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Israel: The necessary superpower

Its legendary military and security derring-do derives from its culture
of risk-taking, creativity and thinking out of the box—characteristics shared by no other country.

On Tuesday, Israeli commandos attached limpet mines to an Iranian cargo ship in the Red Sea, the MV Saviz, which was reportedly a covert forward base for the regime’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.

According to the United States Naval Institute, the Saviz, which had barely moved position for three years, may have been used to feed intelligence to Iran and its Houthi proxies in Yemen for nefarious purposes, including numerous strikes on maritime vessels in the area.

The ship was only lightly damaged in the explosion, and there were no casualties. The most interesting fact was that Israel notified the United States that it was responsible. This indicated the attack was a message to the Biden administration that, if the United States won’t stop Iran in its tracks, Israel is prepared to attack it on its own.

Such a message was deemed necessary because of intense alarm that President Joe Biden appears to be determined to empower Iran and other bad people in the Middle East.

In particular, he is determined to rejoin the 2015 nuclear deal, which would allow Iran to develop nuclear weapons with only a short delay and with the lifting of sanctions funneling billions of dollars into terrorism against Israel and the West.

The administration had insisted that Iran must comply with the deal’s conditions before any sanctions were lifted. Yet on Wednesday, the U.S. State Department said it would lift sanctions that were “inconsistent” with the 2015 deal in order to “return to compliance.”

This week, when American diplomats sat down with Iranian intermediaries to start negotiations over a revamped deal, the Iranians predictably crowed that they had achieved victory. The world’s strongest nation had handed victory to the world’s Number One terrorist nation on a silver platter by “negotiating” from a position of naivite, juvenile eagerness, and weakness, in a way a high school kid wouldn’t have.

With equal malevolence and stupidity, the Biden administration also announced this week that it would resume funding the Palestinians in Judea, Samaria and Gaza to the tune of $235 million, as well as giving $150 million to the U.N. Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA).

Aid to both had been stopped by former President Donald Trump because of the Palestinians’ support for terrorism and UNRWA’s malign role in perpetuating the war
against Israel by creating the uniquely self-replicating status of Palestinian “refugee.”

Yet both the Iranian and Palestinian regimes have responded to Biden’s “goodwill” gestures by repeatedly insulting the United States or attacking American allies in the Gulf.

The more sweeteners America offers these hostile regimes, the more they display their contempt and thus weaken the US further by demonstrating its ineffectuality to the world.

And the more they humiliate America, the more America offers them.

Either the Biden administration is so blinded by left-wing romanticization of the developing world that it’s incapable of understanding the lunacy of all this – or these baleful developments are what it actually wants.

After all, a number of its officials have a history of extreme hostility to Israel. And that’s an almost infallible marker of resentment or aggression towards the West, of whose interests in the region Israel is the most important defender and guarantor.

Either way, people who think like this are so determined never to acknowledge the real threat to the West that they use Israel and the Jewish people instead as scapegoats.

Predictably, therefore, such people have accused Israel of aggression in attacking the Saviz, ignoring the fact that the ship’s presence in the Red Sea was an aggressive act against Israel and Western interests.

Israel’s attack on the ship also sent a message to the Arab world. This is aghast that America is now locked into a deadly spiral of appeasement and aggression with the Arabs’ Iranian foe.

Far worse still has been the potential game-changer deal struck between Iran and China. This will undercut any sanctions against Iran, and will strengthen both these enemies of the free world in their aim of disempowering America and bringing the West to its knees.

Biden should have responded by telling China it must choose between trading with either Iran or the United States. But instead, his administration is adopting its customarily dishonest strategy of striking tough poses against rogue states while taking no significant action against them.

The implications for the West of the Iran-China deal are obviously terrifying. But they are also causing some observers to wonder whether we are about to witness a shift in global power from America to Israel.

On the face of it, the very thought is absurd. How could tiny, beleaguered Israel possibly take over the role of mighty America in leading the free world. However, once you look at the broader picture, it’s not so far-fetched.

Israel is now a military superpower. It has the world’s most technologically advanced military and is one of its top weapons exporters. Its legendary military and security derring-do derives from its culture of risk-taking, creativity and thinking out of the box—characteristics shared by no other country.

Moreover, it’s appeared for some time that, that given the lemming-like cultural tendencies of the West, Israel may become the “last man standing” in upholding and defending western values.

American society is fracturing and may already be beyond repair. The Democrats and the rest of the liberal elite are remorselessly pumping out the message with which countless children and students are being indoctrinated by radical left-wing teachers and academia
—that white people are racist, that America was born in sin, and that it is fundamentally
so evil it must be transformed altogether.

Ranged against those who think like this are millions of other Americans who perceive that their country and culture are being destroyed, and whose anger as a result is at boiling point. The likely outcome is deepening divisions, increasing violence and—if the state of California is any guide to Democratic rule—dogmatic intolerance, public squalor and rank administrative incompetence.

Western Europe is in no better condition, with countries steadily surrendering to Islamist intimidation and cultural encroachment. The European Union’s vaccine debacle illustrates its defining combination of dictatorial tendencies, centralizing paralysis and uselessness in defending the fundamental interests of the people.

Appeasement is a symptom of profound cultural demoralization, caused by a loss of national self-belief and faith in the future. That process has been going on in the West ever since the Holocaust delivered the devastating message that there was something rotten at the very heart of Western high culture.

The most important proof of this demoralization is the birthrate in America and Europe, which is either below or barely the rate at which the indigenous population can reproduce itself. In other words, the West is literally dying out.

By contrast, Israel is emerging from the pandemic at a world-beating rate—its economy strong and resilient, and crucially, its birthrate healthy and high.

This is because Israel actually believes in itself. Sure, it has a ludicrously dysfunctional political culture, currently illustrated once again by its post-election gridlock and absence of a functioning government. It is also disfigured by deep social divisions between secular and religious communities, and subversive elements who regard the very idea of a Jewish state as anathema.

But the vast majority of Israel’s public understands that its core value is the preservation of life and liberty and doing good in the world. It is a society built on redemption and hope, and in dramatic contrast to the death-spiral gripping America and Europe, it is relentlessly focused on its survival.

The Arab world has come to understand that all this is of priceless value—not just for Israel but for itself, too. It sees that Israel actually takes out its enemies. It is increasingly realizing that the country most likely to defend Arab interests against Iran is not America but Israel, the Arabs’ new and unlikely ally.

As America falters and Western societies break apart, might this become Israel’s century?

Melanie Phillips, a British journalist, broadcaster and author, writes a weekly column for JNS. Currently a columnist for “The Times of London,” her personal and political memoir, “Guardian Angel,” has been published by Bombardier, which also published her first novel, “The Legacy.” Go to melaniephillips.substack.com to access her work.

(JNS).

US appears to cave to Iran, says it’s ready to lift sanctions

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The Biden Administration changes policy, says it is now prepared to
lift sanctions before Iran stops its violations of the nuclear deal.

The Biden administration has changed its stance on Iran, announcing it is prepared to accede to Iranian demands to lift sanctions before Iran resumes its compliance with the nuclear deal.

The announcement was made in Washington as negotiating teams from the partners behind the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, known formally as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), held talks in Vienna with Iran. The major powers are trying to convince the Islamic Republic to stop violating the agreement and cease producing enriched uranium.

“We are prepared to take the steps necessary to return to compliance with the JCPOA, including by lifting sanctions that are inconsistent with the JCPOA,” said State Department Spokesperson Ned Price.

“I’m not in a position here to give you chapter and verse on what those might be. That is precisely why we have agreed to engage in diplomacy to this effect. The precise nature of any sanctions relief is the subject of diplomacy,” Price told reporters at the daily State Department press briefing.

Price’s statement reflects a drastic about-face for President Biden, who in an interview in February indicated that Iran would first have to stop enriching uranium before the U.S. would lift sanctions.

This week the UN Security Council’s five permanent members – Britain, China, France and Russia, along with Germany, resumed talks in Vienna with the Iranians. The U.S. team, led by special envoy Robert Malley, is working in a separate hotel at the insistence of the Iranians, who refuse to meet with them for the time being.

Until Wednesday, the Americans had insisted that Iran first stop its enrichment of uranium before any economic sanctions would be lifted. The Iranians refused, pressuring the Biden administration to first roll back sanctions before they would talk.

During his term in office, former President Donald Trump pulled out of the JCPOA, saying in 2018 that the Iranians had lied about their nuclear weapons program. Trump hit the Iranians with harsh economic sanctions to try and force them to scale back their nuclear ambitions and military expansion in the region.

Known for having one of the world’s most oppressive regimes, Iran’s leaders have maintained their mantra of “death to America, death to Israel,” with an explicit national policy that seeks the “total annihilation” of Israel.

Arab states in the region also fear Iran’s nuclear weapons program, with Saudi Arabia demanding that they be consulted before the U.S. makes any policy changes.

Israel has repeatedly stated it will not accept a return to the original JCPOA, under whose terms the Iranians could resume unimpeded uranium enrichment when the agreement expires.

Speaking Wednesday at the ceremony marking the start of Holocaust Remembrance Day, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu directed a warning at the Biden administration and others seeking to reenter the Iran deal.

“The nuclear deal with Iran, which gives it international approval to advance the development of an arsenal of atomic bombs, is once again on the table. But history has taught us that such agreements, with such extremist regimes, aren’t worth the paper they’re written on,” Netanyahu said.

“Even to our best friends, I say: We are not bound in any way to an agreement with Iran that paves the way for nuclear weapons. We are obligated to only one thing: To prevent anyone who seeks to destroy us from carrying out their plot,” Netanyahu said.

(World Israel News).

‘Positive atmosphere’ at Bennett, Netanyahu meeting as PM scrambles to form coalition

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Thursday’s meeting marked the first time in several years that
Bennett was invited to the PM’s residence.

Since Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was tasked with forming a government this week, the Israeli leader has been struggling to woo right-wing parties to join a Likud-led coalition.

The Likud won 30 seats in the national election, by far the most of any other party. Next in line is the center-left Yesh Atid with 17. To date, Netanyahu has 52 endorsements and Yesh Atid head Yair Lapid has 45. A minimum of 61 is necessary.

On Thursday evening, Netanyahu met with Yemina leader Naftali Bennett at the PM’s residence. It was the first time in several years that Bennett was invited there. He hadn’t been at the PM’s residence for several years, reportedly due to Sara Netanyahu’s animosity towards him. The meeting lasted for over two hours.

“The meeting between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Yamina chairman Naftali Bennett just concluded. The meeting was conducted in a good spirit and in a positive atmosphere. It was agreed that they would meet again,” according to a joint statement issued by Likud and Yemina.

Bennett has only seven endorsements but has been declared somewhat of a kingmaker. Lapid was aiming for a rotational government in which Bennett would be prime minister first, but the Yemina leader has not accepted the offer.

“Since the election, countless Israelis have appealed to me, literally pleading, to get the State of Israel out of the ongoing chaos,” Bennett said in a statement before his meeting with Netanyahu.

“I come here with a lot of good will and I pledge to do everything I can to rescue Israel from the chaos and to establish a good and stable government for the State of Israel. It is time for national responsibility.”

Also ahead of the meeting, Religious Zionism party leader Bezalel Smotrich, also in a sit-down with the prime minister at his residence, agreed to try to convince Bennett not to participate in forming a “left-wing government,” Smotrich’s spokesperson said.

Even if Bennett agrees to join a Likud government, the struggle will not be over, as Netanyahu would still be short two seats.

(World Israel News).

Interest in immigrating to Israel from US soars despite pandemic-era challenges

When Aaron Feinblatt moved to Israel in late February 2020, just as the first signs of the worldwide coronavirus outbreak were emerging, only one person wore a mask on his aliyah flight.

Feinblatt had no idea that masks would soon become the norm for him and everyone else, nor how COVID-19 would affect the first year in his new home.

“I got here two weeks before the country completely shut down,” he said. “With all the lockdowns and restrictions in the last year, I feel like I have been physically here but my aliyah hasn’t yet happened.”

Yet the 29-year-old lawyer from Philadelphia has no regrets about arriving when he did.

“I am thrilled to be here,” Feinblatt said. “I’m healthy and I have a job with an Israeli start-up and I live a 10-minute walk from the beach in Tel Aviv. I would have pushed through and come here even if my aliyah date had been during the pandemic and not before it.”

Rather than diminishing interest in immigrating to Israel, the COVID-19 pandemic appears to have fueled it. A total of 7,965 aliyah applications from North America were submitted in 2020, double that of the previous year. Over the first three months of 2021, the number of immigrants arriving in Israel from North America was up 30% over the same period a year ago.

“We’ve seen unprecedented interest since spring 2020,” said Marc Rosenberg, vice president for Diaspora partnerships at Nefesh B’Nefesh, which manages aliyah applications from North America and assists with immigration in partnership with Israel’s Ministry of Aliyah and Integration, the Jewish Agency for Israel, Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael and JNF-USA.

“Past national or international events sparked inquiries and applications, but never like this,” he added.

A few factors are driving the increase, immigration officials theorize.

The pandemic has spurred people to reconsider their life priorities, giving greater urgency to the dream of living in Israel.

The shift to remote work has enabled a growing number of people who want to move to Israel without giving up their U.S. careers to do so.

The difficulty of travel and Israel’s ban on non-citizen entry (with some exceptions) is prompting some Americans who were frequent visitors to Israel, particularly retirees with grandchildren there, to relocate permanently.

And Israel’s early success combating the coronavirus and efficient rollout of vaccinations encouraged some of those already considering aliyah.

Another contributing factor is the rise of left-wing extremism in America, and increased anti-Semitism.

“I figured that the risk of contracting the disease seemed the same in both countries, but in Israel I would be able to be immediately vaccinated,” said Ariana Gordon, 33, who made aliyah recently from Los Angeles.

After Gordon lost her job at a California gym due to COVID closures, she realized it was time to act on her longstanding aliyah wish. She initiated her application late last June and put her graduate degree in computer science to use by beginning a remote internship with Israel Tech Challenge. Now she lives in Tel Aviv.

The pandemic also prompted educator Ilanna Price to make the move. Price, 27, was living in New York, while the rest of her family had moved to Israel over the past decade.

“I had a life in the U.S., and things were going well. But then with COVID I was stuck at home and the ability to do my job was severely limited,” Price said. “The situation gave me the extra push to finish up my aliyah application.”

Price moved to Israel in October. She lives in the trendy Florentine neighborhood in south Tel Aviv and works as a kindergarten teacher.

Making aliyah during the COVID-era has not been easy. The pandemic slowed the processing of necessary paperwork on both sides of the Atlantic. Israel’s government limited the operations of the country’s main airport for several weeks more than once, frustrating the scheduling of immigration flights.

When Tel Aviv’s Ben-Gurion Airport was shuttered in January during a third national lockdown, Gordon’s aliyah flight was canceled and she found herself stranded in the United States after having given up her apartment and car.

“I got my aliyah visa in late January and my original flight was scheduled for Feb. 1, but Israel wasn’t letting in any flights,” Gordon said. “I was rebooked five more times, and finally made it to Israel on a Nefesh B’Nefesh charter flight that arrived March 1.”

Due to the delays, Gordon had to redo some costly paperwork, including import documentation for her dog, and underwent three COVID tests at her own expense.

“It was a real emotional roller coaster,” Gordon said. “I tried not to get my hopes up each time, but I couldn’t help it because I wanted to be in Israel so badly.”

For Rachel and Yosef Gross, a couple who immigrated to Israel in February 2020, the challenge of aliyah during the COVID era came after their arrival.

“My dad was sick with cancer in Chicago and I thought I would be able to go back to visit him regularly,” Rachel Gross said. “But then COVID happened. He passed away in early February 2021 and I couldn’t get there.”

Yet she says she has no misgivings about moving to Jerusalem. Rachel, 28, has a full-time job as a graphic designer with an Israeli start-up. Yosef, 27, works in digital marketing and music management, and is also pursuing a graduate degree in environmental studies at Tel Aviv University. The couple is expecting their first child later this year.

“It’s always been our dream to be in Israel, and we are blessed to be here,” Yosef said.

“It would have been worse for us if we had gotten trapped in the U.S. because of COVID,” Rachel added.

With most of Israel’s adult population vaccinated, new COVID cases at their lowest levels in months and the country largely reopened, Feinblatt says he’s looking forward to doing the things he’d planned to do a year ago. Primarily he wants to make the social connections he missed out on before starting work.

“I had been looking forward to integrating, being out and about, learning and practicing Hebrew, and meeting people,” Feinblatt said.

Looking back on her own experience, Price said that when she completed her aliyah application last summer, she figured it could be the worst time or the best time to make aliyah – she just wasn’t sure which.

“The truth is that I probably would have continued to put off aliyah if it hadn’t been for COVID,” Price said. “I’m glad I took the step to do it.”

(Arutz 7).

This article was sponsored by and produced in partnership with Nefesh B’Nefesh, which in cooperation with Israel’s Ministry of Aliyah, The Jewish Agency, KKL and JNF-USA is minimizing the professional, logistical and social obstacles of aliyah, and has brought over 65,000 olim from North America and the United Kingdom for nearly two decades.

Report: Brexit Helped U.K. Evade EU’s COVID Bureaucracy

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A new report found Brexit helped the U.K. escape the European Union’s bureaucracy when it came to its handling of the coronavirus. According to the Free Beacon on Thursday, the U.K. was able to approve and administer COVID vaccines and medicines more quickly and efficiently than the EU.

Experts said the EU is now struggling to ensure the safety of its citizens amid a rising number of reports detailing potentially deadly side effects allegedly caused by vaccines. Meanwhile, Britain’s COVID response has been more coherent.

However, critics said Britain’s COVID lockdown was too stringent and unnecessary.

“And the people need to get back to work,” London resident David Ross said. “Society needs to get back to normal, so this is great news, but everything should be open. Schools: 100%. Everything back open again. I think we’re over the worst of it. They keep talking about third, fourth, fifth wave. These are politicians, not scientists or doctors. So bring it on, I say.”

Currently, the EU expects to reach herd immunity by June while the U.K. plans to remove all COVID restrictions that same month.

(OANN).

San Francisco Is Hemorrhaging Residents To Texas And Florida: Study

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The liberal city of San Francisco, California, is losing residents at a record pace, many of whom are migrating to states such as Texas
and Florida, according to a recent study.

San Francisco has lost more residents between 2019 and 2020 than any other major U.S. city, according to data compiled by the commercial realty firm CBRE Group and reported by Business Insider.

The study discovered that the number of those fleeing San Francisco to Texas spiked by 32.1%, and those making the trek to Florida skyrocketed by 46.2% over the previous year.

Unicorn investor Keith Rabois, who has moved to Miami, maintained that the Bay Area is losing its lucrative tech talent, telling Business Insider that “many of the most ambitious people on the planet have lived here, but post-COVID, I think the concentration of talent has atrophied, perhaps permanently.”

Most of those who left San Francisco, however, did not leave the state, but simply made their way north to Sacramento. As Business Insider noted regarding the CBRE data, the number of moves from San Francisco to Sacramento increased 70% in 2020, which outnumbers the amount of people leaving for cities in other states, such as Tampa, San Antonio, and Austin.

“The pandemic came just as the bulk of the large and increasingly affluent millennial cohort had reached prime family formation age,” the report states. “Consequently, millennials had been trending toward more suburban residencies even before COVID-19 came on the scene.”

California as a whole has been bleeding residents in recent years under Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who faces a potential recall election amid fury that erupted in response to his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Hans Johnson, a demographer at the Public Policy Institute of California, addressed what he described as “a real sea change in California, which used to be this state of pretty robust population growth.”

“It hasn’t been for some time now. But it’s now gotten to the point where the state is essentially not growing population-wise at all,” Johnson said.

As the Washington Examiner reported:

According to a population estimate this week, 135,600 more people fled the Golden State than moved there, which marks only the 12th time since 1900 that the state saw a net migration loss. It is the third-largest drop ever recorded.

Johnson added that the population decrease could cause the state to lose a seat in Congress as well as an Electoral College vote for the first time. The state did not gain any seats following the 2010 census, which was also a first.

Residents have cited high taxes as a main driver of the decision to leave.

“I never wanted to leave California,” San Francisco real estate broker Scott Fuller said about his departure from the state after living there since 1983. “It’s the most beautiful state with the best climate. I think the tipping point was continued tax increases and even more proposed tax increases. … I have absolutely no regrets.”

(Daily Wire).

Avdija wears special message on sneakers for Holocaust Remembrance Day

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Avdija came in to the court wearing black and wrote the word “Yizkor” – which means “remember” – on his sneakers.

 

Israeli NBA star Deni Avdija sent a special message to commemorate Holocaust Remembrance Day as he helped the Washington Wizards defeat the Orlando Magic 131-116 on Wednesday evening.
Avdija came in to the court wearing black and wrote the Hebrew word Yizkor – which means “remember” – on his sneakers.

Israeli Washington Wizards player Deni Avdija paid homage to Israel's Holocaust Remembrance day with "Yizkor" (Remember) on his sneakers. (Credit: NBC SPORTS/COURTESY)
Israeli Washington Wizards player Deni Avdija paid homage to Israel’s Holocaust Remembrance day with “Yizkor” (Remember) on his sneakers. (Credit: NBC SPORTS/COURTESY)
“Today, my heart was with my Israeli family and Jewish family all over the world to remember worst, or one of the worst,  things to ever happen to our culture,” Avidja said in an interview which was posted by the Wizards’ Hebrew-language twitter account. 

“There are some things that are more important than basketball, and I feel like the Holocaust is one of them. I did everything to represent and show that we will never forget this event,” he said.

He said it was a special night for him, adding that “I’m blessed and I’m glad I had the opportunity to play on an NBA court and wear those shoes with those letters, and basically represent the whole Jewish community in Israel and all over the world.”
Wizards coach Scott Brooks said he did not know of Avdija’s plan beforehand but was pleased to see the Israeli commemorating the occasion while also playing an excellent match.
Avdija’s form has continued to improve during his rookie season, scoring 16 points – 4 of which were 3-pointers – and adding five rebounds and two assists, leading the Wizards to break their recent streak of losses.
The 20-year-old was selected as the ninth pick in last year’s NBA draft, the highest pick for any Israeli in NBA history.

FBI Releases Hate Crime Ads In Yiddish, Hebrew

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In what is likely a first, the FBI has released ads in outreach to the Jewish community. The ads have been designed and written in English, Yiddish, and Hebrew, making sure they hit all segments of the Jewish community in the United States.

The ad campaign calls on people who were victims of hate crimes to report them to the FBI.

“Did you know many hate crimes are not reported?”, the ad reads.

“The FBI wants to help, but we need to hear from you. If you believe you’re the victim of or a witness to a hate crime, contact your local police department, call 1-800-CALL-FBI, or go to tips.fbi.gov.”

 

Source: Yeshiva World News

HISTORIC: Yom Hashoah Event in Dubai Pays Tribute to the Six Million

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Who could have imagined just a year ago that Yom Hashoah, one of the saddest days on the Jewish calendar, would be observed in Dubai?

United with Israel witnessed a historic tribute to the six million Jewish victims of Holocaust. It was the first time ever that a Yom Hashoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day) event was held in the United Arab Emirates. The event took place at the Youth Hub in Dubai.

Yoseph Haddad, an Israeli-Arab social activist and CEO of Together – Vouch For Each Other, which works to bridge the gaps between Jews and Arabs, said: “Today we express our solidarity with the Jewish People by remembering the six million murdered Jews in the worst massacre in history, the Holocaust”.

The Director of ISRAELis, Eyal Biram, highlighted the great unity that exists between the people of Israel and the Emirati people since the signing of the historic Abraham Accords.

“We are here in this room and this gives us the opportunity to see the light for a better future,” he said.

The event ended with the lighting of six candles in memory of the Six Million.

The tribute is part of the #Cousins_Meetup program taking place this week, where Israeli and Emirati social media influencers are forging relationships between ‘real’ people and breaking cultural barriers.

Following the signing of the Abraham Accords, which normalized relations between Israel and the UAE, this is another step towards peace in the Middle East, thanks to ISRAELis!

(United wit Israel).

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