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Israel

Located on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea, Israel is the only Jewish-majority state in the world. It has a total land area of 22,072 sq km with an estimated population of approximately 7.7 million as of 2010.

6,421 Questions

How much is 4 billion yen worth in Israel money?

As of August, 20, one Japanese Yen is 0,04446 Israeli Shegel.

So that would mean that 4,000,000,000 Japanese Yen is 177,840,000 Israeli Shegels.

Where is the headquarters for the Israeli army?

The Israeli Army is one of the branches of the Israel Defense Forces, which also includes the Navy and Air Force. The headquarters for the entire military is located in Tel Aviv.

How many children did Israel have?

If you mean the Biblical Israel, who was also named Jacob, he had twelve sons and a daughter (Genesis ch.29-30 and 35).

What is the vernacular region for israel?

The most politically neutral term for where Israel is located is the "Southern Levant". People also call the region "Palestine" in reference to the former British Mandate located there. However, Palestine currently also refers to the fledgling Arab State in West Bank, which causes confusion when the name is used.

Why did Israel invade Lebanon in 2006?

Israel has a strict policy of bringing every soldier home safely (either alive or in a body bag). Hezbollah thought they could antagonize Israel a little by kidnapping two soldiers, Regev and Goldwasser, on the Lebanese border, thinking Israel would not actually fight for them. They were wrong and the Lebanese civilians paid the price for supporting and housing such belligerents.

Will Scotland attack England before Iran attacks Israel?

Highly unlikely.

The situation between Israel and Iran is significantly more volatile than the situation between Scotland and England. This is especially unlike since Scotland will likely break away from the UK peacefully, and this might happen as soon as next year if the country votes for it.

What does the ethnic group do in Israel?

There are certain privileges and responsibilities based on what ethnic group (based on religion) you ascribe to in Israeli society. Of course, all Israelis have the most important and basic rights, but certain particular differences arise between groups. Israeli Jews, Druze, and Circassians have mandatory service in the Israeli Army. Arab Israelis have the right to get an education in Arabic instead of Hebrew. No person of one religion can be intermarried with someone of a different religion unless those two religions permit it (which no Israeli-recognized religion permits).

When was Please Note We Are No Longer Accepting Letters of Recommendation from Henry Kissinger created?

Please Note We Are No Longer Accepting Letters of Recommendation from Henry Kissinger was created on 2008-07-06.

How did the fig tree represent the nation of Israel?

The nation of Israel was a representation of the true Kingdom of God. Hosea 9:10 is a good verse that shows the link between the nation of Israel and the fig tree. Later, the nation of Israel ceased from being a representation of the true Kingdom of God. This end is seen in Mark 11:13-14 and Mark 11:20-21. (From history we know the nation of Israel ceased from being a nation shortly thereafter when Jerusalem was devastated by the Roman Titus.) Remarkably, in 1948 Israel became a viable nation once again. Mark 13:28 explains that when the nation of Israel becomes a nation again that the end of time is near.

Why is the international community against Israel's policies?

There are a number of different theories as to why the international community is opposed to Israel's policies

Answer 1: Prevalence of Anti-Zionism

The international community is incredibly Anti-Zionist.

Israel is a unique state in the world today in the sense that it is the only state created by a historically persecuted minority. If the Romani created a state, it would likely face similar hatred. The crimes for which Israel is accountable are important to consider, but they do not rise to the level of genocide (see Related Question below) nor do they reach the level of numerous other countries such as Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Iran, China, Russia, etc. in their repression of indigenous citizenry. As a result, it cannot be the repression or attacks on the Palestinians alone that cause the Anti-Zionist sentiment worldwide. There are a number of reasons for Anti-Zionism.

1) Fear of Antagonizing Others: Some people are afraid of supporting or legitimating Israel because they fear another terrorist attack from another country that is less sympathetic to freedom of expression. While Israelis, and Jews in general, are used to people trampling on their ideals and not bombing public places or threatening mass death, other groups are more prone to such activities.

2) International Legal Violations: Israel has engaged in a number of policies in violation of international law, such as the unification of Jerusalem, the settlements in the West Bank, the annexation of the Golan Heights, etc.. Israel is not reticent for performing such acts and claims that it violates those laws because they are prejudicial to its rights and interests. If other countries did the same, (Iran is a great example), they are sternly reprimanded by the international community and forced to toe the line.

3) Anti-Semitism: This should be self-evident. The Logic goes thus: Anti-Semites oppose any Jewish aspiration to freedom and/or power. Zionism promotes Self-Determination for the Jewish people which is an aspiration to freedom and power. Therefore, Anti-Semites oppose Zionism. Additionally, many people who are Anti-Semitic see Jews as running some sort of international cabal to strip power from everyone else. Equipped with a country, who knows what further havoc Jews could cause. The Arab World is prone to these types of conspiracy theories, making the Protocols of Zion and Mein Kampf bestsellers in the Arab World. There are many respectable Arabs who take these works seriously as historical discussions of Jews.

4) Palestinian Indigenous Rights: The indigenous Palestinians and their descendants are aggrieved that people from abroad would come to the land that their parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents had lived on and worked for as long as they could remember and buy that land from the Ottomans without consulting them. Moreover, these people had a particular agenda to establish a state on the land they called their own. Understandably, the Palestinians, and those who support them, are opposed to the Zionist project for these emotional and political considerations. Additionally, the Israeli Military Occupation of the West Bank Territories and the Blockade of Gaza represents a true legal and humanitarian crisis for Supporters of an Independent Palestine and the Palestinian People. To many people, the Palestinians must have the right to go back to their homes (although it is doubtful that the Arabs would have permitted that right to the Jews should the Arabs have been victorious in the Arab-Israeli War of 1948-9).

5) Jewish Reversal of Dhimmi System: The Arab class system during the Islamic Empires had always been very clear. Muslims were of a superior class to the non-Muslims (usually Jews and Christians) called Dhimmi (which means protected ones). This is coupled with the Islamic assertion that once a land comes under Muslim domination that the land should not convert to non-Muslim power. A small minority of Muslim Revanchists make claims at controlling Spain, which was only ruled in parts by Muslims for 700 years over 500 years ago. Israel sits on lands that were under Islamic domination for nearly 1300 years (with a less than a century under the Crusader States). Therefore, many Muslim Arabs rejected the Jewish state purely because it was Jewish. Had it been just another Muslim group, a separate state would have been accepted without controversy, like has been the case for the 22 other Muslim Arab states. But it was intolerable to allow the Dhimmis to set up a state, especially one in which Dhimmis would rule over some Muslims.

Some information on the discrimination against the Dhimmi: The Dhimmi was required to pay a number of taxes that were connected with his dhimmi status. The most famous was the jizya, which was a tax that Dhimmi had to pay for Muslims for the right to not be killed where they stood for not acknowledging Mohammed's Prophecy; it was a form of humiliation. Additional taxes included the kharaj, which was a tax on non-Muslim land-holdings in the Muslim World. The kharaj was so untenable that most Dhimmi were forced to live in the cities where the tax would not be applicable. On paper, a Christian or Jew could testify against a Muslim, but in reality, such testimony was not acceptable and the attempt to "defame" a Muslim would receive retribution. Christians and Jews were not allowed to build new houses of worship, restore old houses of worship, proselytize in any way (this included religious debate or dialogue), or allow wine or pigs to be shown in public.

6) Arab Nationalism: Arab Nationalism as a movement crystallized in the 1930s and came to the political fore in the 1960s. Arab Nationalism is a movement that seeks to create an Arab State or multiple Arab States based on common cultural and historical markers. This movement began to make a tether between Arab cultural identity and Islamic religious identity. This was especially keen in places with large non-Muslim communities because those communities typically worked closely with the European colonizers seen to be repressing the Arab identity. Zionism, which is a movement based on a European cultural identity and a Jewish religious identity was antithetical to the Arab Nationalist movement ideologically and claims territory that Arab Nationalists also claim putting them at odds politically.

7) Islamism: Islamism, the political philosophy that Shari'a or Islamic Religious Law should be the grounds upon which a state is ruled, strenuously opposes any Western-style of government because it does not uphold Islamic moral standards (for example: gays and haram meats are permitted). Israel, as a secular, Westernized State is opposed for this reason. Israel, specifically, is also hated by Islamists for two reasons unique to Israel. The first is that the Jews are the ones in power. In the Islamist conception, only Muslims should be in power in the State and any non-Muslim minorities should have a secondary role if they should have one at all. Second, Israel is situated in territory which used to be governed by Muslims for nearly 1300 years (with a century-long break under the Crusader States). As a result, Israel is considered a usurpation of historical Islamic authority whereas European countries (for example) never had Islamic authority before.

It is worth noting that not all Muslims are opposed to the State of Israel and there are several Islamic arguments in favor of the State of Israel, such as those advocated by Sheikh Hadi Palazzi, Irshad Manji, and Tawfik Hamid. None of these individuals, though, is an Islamist. Of the Muslims who oppose the State of Israel, not all of them are Islamist either, many are Arab Nationalists or have no general political affiliation and oppose the State of Israel for one of the many other reasons listed here. Finally, Islam/Muslim/Islamic is the religion and Islamism/Islamist is the political philosophy; the two are different.

8) Anti-Colonialism: While Arab Nationalism was an anti-colonial movement, the general principles of the anti-colonialism led to a rejection of States based on European values in non-European locations with a large number of non-European (ethnically speaking) inhabitants. This sentiment was felt most strongly towards (South) Rhodesia, South Africa, and what would become Israel. Anti-colonialists believe that Asians and Africans had the right to Self-Determination pursuant to their cultures. However, Rhodesian and South African institutions could and did eventually convert to being African nations (in the true sense of the term) because their racist infrastructure could be reformed. Zionism is by default a government by the Jews and would cease to be Zionist if the Jews were taken out of the leadership position. Thus Zionism catches the ire of anti-colonialists.

9) Political Antagonism: If State A has a lot of wars with State B, State A and B will develop a mutual animosity towards each other and their raisons d'être. There are a number of politically independent or partially independent Peoples and States that came into conflict with the Halutzim (Jewish Pioneers in the British Mandate of Palestine), the Haganah et al. (Jewish Militias), and Tzahal (the Israeli Army). This has only increased with the numerous Arab-Israeli Wars, the Intifadas, the Occupation of the West Bank and the Blockade of Gaza, and Israel's acquisition of nuclear weaponry.

10) Anti-Nationalism: In today's world, as things like globalization, cultural diffusion, and mixed ethnicities in major districts become more prominent, the Zionist model of a Nation-State dedicated to one race or religion seems anachronistic. Germany, founded on the same model, now has the issue of integrating Turks (and their children) into the German state, but since Germans always lived in Germany and constituted a majority there, as opposed to being a reorganized Diaspora, nobody suggests that Germans should "return" to a more cosmopolitan type of existence. This is, however, oftentimes suggested by Anti-Nationalists and Post-Nationalists concerning the Jews and their State.

11) Non-Jewish Holy Sites: Since the Holy Land does not only have Jewish Holy Sites, but also has Christian and Muslim Holy Sites, there is opposition in these communities to Jews having a physical monopoly and control of these holy sites. Therefore, these communities opposed the idea of a Jewish Nation State that could do exactly that.

12) Jewish Blasphemy: There was a prevailing belief among the more religious Jews (Orthodox, Hasidim, Ultra-Orthodox, etc.) that the Galut (the Exile from the Holy Land) was a divine act of punishment because Jews had violated the commandments that God had given them. When God believed that the Jewish people had repented and were ready for the Messiah, this Messiah would come and bring the Jews back to the Holy Land. Until that time, Jews will remain in exile. The Orthodox and some branches of the Hasidim and Ultra-Orthodox eventually came around to supporting the State of Israel, but not on the grounds of it being a Jewish (religious) State. They typically support it because it is a nation with a large percentage of Jewish people. However, there are some very vocal factions in the Hasidic and Ultra-Orthodox communities (such as Neturei Karta) who see a Return to the Holy Land as being an act of blasphemy because Jews should wait for God to bring them into the Holy Land and not to physically move there of their will.

Answer 2: Jealous of Israel's Chosenness

They know that Jews are Gods chosen people. Let's face it. What Israel has done in 60 years turning a desert dump into a gorgeous cosmopolitan high tech country could not have been done without Gods blessing and the Arabs (and most of the world) they are simply jealous and can't stand it. That also explains why although nobody ever made demonstrations or UN resolutions condemning the 8 years of rockets into Israel, all of a sudden when Israel attacks back we see the sudden outpouring of sympathy for the Gaza victims!!

Answer 3: Israeli Repression of Palestinians

the palestinians have been suffering in gaza and isreal for over 60 years the isreali's attack young children and woman hence leading to genocide....the isrealis have turned a country of islam into zionist scum, they dont deserve the land

Answer 4: Israelis forcing the Palestinians to be Refugees

Because European invaders came and took the farms of Palestine, and the cities. They changed the name to Israel and forced the Palestinians out. This genocide killed millions and made millions of Palestinians into refugees. As you can imagine, the Palestinians and the people in neighbouring countries hate such bad behaviour. In 2009, Israel again slaughtered hundreds of Palestinian children in Gaza.

Answer 5: International Community is Not Against Israel

sorry dudes i don't think that the international community is against israel since there is no actions taken against the crimes it makes.

sorrily that many people while discussing this issue forget about one fact that we are all humans and should respect each others believes .we should pay respect to human kind without classifying people based on religion

the killing is wrong wrong from any side

to solve the problem we have to address the root of the problem .....the israelis claim that the land is theirs because god said so (u can convince a person who shares the same believe about this but u cant convince me as i don't even believe in such things)they say the lived here some 1 million yrs back and now its time to go back.on the way back oooooooops there are some people already there and they are plenty too so what to do?mmmmmmmm we shall sneak in slowly act as immigrants and sure locals will welcome us ..buy houses and lands from the stupid Arabs and slowly while the Arabs a sleep we shall squeez them out and claim the rebirth of the promised land with the help of our brothers in America and Europe we shall protect it,even though we r minority we shall rule the majority ...why ?coz we are the choosen ...and we struggled so much against the natzies ...so what about the Arabs are they natzi? no but they don't belong here...will do u know that the majority of the so called Arab are basically lived in this land for so long and they are not 100% Arabs but a mixture of races who lived in this area long time a go

msot of the world cultural areas are connected for example latin America ,the Indian sub contienient ,the Korean peninsula but israel have such an awkward position as if it has been implanted(who would want to live next to neighbours don't have somthing in common with)all surrounding countries are Arabs and mostly Muslims (its like the whats wrong in the picture puzzle)

Describe the United Nations plan for partitioning the region of Palestine into a Palestinian State and a Jewish state?

Most people incorrectly believe that the UN Resolution "created" a Jewish State (Israel) and an Arab State (Palestine) on the map. This is not the case. What UN Resolution 181 does provide for is the permission for the different ethno-religious groups in Mandatory Palestine to declare a state. In the case of most mandates, the understanding was that the mandate would eventually become independent as one new state, like Iraq or Syria had. The case of a Palestine was therefore unique and needed the permission to deviate from the traditional path of independence. Because of their being two states, provisional borders had to be provided, which is why a map was used, but those borders would only come into play if both sides decided to remain at peace.

Do Israel use IBAN numbers?

23 digits

2 digit bank code

3 digit branch code

all are needed to send money to Israel

What is the population of masada israel?

Matzada (Masadah) is located near the Dead Sea, in an unpopulated corner of Israel. There are no towns in the immediate area.

Why are the Golan Heights of such strategic importance to Israel?

The Golan Heights are higher than the the surrounding Israeli land. When the Syrians had control of the Heights, they'd fire rockets at civilian settlements in Israel from the vantage point.

Today, Israel uses the dead soil of the Heights for agricultural research to develop drought resistant crops.

Albert Einstein for president in Israel?

Albert Einstein was asked by Israel to be president (Because of his Jewish family), but refused to take the responsibility because it would stop him from his science.

What is the zip code for Bethlehem in Israel?

Unfortunately there is no system for ZIP codes in Palestine. Zip codes are only used for the United States, all other countries use postal codes.

The postal code for Bethlehem is 36007

It can be found at the link listed below using Index » Israel » North » Yizre'el.

Is it true Gaza bombed Israel?

Not exactly. It's more accurate to say that terrorists in Gaza launch bombs and rockets into Israel on a regular basis.

What was Egypt's role in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?

Assessing Egypt's position

by Hassan Khader 14 January 2010

RAMALLAH - Egypt's actions in Gaza have been a source of confusion for some time. Four factors govern Egypt's policy towards the Gaza Strip:

1. The Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty, the upholding of which is a key

priority for Egyptian national security.

2. Concerns triggered by Israel's desire to transfer responsibility for the Gaza Strip onto the Egyptian state, especially in light of Israel's redeployment from the strip, and its attempts to rid itself of the obligations imposed by international law on the occupying power.

3. Concerns arising from the de facto rule in the Gaza Strip by the Muslim Brotherhood, which poses an additional threat to Egyptian national security. This threat results from the well-established ties between the Gaza Muslim Brotherhood and its banned mother organisation in Egypt, and the special relationship linking the Brotherhood generally with Iran, Syria, and other radical Islamist organisations in different parts of the Arab world.

4. Its ongoing efforts to end the Arab/Palestinian-Israeli conflict through negotiations that would lead to a Palestinian state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, while simultaneously avoiding Egyptian adoption of any positions that contradict its peace treaty with Israel or that would jeopardise its relations with the United States.

These factors are all interrelated, and under certain circumstances some issues become paramount, while at other times different concerns become priorities. Three overarching facts are most significant to this process: first, that the Gaza Strip shares a border with Egypt; second, Egypt is a major player in the Arab moderate camp; and third, the historical relationship between Egypt and Palestine.

The border connecting Egypt and the Gaza Strip makes it possible for militants to infiltrate into the Sinai and launch attacks against Israel from Egyptian territory. Just as the Syrians prevent any attacks on Israel from their territory in the Golan, notwithstanding the historic relationships between Syria and countless Palestinian and other radical organisations, Egypt must prevent attacks on Israel from its territory.

The border also raises the possibility of Egypt losing control over security in the Sinai in the event of cooperation between the Muslim Brotherhood on both sides of the Gaza border. These concerns are exacerbated by the fact that the special relationship between Hamas and Iran has now created a de facto Iranian presence on Egypt's borders.

Egypt considers the Palestinian issue to be central not only to its national security, but also to its regional responsibilities. Accordingly, based on long historical experience, Egypt has formulated a complex policy on this issue.

What matters is not whether the Egyptian perceptions are right or wrong, but rather that the Palestinian issue is the prime source that influences Egypt's national security policymaking. In view of this, and because the policies and stances of the Palestine Liberation Organiz ation and the Palestinian Authority coincide with Egypt's positions, any recognition of the legitimacy of Hamas rule contradicts Egyptian interests. But because it is the only way to achieve their national goals, the Egyptians have tried in various ways to unite the Palestinian polity, which would ultimately have to entail the integration of Hamas into the Palestinian political structure and enable the Palestinians to adhere to a unified stance that is consistent with regional and global realities.

Hamas' conduct on the border with Egypt constitutes an open challenge to core Egyptian policies. One example of this confrontation has been the shooting at Egyptian soldiers from Gaza, recently resulting in the death of one of them. This suggests that Hamas leaders fail to comprehend the reality of their situation and the realities of Egyptian politics.

In any scenario, the results will not favour Hamas, even though the Egyptians too have found themselves forced into making difficult decisions such as building a wall along their side of the border with the Gaza Strip.

As for the humanitarian catastrophe befalling the people of Gaza, the responsibility does not rest on the shoulders of the regime in Cairo (which would show no mercy to anyone if threatened), but on the shoulders of those who assess the political situation with anything less than the kind of calibrated scale used for measuring gold.

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* Hassan Khader writes a weekly column for the Ramallah-based Al-Ayyam daily newspaper. This article originally appeared in Al-Ayyam in Arabic and was translated to English by the American Task Force on Palestine (ATFP). It is distributed by the Common Ground News Service (CGNews) with permission from ATFP and the author.

Source: Al-Ayyam (English translation by ATFP), 08 January 2010,

www.al-ayyam.PS and www.americantaskforce.org

Copyright permission is granted for publication.

Were there ALWAYS Jews in Israel?

Answer 1

Israel was under British territory until the end of World War 2, when they gave it up to the Jewish community around the world so they could be free from prosecution in other countries.

Answer 2

Yes, assuming "Always" refers to "all periods of time when there have been Jews in some place in the world" as opposed to "all moments since the Big Bang". There have always been Jews in Israel since Judaism's inception. (Scholars place this at around 2500 years ago while Religious Jews place this at around 3800 years ago.)

Now, this does not mean that the Jews were the majority or that they were in any way connected to the government or rulership of the territory. For example, in 1918, the British census showed a 7% Jewish population, which is a small minority.