts in Switzerland.

All told, 457,000 Holocaust survivors and heirs have therefore received money from the fund.

Among them were 199,000 people who were pressed into forced labor by Nazi Germany, and who received a share of $288 million.


In addition, 4,100 Jewish refugees who were turned back at Switzerland's borders during World War II received a total of $11.6 million.

Korman also authorized the payment of a total of $205 million to 236,000 needy victims of Nazi Germany's occupation, notably in the former Soviet Union.

no details of the fund's administrative budget have been revealed, but Tachles said that the Claims Resolution Tribunal, based in the city of Zurich, cost $800,000 a month to run.

Swiss banks' Shoah fund 'paid out $1.24B' - Israel Jewish Scene, Ynetnews
 

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3-year-old Syrian girl transferred to Israel for treatment


Toddler sustains shrapnel wounds amid conflict; some 100 Syrians evacuated to Israeli hospitals in recent months




three-year-old girl injured in the bloody Syrian war was transferred to Israel for treatment Saturday morning. Together with her mother, the toddler was evacuated to Ziv Medical Center in Safed, where she was treated for shrapnel wounds. She was admitted to the pediatric unit of the hospital and was in serious condition.

Earlier this week, four Syrians were brought to the same hospital in Safed for treatment for injuries sustained in the Syrian civil war.

One of the patients was a 15-year-old girl who lost her foot during the fighting, Israel Radio reported.

Approximately 100 Syrians have been brought to Israel for treatment over the last several months. According to the UN, at least 93,000 people have been killed in the bloody conflict.

Around 7,000 children under the age of 15 have been killed. Half of the 1.7 million Syrian refugees are children, and inside the war-ravaged country, more than 3 million children are in desperate need of humanitarian aid.

Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon in early June confirmed for the first time that Israel is operating a field hospital on the Syrian border. He said the IDF was transferring severely wounded Syrian nationals to Israeli hospitals for treatment. Initial reports of an IDF field hospital in the Golan Heights surfaced in February.

"Our policy is to help in humanitarian cases, and to that end we are operating a field hospital along the Syrian border," Ya'alon told the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. "In cases where there are badly wounded, we transfer them to Israeli hospitals. We have no intention of opening refugee camps."

The IDF has kept secret the identity and number of Syrian nationals treated in Israel.


3-year-old Syrian girl transferred to Israel for treatment | The Times of Israel
 

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Israelis find new way to fight breast cancer


New strategy developed by research team from Weizmann Institute of Science may be able to help descendants of women with triple-negative cancer


An Israeli research team from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, led by Professor Yosef Yarden of the Institute's Biological Regulation Department, have embarked on a journey to find methods that will help fight off triple-negative breast cancer, a type of cancer usually found in young, Hispanic, or African women.

It is also often found in Jewish Ashkenazi women of Eastern European descent.

Triple-negative means the cancer is lacking three hormone receptors (estrogen, progesterone, and HER2) that provide fuel to most cancerous tumors.


As breast cancer carries a strong genetic link, daughters and granddaughters of patients with the cancer are often affected. The Weizmann team's experimental research utilizes methods that mimic the way the body normally responds to breast cancer, as they search for the first solution for triple-negative cancer.


"It's quite a difficult disease," Professor Yarden told ISRAEL21c. "Women who are initially treated with chemotherapy show a good response, but they eventually develop resistance to the chemical therapy. They die within seven or eight years."

Along with his colleague, Professor Michael Sela, the two went on to develop a theory that may be able to improve survival rates in breast cancer patients, and reduce the number of re-occurrences.

They came to this conclusion by abandoning the normal method of developing medicines to fight cancer, which is traditionally done through attacking an antibody on the surface of the tumor. Instead the Israeli doctors combined two diverse antibodies to separate sections of the receptors, which resulted in a positive response during testing.

"If this approach is developed into a drug, it might treat about 5% of all breast cancer patients, a meaningful proportion considering the aggressiveness of triple negative," said Yarden.

While the two have only conducted their tests on animals so far, all of their research has proved very positive thus far, and they are looking to collaborate with pharmaceutical institutions to develop a drug.

Both Professors Yarden and Sela have stated that finding a vaccination that completely fights off cancer is their overall objective.

Their research has since been published in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Israelis find new way to fight breast cancer - Israel Culture, Ynetnews
 

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Israel Hospitals Took Care of Nearly 220,000 PA Arabs in 2012


Will the United Nations, which has condemned Israel for alleged war crimes, also censure it for treating nearly 220,000 PA Arabs Israeli hospitals, including Hamas' prime minister's brother-in-law?





A report published by the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories Unit (COGAT) shows a 10 percent increase in the number of Palestinian Authority Arabs who received treatment in Israeli hospitals in 2012.

The total number of 219,464 patients, 21,270 of them children, includes the companions accompanying the patients in Israel.

The numbers represent a dramatic increase in the number of PA Arabs who receive treatment by Israelis medical professionals, compared with 197,713 patients in Israeli hospitals in 2011 and only 144,838 in 2008.

COGAT, a military unit which is responsible for implementing the Israeli Government's policy in Judea and Samaria, stated, "The Civil Administration, through its health department (HDCA), works closely with the Palestinian Ministry of Health to support the medical needs of the Palestinian population throughout Judea and Samaria." The HDCA manages all issues relating to Israeli-Palestinian healthcare coordination, primarily the transfer of Palestinian patients to hospitals in Israel.

The HDCA further works to enable professional medical training for Palestinian Authority Arabs by Israel through the encouragement of medical conferences and the training of Palestinian medical staff in Israeli hospitals. Training sessions take place several times a year, initiated by both the HDCA and the Palestinian Authority.

In 2012, the Civil Administration paid $560,000 to send PA Arab doctors, nurses, and paramedics for training in Israel. The Civil Administration has also set aside a budget to finance critical medical procedures for patients who are not covered by Palestinian or UNRWA health insurance and are not able to pay privately.

Tazpit's Anav Silverman reported last year that Suhila Abd el-Salam, the sister of Hamas Prime Minister in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, accompanied her husband for treatment in Israel. Her husband was admitted to Bellinson Hospital, in Petach Tikvah, for immediate medical treatment following a serious heart condition.

Haniyeh's sister and her husband requested permission to travel to Israel to receive the necessary medical treatment because Gaza hospitals could not properly treat the condition.

This was not the only time that a Gaza resident was treated in Israel. This past March, a 15-year-old boy in Gaza was transported to the Kaplan Medical Center in Rehovot after suffering from severe burns and shrapnel injuries from an alleged rocket launching pad that was set up in Jabalya, a neighborhood in northern Gaza.

The Palestinian Minister of Health, Dr. Hanni Abadin, paid an unprecedented visit to Hadassah Ein Kerem Hospital in Jerusalem at the beginning of this past May.

Dr. Yuval Weiss, director of the hospital, reported that at any given moment there are some 60 Palestinian Authority medical personnel in training at the hospital. Dr. Abadin thanked Hadassah for the opportunity to visit and for its services, visited Arab children hospitalized at Hadassah and gave them gifts.

The Civil Administration Health Department declared that it will continue in 2013 to cooperate closely with their PA counterparts and international organizations in Judea and Samaria to advance healthcare for the benefit of all residents in the region.


The Jewish Press » » Israel Hospitals Took Care of Nearly 220,000 PA Arabs in 2012
 

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Israel Continues To Treat Wounded Syrians


Responding to need for humanitarian aid, Israeli medical teams treat wounded Syrians both in the field and in Israeli hospitals.


This past Shabbat, a 3-year-old girl wounded by shrapnel in the Syrian civil war was brought to Israel for medical treatment with her mother. At press time, they are still receiving treatment at Tzfat's Ziv Medical Center.

This little girl is not the only Syrian child to receive medical care in Israel in recent days. Another 15-year-old arrived with an amputated leg and stomach wounds and an 8-year-old, along with her mother, was also treated for fractures from shrapnel at the Ziv Center, spokespeople said.

After a bomb struck their home, the 8-year-old girl and her mother were taken to the Israeli field hospital before being brought to Israel for medical treatment. Israel keeps the identities of Syrians receiving medical treatment in Israel a closely held secret so patients won't face attacks when they return to Syria. The Ziv Center has already treated more than 45 Syrians amid recent chaos, out of a total of more than 100 Syrian civilians treated in Israel hospitals in recent months.

In addition to treating the Syrian wounded in Israeli hospitals, Syrian civilians also receive medical care in an IDF field hospital along the Israeli-Syrian border. "Our policy is to help in humanitarian cases, and to that end we are operating a field hospital along the Syrian border," Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon told the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. "In cases where there are badly wounded, we transfer them to Israeli hospitals."

About half of the 1.7 million Syrian refugees are children, while an additional 3 million children still in Syria remain in desperate need of humanitarian aid. Observers report that the children are traumatized, having witnessed massacres, homes burned to the ground, torture, and rape. One refugee woman reported that her teenage daughter was so distressed by what she witnessed that she burned herself, believing that if she turned black, then maybe she could avoid rape.


Israel Continues To Treat Wounded Syrians | United with Israel
 

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History of India's Jewish beauty queens


In spite of numerical insignificance of Jews in India's huge population, their women went on to represent country internationally in several beauty pageants


Given the fact that Jewish beauty has been celebrated in history, it comes as no surprise that in spite of the numerical insignificance of Jews in India's huge population, 5,000 in the total Indian population of 1.3 billion, their women went on to represent the country internationally at a number of beauty pageants.

In fact, they were the first to do so, as the very first Miss India was Jewish. The first Miss India pageant in 1947 was organized by Femina, a Times of India publication, and the beauty who was crowned as Miss India was a Baghdadi Jewess, Esther Victoria Abraham (1916-2006), who later became popular as a successful film actress with the pseudonym Pramila.


Two decades later, on March 12, 1967, her daughter Naqi Jahan, who was chosen Miss India in the pageant organized by the popular magazine Eve's Weekly that year, became the first to represent India at the Queen of the Pacific Quest beauty pageant held in Melbourne, Australia.

Although Naqi Jahan is considered Jewish because of her Jewish mother, she was raised as a Muslim, as her mother Esther married a popular Muslim film actor of those times, Kumar ne Syed Hasan Ali. Today their son, Haider Ali, is a successful character artist in Bollywood.


The honor of being the first Indian to participate in the Miss World pageant went to Fleur Ezekiel, a member of the Bene Israel community, numerically the largest of the three Jewish communities in India. She represented India in the Miss World pageant of 1959.

The mother of the Roy Kapur brothers, Siddharth, Kunal and Aditya, who are making waves in Bollywood today, was Miss India 1972, Salome Aaron. Aaron, a ballroom dancer, later went on to make a career for herself as a film choreographer in Bollywood.

Of her three sons she had with her Hindu husband, the eldest, Siddharth, has found great success as the managing director of a film company, which is the joint venture of Disney and UTV in India, while the younger two, Kunal and Aditya, have become successful actors.

It is interesting to note that her youngest son, Aditya Roy Kapur, is the second male lead in the only second Indian film to be released simultaneously in India and Israel, "Yeh Jawaani hai Deewani."

History of India's Jewish beauty queens - Israel Jewish Scene, Ynetnews
 

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Russia's Jewish Autonomous Region Hit by $90 Mln Flood Damage – Official


Russia's Jewish Autonomous Region, in the country's flood-hit far east, has suffered 3 billion rubles' (about $90 million) worth of flood damage, the local governor said Saturday.




"It is not yet possible to fully assess the damage, as the floods are continuing. Sizable sums will be needed for repair work: 485 million rubles on road repairs, 248 million to make up for the damage to agriculture or rather to producers in the region, and 271 million will go to repair social facilities," Governor of the Jewish Autonomous Region Alexander Vinnikov said.

As of Saturday morning, over 25 towns or villages and 918 residential properties had been evacuated from particularly hard-hit areas in the region, and over 8,200 people had been evacuated, Vinnikov said.

He also said he had received a letter asking his to redirect funds earmarked for public-sector projects, such as building a new hospital and routine highway repairs to flood-relief. He did not say who sent the letter, but indicated that it was not a request he felt he could seriously consider.

Russia's Jewish Autonomous Region Hit by $90 Mln Flood Damage – Official | Russia | RIA Novosti
 

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Biblical-Era Town Discovered Along Sea of Galilee


A town dating back more than 2,000 years has been discovered on the northwest coast of the Sea of Galilee, in Israel's Ginosar valley.



The Sea of Galilee boat is the most famous artifact that we can now associate with this newly discovered town. It dates back to either the first century B.C. or A.D. Although the boat was uncovered in 1986 the discovery of the town means we now know it was found on the ancient town's shoreline.
Credit: Photo by Berthold Werner




View looking southwest showing the mountains bounding the Ginosar Valley in Israel. Archaeologists found pottery remains, cubes known as tesserae and, in the modern town, architectural fragments indicating a town flourished in the area from the second or first century B.C. until after the fifth century A.D.Credit: Photo copyright Dr. Ken Dar


The ancient town may be Dalmanutha (also spelled Dalmanoutha), described in the Gospel of Mark as the place Jesus sailed to after miraculously feeding 4,000 people by multiplying a few fish and loaves of bread, said Ken Dark, of the University of Reading in the U.K., whose team discovered the town during a field survey.

The archaeologists also determined that a famous boat, dating to around 2,000 years ago, and uncovered in 1986, was found on the shoreline of the newly discovered town. The boat was reported on two decades ago but the discovery of the town provides new information on what lay close to it.

The evidence the team found suggests the town was prosperous in ancient times. "Vessel glass and amphora hint at wealth," Dark wrote in an article published in the most recent edition of the journal Palestine Exploration Quarterly, while "weights and stone anchors, along with the access to beaches suitable for landing boats — and, of course, the first-century boat "¦ all imply an involvement with fishing." [Photos: 4,000-Year-Old Structure Hidden Under Sea of Galilee]

The architectural remains and pottery suggest that Jews and those following a polytheistic religion lived side by side in the community. In addition, the researchers found that the southern side of the newly discovered town lies only about 500 feet (150 meters) away from another ancient town known as Magdala.


Fields between the modern-day town of Migdal and the sea coast contained hundreds of pottery pieces dating from as early as the second or first century B.C. to up to some point after the fifth century A.D., the time of the Byzantine Empire, the archaeologists found. The artifacts suggest the town survived for many centuries.

Also among their finds were cubes known as tesserae and limestone vessel fragments, which were "associated with Jewish purity practices in the early Roman period," indicating the presence of a Jewish community in the town, Dark told LiveScience in an email.

Some of the most impressive finds, however, were not made in the fields but rather in modern-day Migdal itself. The archaeologists found dozens of examples of ancient architectural remains, some of which the modern-day townspeople had turned into seats or garden ornaments, or simply left lying on the ground. In one instance, the researchers found more than 40 basalt ashlar blocks in a single garden.

After talking to the local people, and trying to identify the source and date of the findings, the researchers determined that many of the architectural remains came from the local area and likely were part of this newly discovered town.

These remains included a number of ancient column fragments, including examples of capitals (the top of columns) carved in a Corinthian style. "This settlement may have contained masonry buildings, some with mosaic floors and architectural stonework," Dark wrote in his paper.

The finds also included a pagan altar, made of light-gray limestone and used in religious rituals by those of a polytheistic faith, Dark said.

Is it Dalmanutha?

In the New Testament, Dalmanutha is mentioned only briefly in the Gospel of Mark.

The gospel says that after feeding 4,000 people by miraculously multiplying a few fish and loaves of bread, Jesus "got into the boat with his disciples and went to the region of Dalmanutha. The Pharisees came and began to question Jesus. To test him, they asked him for a sign from heaven. He sighed deeply and said, 'Why does this generation ask for a sign? Truly I tell you, no sign will be given to it.'Then he left them, got back into the boat and crossed to the other side." (Mark 8:10-13, New International Version)

Dark isn't certain the newly discovered town is Dalmanutha, but there is evidence to support the idea. From the remains found, researchers can tell the newly discovered town would have been a sizable, thriving location in the first century A.D., and the name Dalmanutha has not been firmly linked to a known archaeological site.

It's likely that the newly found town's name is among the few place-names already identified by other researchers relating to the Ginosar valley shore, and one of those places is Dalmanutha, Dark said.

Biblical-Era Town Discovered Along Sea of Galilee | LiveScience
 

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Out of Africa, to an Israeli wildlife hospital


The baby hedgehog, his eyes still closed but his spikes already fully out, arrived with a personal letter. "We found him near our house," it said. "He was under some stairs, surrounded by our cats and dogs. We don't know where his mother is. He didn't eat for a whole day! Please take care of him and we would be happy to return him to nature."

Ariela Rosenzwig, the Israeli veterinarian who read the letter out loud recently in the Wildlife Hospital in Ramat Gan, picked up the tiny creature. She carefully examined it and put it in her shirt pocket, for warmth. "His leg is broken," she said, "but that's the least of his problems. He should be in a cave with his mother; his chances of survival are low."

Around Rosenzwig, various animals that were brought in to the only wildlife hospital in Israel were waiting their turn, all of them in cardboard boxes. There was a young falcon with wing problems and a jackdaw chick which was screaming his lungs out. On the operating table was a Steppe Eagle, which had been shot by an arrow somewhere in Africa, flew all the way to Israel and somehow found its way to the hospital, and had the arrow successfully removed from its flesh. An owl was awaiting a clean-up, and a small seagull was also in line for some treatment.

The hospital treats around 2,000 animals annually, and one day earlier this year had around 170 of them in hospitalization. "If it's wild we accept it. Doesn't matter if it's a snake or a weasel, a deer or a hyena,"
said Ronni, who manages the day-to-day operations in the hospital.

Even crows and pigeons are taken care of, in keeping with the ethos of the hospital — saving animals.

"Our main aim is to return wild animals to nature, to preserve species, especially in a sensitive area like Israel," Ronni added. "The majority of animals we receive and help are here because of human activity — getting hit by cars, electrocuted, tangled in traps."

In the hospitalization ward, there's a range of Israeli wildlife, often sharing cages. "We are on a big migratory route here in Israel, so we have many birds in our care," said Nilly, another veterinarian. Volunteers were feeding worms to dozens of chicks, all crying for attention. "I think she is missing some B12," said Tina, a volunteer from Germany, massaging and feeding a young swift.

The hospital is equipped with X-ray machines, operating rooms and supplies for most kinds of animals. It is funded by public donations, private foundations and the Ramat Gan safari zoo in whose premises it is located. Four veterinarians are employed, receiving large animals almost every day from nature protection personnel and smaller ones from caring citizens, as in the case of the baby hedgehog.

"I want to X-ray him," said Ariela after warming up the creature. She did so twice, to be sure of the right diagnosis.

He was not doing well. "See these gasps? If we don't do something, he will die."

She inserted an IV directly into his leg bone. "This is life and death now," she said. "Poor guy."

The hospital treats some of the safari's more complex cases — not so wild, but still in need of medical care. Pedang the tiger, for example, who is 14 years old and suffers from chronic ear infections, was treated by Rosenzweig and other veterinarians this spring, under full anesthesia. He also received a lengthy acupuncture session. "This is usually done on much smaller animals," said the Safari spokesperson, Sagit Horowitz.

The hospital is staffed with the help of dozens of volunteers and young Israelis who choose to spend their army service there — and often stay afterwards, as Ronni did. "This place is addictive," she said, as she watched the hedgehog intently.

In early afternoon, a group from the hospital marched out into the grounds of the safari, to release one of the many swifts. "I need to see if it looks up to the sky when we're out," said Tina. It did. She opened her cupped hands, and the bird rose up.

"I don't like the look of those crows," said one of the volunteers, pointing to an ominous couple flying overhead.

But the swift "is the second-fastest bird in the world," said Tina, as the newly released bird started to maneuver close to the ground, too rapidly for the crows.

That was the day's balance: one swift released, and the baby hedgehog that didn't make it. Inside the hospital, though, numerous other creatures were, gradually, being nursed back to heath, readied for a return to nature.

"You get attached to all animals," said Nilly, who has worked in the hospital for eight years.

One of those was a hyena that was hit by a car and was now recovering following surgery. "He was standing today," Ronni updated Nilly with a smile. "It's a promising start."

Sometime they name the animals, Nilly said, especially the big ones that stay a while.

Out of Africa, to an Israeli wildlife hospital | The Times of Israel
 

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Denmark marks 70th anniversary of rescue of Jews


ceremony has been held in Denmark to mark the 70th anniversary of the evacuation of 7,300 Jews during World War II to prevent their deportation to a Nazi concentration camp.

At Copenhagen's synagogue Sunday, Jewish community leader Finn Schwarz told several hundred people it was "almost a miracle" that the October 1943 operation in Nazi-occupied Denmark dodged German patrol boats to deliver the Jews across a waterway to neutral Sweden.

In that year, Denmark's Jews were ordered deported, but a German official tipped off Danish lawmakers who told Jewish leaders.

Some 481 elderly and sick Danish Jews who couldn't get out were deported to a concentration camp in Czechoslovakia, and 53 died there.

On Tuesday, a light show on a bridge between Denmark and Sweden will commemorate the escape.

Denmark marks 70th anniversary of rescue of Jews | The Times of Israel
 

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After serving queen, Danish soldier makes aliyah, joins IDF


Benjamin Schultz leaves family, friends in Denmark, joins IDF's Givati Brigade in Hebron after service in Danish Royal Life Guard left him looking for 'more action'




Benjamin Schultzer, a 24-year-old Dane who at the age of 21 was recruited to the Danish army, is now serving as an IDF soldier in Hebron. At first he served with the Danish Royal Life Guard, the Danish monarchy's guard unit, and then, during his army service, he was assigned to the UN force in Lebanon. Not once did he look over to Israel – to which he always felt great fondness.

In November 2011 he returned to Denmark, and decided to leave the army frustrated with the "lack of action" offered by service in his country. It was then that the unusual idea first popped into his head: Why not join the IDF?

In June 2012, Schultzer left his family behind, came to Israel and volunteered with the IDF's Givati Brigade, where he continues to serve today. He told his friends that "the Danish army is small and professional because they have no enemies, while the Israeli army is big."


Next week Schultzer will begin the process of aliyah. He is eligible for Israeli citizenship due to the Law of Return, although he is not Jewish by halacha since only his grandfather is Jewish – and thus, he intends to convert to Judaism.

His mother may be worried, but claims that as long as her son is happy, she and the rest of the family are pleased and support his unusual life choice.


After serving queen, Danish soldier makes aliyah, joins IDF - Israel News, Ynetnews
 

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Rihana in Tel Aviv ,Israel




[tweet]392754661565800448[/tweet]
 

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Jewish groups chip in to help fire-ravaged Australia


Australian Jewish groups are providing shelter, meals and psychological counseling for victims of the wild bushfires ravaging Australia




The bushfires, which began last week, have forced members of the Jewish community to evacuate their homes.

David Lake lost his home Monday at the Blue Mountains, one hour's drive west of Sydney, and fled. He managed to save a kiddush cup and a mezuzah.

"All my possessions were incinerated," said Lake, a Sephardic Jew. "It's difficult and emotionally traumatizing.

"The kiddush cup was completely blackened but I managed to restore it — it's still usable," he said. "Isn't that wonderful?"

Lake has been living since Tuesday at a Chabad house in Sydney, which has 40 rooms available, along with a handful of other Jewish evacuees, thanks to the relief efforts of Rabbi Yossi Schapiro, a representative of Chabad of RARA, or Rural and Regional Australia.

"He's going to be here for a while and we'll host him for as long as he needs," the rabbi said. "He is devastated; any person would be devastated."

Our Big Kitchen, a Chabad-run community kitchen in Bondi, staged a cook-athon on Tuesday, preparing more than 1,000 meals for distribution to victims and firefighters.

"We pray that God Almighty has mercy and brings a swift end to this terrible catastrophe, comforts the bereaved and heals the wounded," said Pinchus Feldman, the chief rabbi of Chabad in Sydney.

The Jewish House, a crisis center, is offering psychological help, as well as shelter for those with pets.

"We're in touch with 25 families," said the center's CEO, Rabbi Mendel Kastel. "Most are all packed up and ready to run if they need to."

Jewish Aid Australia launched an appeal this week.

"Like all Australians, the Jewish community is deeply concerned by the devastation left in the fires' wake," said Jewish Aid Australia CEO Gary Samowitz.

The fires reportedly were sparked by explosives training on army land in the area. More than 200 homes have burned down from the approximately 30 wild fires, fueled by the hot, dry summer weather.

Jewish groups chip in to help fire-ravaged Australia | The Times of Israel
 

SajeevJino

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First pediatric open heart surgery performed in Tanzania by medical team trained in Israel.

The South-Eastern African state of Tanzania now has its first pediatric heart surgeon, after Dr Godwin Godfrey returned home following five years of training in Israel.

The Israel based humanitarian project Save a Child's Heart (SACH), organized Dr Godwin's training in a landmark achievement that also saw it train a complete surgical team from a foreign state for the first time


Although SACH has previously trained doctors and surgeons from countries such as China, Ethiopia, Romania, Iraq and Nepal and also the PA, this is the first time the project has trained an entire cardiology team, including an anesthetist and cardiology nurses, meaning the they can perform lifesaving operations unassisted for the first time."

An Israeli team from Holon accompanied the Tanzanian team for a ten day trip to the city of Mwanza in the South East African state, in which they will perform operations together, giving the local team back up until they gain full confidence to operate alone.

"It's an incredible accomplishment both for the Tanzanian doctors who are returning and for the Israeli team," Weiss said.

» Trained In Israel: Tanzania’s First Pediatric Heart Surgeon
 

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