Home Blog Page 1132

University of Michigan ‘Disappointed’ After Professor Refuses to Write Recommendation Letter for Student Studying Abroad in Israel

0

University of Michigan ‘Disappointed’ After Professor Refuses to Write Recommendation Letter for Student Studying Abroad in Israel

 

The University of Michigan (U-M) said it was disappointed after a professor refused to write a letter of recommendation for a student who sought to study abroad at Tel Aviv University, in an expression of support for the academic boycott of Israel.

In an email sent on September 5, Professor John Cheney-Lippold told the student, who had taken a course with him during the Spring 2018 semester, that he would have to rescind an earlier offer to write a letter of recommendation due to “politics.”

“I am very sorry, but I only scanned your first email a couple weeks ago and missed out on a key detail,” wrote Cheney-Lippold, who teaches in the Department of American Culture’s Digital Studies program.

“As you may know, many university departments have pledged an academic boycott against Israel in support of Palestinians living in Palestine,” he said in reference to the boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) campaign against Israel.

The movement says it seeks “to isolate Israel academically, culturally, economically and militarily” until it abides by key Palestinian demands. Critics accuse it of rejecting the Jewish people’s right to national self-determination and aiming to dismantle the Jewish state, a goal supported by the campaign’s co-founder.

Cheney-Lippold noted that the academic boycott forbids “writing letters of recommendation for students planning to study” in Israel — a stipulation included in the official BDS guidelines.

He apologized for not informing the student of his stance earlier, and said he would be happy to write them other letters.

The student, who chose not to disclose their identity, reported the “very disturbing and unsettling email” in a note sent the following day to U-M President Mark Schlissel.

“I firmly believe that any student’s abroad experience should not be impacted or dictated by any professor’s personal political beliefs,” they wrote. “I feel that his response is very disturbing, as he is allowing his personal beliefs (and apparently those of ‘many university departments’) to interfere with my dreams of studying abroad.”

“All I asked for was an academic recommendation regarding my work habits, diligence, and aptitude as a student,” they continued.

An email sent by University of Michigan Professor John Cheney-Lippold to a former student on September 5, 2018. Photo: Courtesy.

The student pointed out that Cheney-Lippold’s rejection did not appear to stem from any objection to their work ethic or other characteristics, but rather “his own political views.”

They called this stance “unconscionable and hypocritical, as presumably he would have no problem in issuing a letter of recommendation” to students who seek to study abroad in “totalitarian” countries and territories as part of a formal U-M program, namely “China, Cuba, Russia, Jordan and the Palestinian Territories.”

The student further suggested that Cheney-Lippold’s conduct appears to be in violation of a 2017 statement by U-M’s Board of Regents rejecting the BDS campaign, as well as Public Acts 526 and 527, which were signed into law in Michigan in 2016. The bipartisan bills, similar to others that have been passed in nearly two dozen states, bar state agencies from contracting with an individual who is engaged in “the boycott of a person based in or doing business with a strategic partner,” namely Israel.

The student’s father, an attorney, said he was informed that the university doesn’t have a current policy about such BDS compliant behavior “that applies to their teachers or their staff, and that that’s under review now.”

Students who request letters of recommendation “should be judged based on [their] resume and academic qualifications, period,” he told The Algemeiner on Monday. “Teachers shouldn’t have a right to inject their personal viewpoints about this.”

He expressed hope that anti-BDS policy will be “applied with all of their teachers and faculty so that no other student ever has to get a letter like this, which we found false on a million different fronts.”

“We are against BDS on many different levels,” he added. “It’s false, I think it’s antisemitic, and I think it doesn’t accurately portray what Israel is about and what Israel is doing.”

“They give people of all creeds and colors the opportunity to study and to express their views, and this is unlike any other situation in the Middle East, where you can’t express yourself in that fashion,” he continued. “So I am glad that Michigan has come up with an anti-BDS policy and that the university regents have also indicated that they’re against any kind of academic boycott of Israel, and we are waiting to hear from the university.”

Rick Fitzgerald, a spokesperson for the University of Michigan, told The Algemeiner on Monday that the school “has consistently opposed any boycott of Israeli institutions of higher education.”

“No academic department or any other unit at the University of Michigan has taken a position that departs from this long-held university position,” he confirmed.

“The academic goals of our students are of paramount importance. It is the university’s position to take all steps necessary to make sure our students are supported,” Fitzgerald continued. “It is disappointing that a faculty member would allow their personal political beliefs to limit the support they are willing to otherwise provide for our students.”

He said the school will engage its faculty colleagues “in deep discussions to clarify how the expression of our shared values plays out in support of all students.”

U-M made headlines in November after its student government passed a divestment resolution targeting Israel. A history professor who was barred from speaking at the divestment hearing told The Algemeiner at the time that “in my department alone there are six pro-BDS senior professors.”

Earlier in the year, despite objections from some Jewish students, the university’s Center for Middle Eastern and North African Studies sponsored a lecture by former academic and BDS activist Steven Salaita, who had previously accused “Zionists” of “transforming ‘antisemitism’ from something horrible into something honorable since 1948.”

 

Source: The Algemeiner

Amazon launches Storefronts to give 20K small businesses a bigger spotlight

0

Amazon launches Storefronts to give 20K small businesses a bigger spotlight

Amazon has had a complicated relationship with small businesses over the years: on one hand, it’s long been a channel for them to sell goods online to a wider audience; but on the other, some have lamented giving over too much customer “ownership” to it in the name of sales, and not being able to stand out and present their brand and products in anything other than Amazon’s format.

But today, Amazon made a move to counterbalance some of that criticism: it launched a new portal it’s calling Storefronts to celebrate mom-and-pop shops and other smaller merchants that sell through the platform. Amazon is starting this first in the US, focussing on some 20,000 merchants “from all 50 states” (note: none from other parts of the world). For some context, there are around 300,000 small businesses from the US selling on Amazon.com today.

Those getting highlighted on Storefronts are already merchants on Amazon’s platform, but you could also see this as a way for Amazon to try to lure more merchants to do business there. Amazon is huge, but those small businesses have other options, including other marketplaces like eBay, or building their own sites and using something like Shopify to power them, or foregoeing “traditional” e-commerce routes altogether.

The idea is to bring a little more personality to the process of transaction, not unlike what you might get if you shop regularly at a small businesses when it’s in a physical location, and you might know the owner by name or she or he would know you. Storefronts will highlight different merchants in the mix with videos that profile the owners, and highlight a selection of items that they sell via Amazon. It will also feature the small businesses in a marketing campaign.

No links, however, to a homepage of their own or their physical stores, if the SMBs happen to have either.

“We’ve created a custom, one-stop shopping experience for customers looking for interesting, innovative and high quality products from American businesses from all across the country,” said Nicholas Denissen, VP for Amazon in a statement. “Amazon first invited businesses to sell on Amazon nearly two decades ago, and today, small and medium-sized businesses are a vital part of Amazon’s large selection and commitment to customers. We’re championing their success with this new store and a national advertising campaign featuring a successful Michigan business selling on Amazon to customers across the U.S. and worldwide.”

The rest of the Storefronts experience is essentially a portal through to the wider catalog of goods that you will find on Amazon, curated by subject areas like Back to School, Halloween, Home, Kitchen, Pet Supplies and Books; or themes such as “women-owned businesses” or “family-focused businesses” or “artisans“; and with an emphasis on products being sold by Storefronts merchants, with the products ultimately shown off in the Amazon layout that you know very well already.

Storefronts is built on a template that Amazon has used before: in 2015 it opened another portal called Launchpad that highlights mostly tech startups and sells the hardware and other products that they are building. It later expanded that to other markets outside the US, so you can see how Amazon might develop Storefronts down the line.

To be clear and avoid confusion, today’s Storefronts launch is not connected to Amazon’s other Storefronts product — which is a way for sellers who are also the owners of a particular brand or trademark to take control of how its listed and whose products come up in searches first (or at all), downgrading unauthorised sellers and counterfeiters.

Despite some of those kinds of hiccups and challenges, online marketplaces — where smaller businesses sell items via third-party platforms like Amazon or eBay — have been one of the more enduring (perhaps the most enduring?) business models over the many ups and downs of the world of e-commerce.

You could argue that more traditional, direct-to-customer retail has partly died because of the rise of these marketplaces, but you cannot deny that they have also shown that customers continue to want to buy from these smaller producers and sellers, too.

“Since we started selling on Amazon in October 2016, our sales have nearly doubled. Due to our success, we have been able to hire new team members from our community, including full and part time jobs,” said Holly Rutt in a statement. Rutt is the co-founder of Little Flower Soap Co., which is featured in Amazon’s first ad (which we’ve embedded below). “We believe that customers like to know the story behind what they’re buying. When there is worry about creating jobs, it’s reassuring for customers to know their purchases are helping sustain jobs in the U.S.”

Amazon has long countered criticism of its impact on SMBs by highlighting its positive impact. A recent study it published estimated that small and medium-sized businesses selling on Amazon created more than 900,000 jobs globally.

Source: TechCrunch

All Air Traffic Will STOP On Yom Kippur At Ben-Gurion International Airport

0

All Air Traffic Will STOP On Yom Kippur At Ben-Gurion International Airport

September 17, 2018 11:00 pm

 

On Tuesday, erev Yom Kippur 5779, air traffic in Ben-Gurion International Airport will halt. Incoming flights halt at 1:40PM, and the last takeoff is scheduled for 1:55PM, an El Al flight. With that takeoff, the international airport will be closed for the holy day.

On motzei Yom Kippur, the first flight will land at 9:30PM and the first takeoff is scheduled for 11:30PM.

On Monday, 8 Tishrei, 90,000 travelers passed through the airport on 543 flights. On Tuesday, erev Yom Kippur, that figure is 84,000 passengers on 314 flights.

On erev Sukkos, 84,000 passengers are expected on international flights. During the Sukkos vacation, airport officials report 650,000 passengers will pass through the airport. On a total of 3,870 international flights.

September will continue the sharp increase in passenger traffic at Ben-Gurion International Airport with over 2.2 million passengers in 14,000 international flights, a 17% increase in passenger traffic and it will total over 2.2 million passengers at Ben-Gurion Airport.

The most popular destinations in September are: Greece, Turkey (transit country), Ukraine, Italy, and Russia.

The Airports Authority advises Ben-Gurion passengers to check in for a flight from the home at the airline’s website or at the Ben-Gurion International Airport site, and for passengers to use automatic passageways for biometric passport holders. Therefore, it is recommended that one obtains a biometric passport.

(YWN Israel Desk – Jerusalem)

Theresa May: Young Jews should feel pride in being British, Jewish and Zionist

0

Theresa May: Young Jews should feel pride in being British, Jewish and Zionist

Prime minister takes swipe at Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn without mentioning his name during historic address to UJIA dinner

 

Theresa May has insisted that young community members should be encouraged to feel pride in their identity as “Jewish, British and Zionist” – as she took several side-swipes at Jeremy Corbyn without once mentioning his name.

In a wide-ranging speech that was greeted with a standing ovation from the 800 guests at the UJIA dinner, the prime minister pledged to build the “strongest and deepest possible relationship” with Israel.

 

“I do not underestimate the threat posed by those who promote antisemitism, or hatred in any form,” she said. “Nor the pernicious nature of what those people say and what they stand for. But I do not believe those voices speak for the vast, overwhelming majority of people in our country…And most importantly, I do not believe that those voices will ever win. We will not let them win.”

To huge applause, she vowed to stand with the Jewish community like every community in tackling racism, adding: “Let me be clear: you cannot claim to be tackling racism, if you are not tackling antisemitism. And that mission begins by being clear about what antisemitism is.”

May referred to her government’s adoption of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of anti-Semitism in December 2016. Labour initially adopted it without four key examples of potential anti-Semitism – only reversing that decision this month following uproar.

She said: “Criticising the government of Israel is never – and can never be – an excuse for hatred against the Jewish people – any more than criticising the British government would be an excuse for hatred against the British people.

“There are no excuses for any kind of hatred towards the Jewish people. Just as there are no excuses for hatred towards any community of any race or religion. No excuses means no excuses.”

She spoke of her efforts as Home Secretary to exclude those espousing anti-Semitism and Islamophobia from Britain and, in a thinly-veiled reference to the recently-unearthed 2014 speech from Corbyn about British Zionists and irony, said: “Nothing excuses antisemitism – not comedy, not satire, not even irony.”

And echoing the words she uttered at a meeting of the Board of Deputies in the wake of the supermarket attack, May said: “In the face of any kind of hatred against the Jewish people – in any form and anywhere, whether overseas or right here in our own country – I say with that same defiance: “Je suis Juif.” But she pointed to causes for hope including the reach of the Holocaust Educational Trust.

She hailed the “vital” work of the UJIA in bringing together Jews and Arabs in Israel and deepening the connections between young Jews and the Jewish state, saying: “If we are to stand up for the values that we share – then one of the things we need to do is give young Jewish people the confidence to be proud of their identity – as British, Jewish and Zionist too.

“There is no contradiction between these identities – and we must never let anyone try to suggest that there should be. Indeed one of the most sickening aspects of the antisemitism that tries, abhorrently, to suggest Israel is a racist endeavour – is that those voices seek to separate the Jewish diaspora in our country from their connection with Israel.”

The historic visit of Prince William to Israel was a celebration of bilateral ties, she said, expressing her pride in Britain’s role in the state’s creation and looking forward to “an ambitious free trade deal between our countries”.

And when it comes to her commitment to Israel’s security, the PM insisted she could be counted on. She vowed to continue standing up for Israel “when it is treated unfairly” at the UN and said her government would have “no truck” with those that subscribe to the BDS campaign.

May said: “You can also count on me to defend Israel’s values – because Israel is a country like ours that believes in liberty, democracy and the rule of law.

“Under my leadership the UK will always be a real and trusted partner for Israel, supporting Israel’s security and prosperity, not just through our words but also through our actions.” This didn’t mean there weren’t disagreements with Israeli ministers, she said, calling for “courage and vision” on both sides to make progress for peace. To that end, she called for an end to settlement building and incitement from the Palestinian side.

In a video message for the event, President Reuven Rivlin hailed Israel’s triumphs against the odds. But, in a message that struck a particularly poignant note on light of the recent Nation State Law he has criticised, he said the country must face its challenges, including bringing together the “four tribes” of secular Jews, Arabs, charedim and the national religious.

UJIA chair Louise Jacobs hailed Israel’s head of state as a “president for all Israelis” and spoke of the role that must be played by the diaspora – “the fifth tribe” – in realising his vision of social cohesion.

She warned that the engagement of some young people with Israel was low, saying they would be lost as supporters if this phenomenon was not urgently addressed by the charity and others. In a stark message, she said: “The threat to our community’s relationship with Israel has never been greater.”

Jacobs said: “We must accept some young people are struggling with this relationship” and help them connect to the country beyond the headlines, she said. “We want our young people to look beyond social media and to be inspired by Israel and never to forget that she still represents the greatest inspiration. We need to do more than just educate – we in the diaspora need to actively participate.” A special video highlighted the charity’s work with all four components of Israeli society, helping to unite them.

Sir Mick Davis, UJIA’s former chair and the current CEO of the Conservatives, said his successors Bill Benjamin and Jacobs had “taken the charity to new heights”.

Introducing the PM, he said he had yet to see the “bloody difficult woman” May has previous described herald as, but rather “a remarkable resilience” in the face of political turmoil. Addressing the fears felt by many, he added: “I fear less because of her values, empathy, strength and leadership.” She, in turn, described Sir Mick as a mensch.

 

Source: Jewish News

ALERT – Measles Outbreak Among People Returning From Uman After Rosh Hashana

0

ALERT – Measles Outbreak Among People Returning From Uman After Rosh Hashana

Israel’s Health Ministry is warning of a potential measles outbreak among people who returned from the Ukrainian city of Uman after Rosh Hashana last week, Times of Israel reported.

The ministry says passengers traveling to Israel on three flights on September 12 were confirmed to have the measles, and warned that passengers on those flights were at risk of contracting the disease.

The statement said passengers on Ukrainian Airways flights PS101 and 779 and KLM flight 461 should see a doctor immediately.

The ministry said children, pregnant women and those suffering from auto-immune disorders were particularly susceptible to the disease.

Last month, the Health Ministry reported a massive increase in the number of reported cases of measles in Israel this year. It said 262 reported cases of the measles had been reported since the start of 2018, compared to only nine in all of 2016, and 33 cases in 2017.

 

 

U.S. Customs & Border Protection Release Guidelines Regarding Travel With The Arba Minim

0

U.S. Customs & Border Protection Release Guidelines Regarding Travel With The Arba Minim

 

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) reminds travelers of guidance related to the annual Jewish holiday of Sukkos.

The estimated travel period for the Jewish holiday of Sukkot is from Sept. 14 through Oct. 8. The holiday begins Sept. 23 (after sundown) until Sept. 30 (after nightfall). CBP understands that observant Jewish travelers entering the United States during the Sukkot holiday might carry religious items (ethrogs, palm fronds, twigs of willow and myrtle) in their vehicles if arriving at land border ports of entry, or in their personal baggage if they are arriving by aircraft. These items are regulated to prevent the introduction of invasive pests and diseases; however, these items might be allowed into the United States after inspection by CBP Agriculture Specialists.

The following guidance is provided for travelers:

Ethrogs:

    • Personal shipments of ethrogs are allowed entry through North Atlantic and Northern Pacific ports of entry after inspection by CBP Agriculture Specialists. North Atlantic ports are defined as Atlantic ports north of and including Baltimore; ports on the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence Seaway; Canadian border ports east of and including North Dakota; Andrews Air Force Base, Andrews Air Force base and Washington, D.C. (including Dulles) for air shipments. Northern Pacific ports are defined as Pacific ports north of California including Alaska, Canadian border ports west of and including Montana, excluding Hawaii.
    • Travelers will be asked to open the container with the ethrog and unwrap it. The Agriculture Specialist will inspect the ethrog. If either insect stings or pests are found, the ethrog will be prohibited from entering the United States. If neither is found, the traveler will be allowed to rewrap and re-box the ethrog for entry into the United States.

Palm Fronds:

  • Single palm fronds, for religious purposes, will be inspected by Agriculture Specialists and released if no pests or symptoms of disease are found.

Twigs of Willow:

    • If the twigs of willow are from Europe, they will be prohibited from entering the United States. If they are from other than Europe, they will be inspected by Agriculture Specialists and released if no pests or symptoms of disease are found.
    • Also, if the twigs of willow are green in color, have soft tissue present, or have buds that sprouted, then they are capable of being grown and are prohibited from entering the United States.

Twigs of Myrtle:

  • Twigs of myrtle will be inspected by Agriculture Specialists and released if no pests or symptoms of disease are found.

If travelers have any concerns resulting from the inspection of their religious items at a port of entry, a CBP supervisor is always available to answer questions and address their concerns. As always, CBP is committed to treating all travelers, including travelers who may be observing Sukkot, with respect and dignity at all U.S. ports of entry.

(YWN World Headquarters – NYC)

Worst Flooding Yet to Come for Waterlogged Carolinas

0

Worst Flooding Yet to Come for Waterlogged Carolinas

 

WILMINGTON/WILSON, N.C. (Reuters) –

Deadly storm Florence moved across western North Carolina early on Monday and continued to dump rain that has nowhere to go except to swell rivers, flood highways and homes, and threaten more lives as it heads towards Virginia and New England.

For the water-logged Carolinas, “the worst is yet to come” as river levels rise to historic levels, said Zach Taylor, a meteorologist with the U.S. National Weather Service.

“The soil is soaked and can’t absorb any more rain, so that water has to go somewhere, unfortunately,” he said. “Those rivers are going to start to crest later today and Tuesday and maybe longer.”

Flash floods, landslide warnings and “prolonged significant river flooding” throughout the region will continue for the next few days, the National Weather Service (NWS) said.

The coastal city of Wilmington remained cut off by high flood waters early on Monday, tens of thousands of homes were damaged and at least 17 deaths were reported in North and South Carolina.

Florence, a one-time hurricane that weakened to a tropical depression by Sunday, is expected to decline in force again on Monday before reintensifying on Tuesday and Wednesday, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

It has dumped up to 40 inches (101.6 cm) of rain on North Carolina since Thursday and continued to produce heavy rain over much of North Carolina and eastern South Carolina, the NWS said.

An additional 2 to 5 inches of rain is expected with isolated areas of 8 inches (20 cm) possible through Tuesday in the Carolinas and Virginia.

“The storm has never been more dangerous than it is right now,” North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper told a news conference.

More than 900 people were rescued from rising floodwaters and 15,000 remained in shelters in the state, Cooper said.

Many rescues took place on swift boats in Wilmington, a coastal city of about 117,000 people on a peninsula between the Cape Fear River and the Atlantic Ocean.

Rescue crews negotiated downed trees and power lines to reach stranded residents, Mayor Bill Saffo told WHQR radio.

“There are no roads … that are leading into Wilmington that are passable because of the flooding that is taking place now inland,” Saffo said.

Officials urged people who had been evacuated to stay away.

“Our roads are flooded, there is no access into Wilmington,” New Hanover County Commission Chairman Woody White told a news conference. “We want you home, but you can’t come yet.”

In Leland, a low-lying city north of Wilmington, homes and businesses were engulfed by water that rose up to 10 feet over Highway 17 in what local people called unprecedented flooding.

The sheriff’s department and volunteers rescued stranded residents by boat, extracting families, infants, the elderly and pets. Gas stations were abandoned and fallen trees made many roads impassable.

More than 641,000 homes and businesses were without electricity in North and South Carolina and surrounding states, down from a peak of nearly 1 million.

Florence set a state record for rain from a hurricane, surpassing the previous high of 24 inches from Hurricane Floyd which killed 56 people in 1999, said Bryce Link, a meteorologist with private forecasting service DTN Marine Weather.

The storm killed at least 11 people in North Carolina, including a mother and child hit by a falling tree, state officials said. Six people died in South Carolina, including four in car accidents and two from carbon monoxide from a portable generator.

South Carolina’s governor urged anyone in a flood-prone area to evacuate.

“Those rivers in North Carolina that have received heavy rainfall are coming our way,” Governor Henry McMaster told a news conference. “They have not even begun [to crest]. But they will. And the question is how high will the water be, and we do not know.”

By 5 a.m. on Monday, Florence’s winds had dropped to about 30 miles per hour (40 kph), the NWS said, with weakening forecast over the next 24 hours before intensifying again as an extra-tropical low-pressure center.

The center of the storm was about 125 miles west southwest of Roanoke, Virginia and moving northeast at 13 mph, the weather service said.

 

Source: Hamodia

First PTSD Study During Warfare Provides Early Symptom Indicators, Israeli Researchers Say

0

First PTSD Study During Warfare Provides Early Symptom Indicators, Israeli Researchers Say

“This article was re-published with permission from NoCamels.com – Israeli Innovation News.

 

Studies on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the mental health condition experienced by some following a traumatic event which can bring on flashbacks, nightmares, and severe anxiety, often focus on the effects of the condition, the development and testing of treatment, and any preventative factors. Few, if any, have studied the process of developing PTSD and its symptoms as they may be unfolding.

Israeli researchers say they have conducted the first study that looks at PTSD in real-time – in the context of war. It showed that those with a sensitive startle response to everyday situations, such as loud noises, were at higher risk of experiencing symptoms, like difficulty sleeping and concentrating over the next 12 hours.

The innovative research was conducted by the University of Haifa and NATAL, the Israel Trauma and Resiliency Center for victims of terror and war, and took place over the course of Operation Protective Edge, the seven-week conflict and military operation launched in and around the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2014 in the wake of daily rocket barrages by Palestinian groups.

The study, whose results were revealed earlier this year, began on the eighth day of the conflict and looked at 96 civilians living in areas where they had no more than 60 seconds to enter protected spaces following rocket alerts. The participants filled out daily surveys on their experiences.

“To continue reading this article on NoCamels.com, click here.” 

 

 

Thousands visit West Bank holy sites in predawn pilgrimages

0

Thousands visit West Bank holy sites in predawn pilgrimages

Some 15,000 religious Jews travel to Hebron’s Tomb of the Patriarchs, while 1,500 visit Joseph’s Tomb in Nablus for pre-Yom Kippur prayers

 

Roughly 15,000 Jews visited the Tomb of the Patriarchs holy site in the West Bank city of Hebron on Sunday night and early Monday morning ahead of the upcoming Yom Kippur holiday.

Each year, during the period between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur — known as the 10 days of repentance — thousands of Jews make a pilgrimage to the site, believed to be the burial place of the Jewish patriarchs and matriarchs Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebecca, Jacob and Leah, and also Adam and Eve.

 

The Israeli military and police provided security during the visit.

Israeli troops provide security as thousands of religious Jews visit the Joseph’s Tomb holy site in the West Bank city of Nablus on September 17, 2018. (Israel Defense Forces)

“IDF soldiers, along with Border Police and Israel Police forces provided increased security for the event, guarded the prayer and allowed it to take place safely, with no irregular incidents,” the army said.

According to the Israel Defense Forces, more than 15,000 people visited the site from Sunday night to Monday morning, some 5,000 more than the previous year.

In addition, approximately 1,500 people visited the Joseph’s Tomb holy site in the West Bank city of Nablus for Selichot prayers.

“The prayers were held with no irregular incidents,” the army said.

Thousands of religious Jews visit the Joseph’s Tomb holy site in the West Bank city of Nablus on September 17, 2018. (Israel Defense Forces)

Elsewhere in the West Bank, Israeli forces conducted a series of predawn raids, arresting 10 Palestinian suspects, according to the IDF.

Israeli troops raided the family home of a Palestinian teen who stabbed an Israeli man to death in a West Bank terror attack the day before. Soldiers searched the home of Khalil Jabarin in the village of Yatta, measured it in order to prepare it for demolition and questioned members of his family.

On Sunday morning Jabarin, 17, stabbed and killed Ari Fuld, 45, at a shopping center frequented by Israelis and Palestinians in the West Bank south of Jerusalem.

Fuld, a dual Israeli and US citizen and father of four, lived in the nearby settlement of Efrat and was well known in media and Israel advocacy circles for his online activism.
Source: The Times of Israel
WP Twitter Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com