The Israel Brief- 26-28 September 2023

The Israel Brief – 26 September 2023 Saudi envoy to Ramallah talks Palestinian state. Fighting on Yom Kippur. UN speeches by Abbas and Netanyahu. IDF strike targets in Gaza.



The Israel Brief – 27 September 2023 Shin Bet foil assassination plot. Israeli minister in Saudi Arabia. Ben Gvir vs Protesters. Israeli and Malawian FM’s meet.



The Israel Brief – 28 September 2023 High Court hearings on incapacitation law. Erez crossing opened. Expose on Roger Waters antisemitism. Sukkot.






While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

PRAYERS AND PROTEST ON THE STREETS OF TEL AVIV

Yom-Kippur in 1973 was a defining moment. Will Yom-Kippur 2023  prove to be another?

By David E. Kaplan

It is 50 years this October since the Yom-Kippur War of 1973 and Israel is again at war – this time with itself.  As Israel over the years since ’73 tamed threats from without, today its greatest threat may lie from within.

According to the Jewish People Policy Institute (JPPI)’ in its 2023 Annual Assessment published on Wednesday, about 37% of Israelis currently hold or plan to acquire a foreign passport with the intention of emigrating. This figure is ALARMING, ringing like the all-too familiar siren warning of an incoming missile. According to the JPPI, this staggering high percentage from a country that in recent years featured high in polls of the ‘top happiest countries in the world” underscores the deepening crisis within Israel and raises questions about the nation’s resilience. The discontent on the street is not as Justice minister, Yariv Levin sees it that “They failed at the ballot box, and now they want to cancel election results.” On the contrary, the “they” as L:evin calls the protestors, feel that in 2023, they suddenly feel they are on the wrong train, going in the wrong direction! One option is to get off before it crashes.

Tumult in Tel Aviv.  While Jews praying, activists protest against gender segregation in the public space during a public prayer on Dizengoff Square in Tel Aviv, on Yom-Kippur on September 25, 2023.(Photo: ITAI RON/FLASH90)

In a year marked by significant turmoil and polarization, due to the governing coalition’s judicial overhaul  coupled with turbulence in areas of religion and state, the JPPI report paints a troubling picture of Israeli society.

An increasing number of Israeli citizens of 2023 see the real danger to their country lying not in Tehran but in Jerusalem. As a metaphor of this change in perspective, Netanyahu’s address at the UN was before a near empty auditorium. This is a marked change from previous appearances before the General Assembly. Even listeners at home who used to hang at his every word, not this year. Few bothered to tune in as too few believe and trust him anymore. His words may still be polished parlance but they are the parlance of a Pinocchio.

And here lies a quirky irony that as the Jewish state reaches out to former enemies striking glorious accords, within Israel today the present government of Netanyahu now sows inglorious discord.

Prayer as Protest.  To defy a Tel Aviv municipal ban against gender segregation in public spaces upheld by the Supreme Court, the Orthodox Jewish group Rosh Yehudi sets up a gender divider made of Israeli flags in Dizengoff Square on Yom-Kippur on September 24, 2023. (Tomer Neuberg/Flash 90)

Encapsulating this scenario in a timely metaphor of the ‘State of the Nation’ was again an outbreak of hostilities on Yom-Kippur. This time not on border battlefields, but on the streets of Tel Aviv and between Jews. The largest confrontation was on Dizengoff Square as worshipers began the opening prayer of Kol Nidre. Extremists from the religious right-wing camp, supporters of the Netanyahu governing coalition, attempted (in defiance of municipal and High Court rulings barring gender segregated prayers in PUBLIC places)  to forcibly set up a partition to separate men and woman. In response, counter-protesters disrupted the segregated prayers and the issue devolved into fisticuffs with two arrests.

Division on Dizengoff. Secular and Orthodox activists clash after the religious Rosh Yehudi group sets up a gender divider made of Israeli flags in defiance of a municipality decision at a public prayer service in Dizengoff Square, Tel Aviv on Yom- Kippur, September 24, 2023. (Tomer Neuberg/Flash 90)

Even though the ban on gender segregation had been issued by the Tel-Aviv municipality and upheld by the Supreme Court,  this proved no impediment for Itamar Ben-Gvir, the far-right Minister of National Security from calling for a protest prayer later in the week in Tel Aviv. He has since under pressure from his more responsible colleagues called it off. Instead of fulfilling the role of his portfolio by providing ‘security’, Ben-Gvir was typically doing the exact opposite. Displaying disrespect for the judiciary and disdain for those not sharing his views, Ben-Gvir said in a video posted Tuesday on X:

I say to those anarchists that tried to eject worshipers on Yom-Kippur — I and my friends from Otzma Yehudit are coming on Thursday to the same spot, let’s see you try and eject us.”

And this is Israel’s Minister of National Security who is himself a threat to  national security.

Menacing Minister. Israel’s rabble-rousing Minister of National Security was fanning the flames of turmoil by inciting his base to return to Tel Aviv in another protest prayer, which he later called off.

And so, the usually solemn Day of Atonement – Yom-Kippur – saw new controversy over the fate of Israel’s democracy. After nearly 10 months of street protests from Israelis who fear the government is on a tragic trajectory to erode protections for women and minorities and impose an ultraconservative version of Judaism on the public, the flare up on Yom-Kippur added fuel to the fire. If any further evidence was needed to show that the wounds Israel today suffers are sell-inflicted, we have to look no further than its leadership. What the chaos in Tel Aviv did not need need was Ben-Gvir fanning the flames with his rabble-rousing rhetoric nor the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu who characterized what transpired as “leftist protesters rioting against Jews.”

Where does Israel go from here with a government which is failing to read the landscape? Is this not what happened in 1973 when it failed to read the military machinations of Egypt and Syria? Today it fails to read the mood on the street as it embarks on policies that are anathema to far too many people. Impervious to entreaties from Israelis and Jews across the world, this extreme right-wing coalition persists on its judicial overhaul that is set to overhaul the Israel we know and it’s relationship with the Jewish diaspora. At a time when we should be strengthening our ties with Jewish communities around the world, this government is alienating them.

The situation reminds this writer of the war room in Tel Aviv in October 1973, captured so brilliantly in the recently released movie ‘Golda’ with Helen Mirren superbly cast as Golda Meir. Taken by surprise in attacks on its two major fronts with Egypt and Syria, Israel faced annihilation.  “We came so close Henry,” says Golda to US Secretary of State Kissinger at one of their meetings. Most of the action in the movie takes place not on the battlefields but in in the underground command centre in Tel Aviv, not too far  from Kaplan Street, the epicenter of today’s protest movement. Was it the directors intent or was it coincidental that the war room in one sense was visually like a battlefield with so much smoke that it was a struggle to see clearly. In the battlefield it’s from the conduct of war, in Golda’s war room it was from incessant cigarette smoke.  Was the smoke the director’s metaphor for a blinding fog –  failing to see beyond the lurking dangers?

Seeing through the Smoke. A smoky war room during the Yom-Kippur War of 1973 from the movie Golda with Helen Mirren as Golda (left).  (Sean Gleason, Courtesy of Bleecker Street/ShivHans Pictures)

DEFINING TIMES

Fifty years later from that defining war, are our leaders today again failing to see the damage they are inflicting on the nation and the Jewish people by their misguided proposals and policies?

Writing in the Times of Israel, Canaan Lidor writes that “Seen more broadly, the dispute over the Dizengoff Square prayer service is a sobering example of how an initiative that once transcended Israel’s religious-secular divide has this year deepened it, amid the ideological clash over religion and state in connection with the government’s judicial overhaul.”

As this country moves and trips after one self-inflicted crises after another, what this Yom-Kippur has shown is that people should really pray for is for reason to prevail! The signs are not good.

That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history is the most important of all the lessons that history has to teach,” said Aldous Huxley. 

It’s a lesson that Israel’s present leadership is failing to grasp as it careers headlong  along its “March of Folly”.



Mayhem erupts in Tel Aviv over segregated Yom Kippur Prayers






While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

BIBI’S BLUNDER

The Reckless Assault on the Supreme Court

By Raymond Wacks Emeritus Professor of Law and Legal Theory

(Courtesy of The Montréal Review)

The Ashes are slowly fading into a (bitter) memory. England came agonisingly close to winning the historic cricket contest against Australia.[1] One event, however, will be especially hard for English supporters to forget. On the final day of the second test at Lord’s, Jonny Bairstow was given “out” stumped when he wandered out of his crease believing the ball to be dead. While the law was correctly applied by the umpire, his controversial verdict was widely criticised as not being within the spirit of the game.

A ‘Test’ Case. Aussies appealing for Jonny Bairstow’s run out during 2nd Ashes Test at Lord’s Cricket Ground. (Image:(Image: Sony LIV)

Suppose that the rancorous reception that greeted this strict interpretation of the laws of cricket led the International Cricket Council to declare that in future, umpires’ authority to declare a batsman stumped would be discharged by the chief administrative official of the ICC placed at a strategic position on the field. Umpires might legitimately wonder whether this encroachment upon their powers did not constitute so gross a violation of their responsibility that they should, at the very least, wish to protest. Imagine that such limitations persisted until they were told that they no longer had the power to decide whether a batsman was out. Their task would largely be confined to calling wides, no-balls, boundaries, and byes. Every diminution in their power would now constitute an affront to their office. A point would be reached when they cease to exercise the very function for which they have been appointed.

The same is true of judges. Unchecked executive discretion reduces them to impotent spectators of executive action – a grotesque distortion of their calling. No government relishes the pesky interference by courts with its political agenda. And this is no less true of democratically elected governments. Nor is the hostility towards judges the monopoly of any ideology: it is expressed by both left and right.

So, for example, the Conservative Party in the United Kingdom has recently witnessed a recent backlash against the escalation of both the extent and scope of judicial review (JR) since the Supreme Court’s notorious ‘prorogation’ decision in 2019 which unanimously ruled that the government did not have the power to suspend Parliament.[2] And in the United States, the Supreme Court is under fire from the Democrats for its judgment that the Constitution does not confer a right to abortion.[3] Moves are therefore afoot in the Congress to neutralize the perceived rightward shift during the Trump administration by adding four justices to the bench. These crusades are injudicious.

The Israeli government, in seeking to curtail the powers of the Supreme Court, is not only undermining the rule of law, but endangering the country’s celebrated democratic system. And in this enterprise, Israel is in questionable company. There are echoes of the South African apartheid government’s crackdown on the judiciary, the erosion of whose powers it assiduously advanced by legislation that prevented judges from ruling on the legality of the detention of its opponents.[4] And PiS, Poland’s ruling party, has branded judges ‘self-serving, unelected elites who substitute their own preferences for those of voters’.[5] This charitable appraisal was followed by the enactment of stringent limitations on the autonomy and independence of the courts.

DEMOCRATIC CHOICE

Populists seem to have little difficulty simultaneously flaunting and flouting the rule of law. The legal system is censured for corroding the rule of law and depriving the people of its benefits, while the law is employed to frustrate democratic values. But, it may be asserted, are not democratically elected legislatures entitled to express the will of their voters even if – as we have seen for months on the streets of Israel – their actions are widely rejected? And does JR not weaken this vital democratic exercise of choice? Surely, it is argued, parliaments are a better, and more representative, forum for the deliberation of important social, political, and moral questions. Legislatures, in other words, have democratic legitimacy. Unelected judges do not. [6]

Two sorts of argument are typically deployed both in support of and against JR. The first asserts that JR is good (or bad) because it delivers better (or worse) results than other procedures for resolving rights disputes. The second claims that JR is good (or bad) because it produces a procedure that is (or is not) consistent with democracy. In other words, public deliberation is good for democracy; JR facilitates public deliberation; therefore JR is consistent with (or contributes to) the conditions of democratic rule.

LEGITIMACY

It is generally assumed that legislatures enjoy democratic legitimacy, while courts generally lack it. But this must surely depend on the circumstances obtaining in respect of both institutions. A Supreme Court’s legitimacy is likely to be strong where – as in Israel – popular support is based on the nature of its powers, its record, or the method by which its members are appointed.

Such legitimacy may, however, turn on the institutions and rights that actually exist or are recognised. The right to vote is obvious, but is the system of ‘first past the post’ (FPTP) more or less democratic than proportional representation (PR)? Complex questions arise when we attempt to evaluate which rights are essential. Are we concerned with the outcome or the means by which they are reached?

The method of appointment of Supreme Court judges is also on the Knesset’s agenda. The legitimacy of the judiciary often turns on how judges are elevated to the bench. Where appointments are generally perceived to be fair, transparent, and non-political, the prospect of the courts enjoying popular democratic legitimacy is obviously enhanced.

Government and the Gavel. Israel’s Supreme Court hears arguments in showdown over judicial curbs

JUDICIAL AUTHORITY

To support judicial oversight is not to deny that judges may be influenced by subjective moral, political, or ideological considerations, but that is less likely to occur than in the case of elected legislators answerable to their party or constituency. Furthermore, detached from the rough and tumble of parliamentary rhetoric and oratorical persuasion, judges have both the time and, in many cases, the expertise, to examine both sides of the argument presented to them in an atmosphere, one hopes, of tranquil reflection and deliberation.

Judicial authority is a potent process by which perceived failures in democratic outcomes may be ‘corrected’. It is also generally true that disagreements between judges are generally based on principle rather than popularity. Another advantage of the procedure is that courts are able to safeguard non-majoritarian representative democracy. It also empowers individuals to vindicate their rights against government. Misgivings about its undemocratic nature may be offset by its general legitimacy rooted in its contribution to the protection of individual rights.

There is a paradox in the qualms expressed by those who rail against the alleged hegemony of judges. While on the one hand, JR, especially in its strong form, is perceived as a force that destabilises the separation of powers and the democratic principles which are its constitutional underpinning; the rule of law is, on the other hand, actually enhanced by the power of courts to ensure that government actions comply with the constitution. I believe that to diminish judicial authority is to weaken a major pillar of democratic government.

It is time for Prime Minister Netanyahu, after a tenacious spell at the crease, to accept that his wicket has fallen, and, in the interests of his country, stride graciously to the pavilion.



About the writer:

Raymond Wacks, Emeritus Professor of Law and Legal Theory, graduated from Wits law school in 1969 having served on the Executive of the SRC and as President of the Law Students’ Council. He left South Africa in 1970 to pursue research at Oxford where he spent the next decade. In 1982 he returned to SA to take up the chair in public law at the University of Natal, Durban. 
Wacks is the author of fifteen books, several of which have been translated into more than a dozen languages on legal philosophy, privacy, and justice. He is also the co-author of five books, and editor of ten. His monograph, The Rule of Law Under Fire was published by Hart in 2021. Oxford University Press published the sixth edition of his Understanding Jurisprudence: An Introduction to Legal Theory in 2021, as well as the third edition of Law: A Very Short Introduction which appeared earlier this year.




[1] England and Australia compete biennially for a small urn that is believed to contain the ashes of a wooden bail. Following the latter’s victory in 1832, a British newspaper published an ‘obituary’ of English cricket which declared that its ‘body will be cremated and the ashes taken to Australia’.

[2] R (Miller) v The Prime Minister and Cherry v Advocate General for Scotland [2019] UKSC 41.

[3] Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, No. 19-1392, 597 US ___ (2022), overruling both Roe v Wade  410 US 113 (1973) and Planned Parenthood v Casey 505 US 833 (1992).

[4] See Raymond Wacks, ‘Judges and Injustice’ (1984) 101 South African Law Journal 266;  Raymond Wacks, ‘Judging Judges’ (1984) 101 South African Law Journal 295 (in reply to J Dugard, ‘Should Judges Resign? – A Reply to Professor Wacks’’(1984) 101 South African Law Journal 286); Raymond Wacks, ‘Judges and Moral Responsibility’ in Wojciech Sadurski (ed), Ethical Dimensions of Legal Theory, Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and Humanities (Amsterdam, Rodopi, 1991) 111.; Raymond Wacks, ‘Law’s Umpire: Judges, Truth, and Moral Accountability’ in Peter Koller and André-Jean Arnaud (eds), Law, Justice, and Culture (Stuttgart, Franz Steiner Verlag, 1998). See too David Dyzenhaus, Hard Cases in Wicked Legal Systems: South African Law in the Perspective of Legal Philosophy (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1991).

[5] The Economist, 23 January 2020, ‘Poland’s ruling party should stop nobbling judges’. See Martin Krygier, ‘The Challenge of Institutionalisation: Post-Communist “Transitions”, Populism and the Rule of Law’ (2019) 15 European Constitutional Law Review 544.

[6] The case is made most powerfully by Jeremy Waldron, ‘The Core of the Case against Judicial Review’ (2006) Yale Law Journal 1346. His preference for parliamentary rather than judicial decision-making would appear logically to commit him to supporting the Israeli government’s proposals. The rationale for JR is, of course, equally robustly, advanced by Ronald Dworkin, Freedom’s Law: The Moral Reading of the American Constitution (New York, Oxford University Press, 1996). I consider these competing contentions in more detail in Raymond Wacks, The Rule of Law Under Fire? (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2021), 62-65.





While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

AN ISOLATED TEMPLE OF SUSTAINABILITY SHINES IN THE NEGEV

Experiencing a new resort that blends seamlessly into the crusty landscape and exquisite beauty of Israel’s southern desert

By Motti Verses

Israelis have mixed feelings about the southern part of their country – the Negev. Names of places like Tze’elim, Shizafon, Shivta or Mashabim are sensitive. They are associated with memories with army uniforms – sand, dust, sounds of gunshots and orders of military commanders. Army drills, or navigating wearing the olive-green clothing that match the scrubby bushes underfoot, the only vegetation that survives under the Negev extreme sunlight, remain fresh in the minds of many.

Regrettably, many Israelis tend to drive through the Negev with a mindset mostly of it being a necessary transit zone en route to the Red Sea beaches of Eilat and the Sinai Peninsula. Enjoying nature in this remote wilderness has always been extremely challenging. Generations that slept here under the sky in sleeping bags or army tents, looked for green landscapes for a vacation. No wonder there are almost no lodging options between the town of Mitzpe Ramon and Eilat. A luxury retreat was until recently, part of the science fiction department.

This past scenario changed dramatically with a vision by one Israeli. A person that was not deterred by prejudiced opinions, extreme weather conditions, distance, logistics and allocation funding support. He decided to redress reality from scratch. To turn the improbable into the possible.

A dozen years ago, entrepreneur Ronny Douek approached young Israeli architecture students. He asked them to research a design for cliff structures that resembles an ancient village of the people who once dominated the desert – the Nabateans. Sometimes luxury is about making a splash and getting noticed, but the architects of the Tel Aviv practice of Plesner Architects – took the opposite route. They created a resort that blends seamlessly into the natural crusty desert landscape and surrounding beauty, harnessing local materials and regional craft like limestone walls, ceramics and pergolas. These drawing board dreams became reality two years ago with a luxury hotel on isolated empty hills next to a small hidden community settlement called Shaharut, located 40 kilometers north of Eilat.

Seeing is Believing. Looking out onto a biblical view of the desert from the writer’s bedroom. (Photo Motti verses)

The Nabateans most famous capital city of Raqmu is known today as Jordan’s Petra –  identified by its stylish iconic architecture.  To realize such architectural ambitions in Israel’s Negev, who would be the most polished chic brand to  – in Zionist parlance – will such a dream into reality?

Douek initiated a partnership with Six Senses Resorts & Spas, a relatively young brand that declares a commitment to community, sustainability, emotional hospitality, wellness and design, infused with a touch of quirkiness.

No doubt that ever since it opened, Six Senses Shaharut literally ‘stands out’ as the most intriguing captivating hotel in Israel. Curious to decipher the ambiguity of a remote dusty wilderness blended with expensive luxury, I found myself driving with the woman I love, Liat, along a  deserted desert road in the southern Negev. It was exhilarating being the sole car on the road. As I drove absorbing the arid Negev’s stark beauty, my mind too was moving along. Thoughts percolated through my mind of what lay before me at the end of this road – a unique hotel that only opened at the end of 2021 during the corona pandemic. It had surely overcome, I pondered, the typical opening difficulties but then again, this was a hotel not in a city but in the desert! I knew there had been changes from the original opening team with a new chief and new chef. Deep within the recesses of my mind, I  heard voices of disbelief about finding genuine luxury on an isolated Negev hill. After a  four hour drive from central Israel, we arrived at the hotel’s main gate.

Carved into the Crust. Not interfering with nature, the hotel unobtrusively blends into the desert landscape. (Photo Motti Verses)

Surrounded by young warm welcoming team members attired in desert colors, we handed over our vehicle keys and after a splendid  complimentary welcome drink, and a quick explanation, we mounted an electric buggy car climbing up-uphill for a tour of the hotel. A hotel? Not really. Guest rooms are hardly seen. They are built in a hidden invisible way to sustain the environment almost as it was from time immemorial. My mind churning over, I could not escape the thought:

This unique architecture must have cost a fortune.”

However, at Six Senses Shaharut, one’s mindset is moved to recalibrate as one takes in the timelessness of the milieu. In this temple of sustainability, ‘things’ are less familiar. We required time to absorb and adjust. From the main structure at the top of the hill, the sprawling Negev surroundings looked stunning. Perched on a cliff, guests witness the almost supernatural panoramic view of the Arava plateau and Jordan’s magical Edom red mountains. This scenery is a far cry from a blue sea or lake. No green meadows with cows in sight. No forests and hummingbirds singing. It is a desert backdrop. A truly jaw-dropping wonder, especially at sunset.

Surreal Sunsets. The writer joins the guests to observe a spectacular desert sunset. (Photo Motti Verses)
 

We are a phenomenal property that is located directly in the Negev desert with 60 bedrooms that consist of many villas and suites across 46 acres”, says the exuberant native Australian General Manager, Alicia Graham. “If you are looking for a place to relax, disconnect, and enjoy wellness,” says Alicia, “this unique retreat is the ultimate place to be for a total relaxing encounter. We pride ourselves – among other things – for our disconnection from the world. Our wellness facilities offer traditional therapies, signature treatments and personalized programs providing a unique experience for our guests in a unique environment.”

An award winner in the hospitality industry, GM Alicia Graham has “a passion for service and quality”. (Photo Motti Verses)

Burnt umber, cadmium red, ochre and red-violet, not to mention the steely-blue skies all combine for an astonishing palette of color.

The buggy drops us by our stylish well-equipped room with a panoramic view of the desolated hills rich in its inimitable colors – an amalgam of burnt brown, cadmium red, ochre and red-violet, all depending on the journey of the sun during the course of the day.

For a moment I imagined we were staying in a luxurious capsule on a remote planet. The emptiness turned out to be bewitching. Especially in the morning, waking up in the most comfortable bed I have ever experienced, that was surprisingly made of stone. Staying in the wilderness in style, with pampering air-conditioning, a state-of-the-art bathroom, the softest towels on earth, cool amenities and an outdoor terrace, we felt we were in heaven.

Staying Cool.  The outdoor pool can hardly get more inviting. (Photo Motti Verses)

Relaxing by the pool, enchanted by the mountain views, was our daily activity. We didn’t skip the desert temple of rejuvenation – the Spa. In most hotels in Israel, the spa is usually located underground with no natural light – a preference of architects to cut costs. Here at Six Senses Shaharut, the six treatment rooms, saunas, steam rooms, hammams, a yoga hall together with a magical relaxation area are all above ground, making visual access of the landscape a top priority. This desert luxurious spa is one of the most impressive spas I have ever seen and experienced. Then there is the exquisitely designed indoor pool – a true masterpiece, for the ultimate in pampering. I suspect it is equally inviting in winter.

Calming Serenity. Where better to indulge oneself with a dip in the inside pool. (Photo Motti Verses)

However, whatever the weather, following the lead of the hotel’s evocative name, Six Senses Shaharut is the place toindulge the fourth ‘sense’ – taste. Eating here is a gastronomic delight amplified by the restaurant settings offering relaxing ambience and beautiful décor. ‘Taste’ carries over with the creative homey furniture compositions. The Jamillah bar and Midian classic restaurant are beautifully designed  to mesh with the awe-inspiring beauty of the surroundings offering the promise of a mouthwatering meal. We were not disappointed.

We enjoyed our magnificent breakfasts there with indoor and outdoor seating that will be cherished.

For dinner, acclaimed chef David Biton, the former Executive Chef of the King David hotel Jerusalem combines the best of Israeli and Mediterranean influences. He talentedly embraces the ‘Eat with Six Senses’ philosophy of local fresh and seasonal produce. Some ingredients are even harvested from the resort’s organic gardens. While not kosher certified, dishes such as pork and seafood are not offered.

I am fortunate to operate first class restaurants and not the food outlets of a traditional hotel,” says chef Biton. “The number of dinners is small and we don’t cater banquets. All the ingredients are fresh and nothing comes from freezers. We use only fresh spices. We guarantee state-of-the-art gastronomy which is hard to find in conservative hotels. Six Senses Shaharut is a green hotel with endless recycling procedures in use as well, which make my professional journey here amazingly exceptional,” he says.

Creator and his Creation. Six Senses Shaharut executive chef, David Biton. (Photo Motti Verses)

What really differentiates Six Senses Shaharut from any other hotel in Israel are the management and employees. This is the only hospitality estate that is almost fully operationally managed by non-Israelis. These professional foreigners are transmitting the Six Senses philosophy after experiencing it before at other hospitality establishments around the globe. None of them – apart from chef Biton – worked in a hotel in Israel before. Their professional mindset is just different. It reflects directly on the employees, most of them young optimistic Israelis, saving money to conquer the world. It was a true pleasure to notice how devoted they are to be part of that pioneering vision to make the Negev desert flourish. Apparently, in the far less inhabited areas, Israel is looking more promising than ever.

‘Far from the madding crowd’ and not a single nylon bag flying in the wind,nature and humanity meet in an extraordinary intimacy that is Six Senses Shaharut that combines ultimate luxury with ultimate sanctuary.



About the writer:

The writer, Motti Verses, is a Travel Flash Tips publisher. His travel stories are published on THE TIMES OF ISRAEL  https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/author/motti-verses/. 

And his hospitality analysis reviews on THE JERUSALEM POST, are available on his Linkedin page LinkedIn Israelhttps://il.linkedin.com › motti-verse…Motti Verses – Publisher and Chief Editor – TRAVEL FLASH TIPS

And his hospitality analysis reviews on THE JERUSALEM POST, are available on his Linkedin page LinkedIn Israelhttps://il.linkedin.com › motti-verse…Motti Verses – Publisher and Chief Editor – TRAVEL FLASH TIPS




*Feature Picture: Dressed for the Desert.  It may be hot but the writer looking cool with the magnificent Arava and Edom mountains as the backdrop.(Photo Motti Verses).





While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

Lay of the Land Weekly Newsletter- 21 September 2023

Unveiling the contours and contrasts of an ever-changing Middle East landscape Reliable reportage and insightful commentary on the Middle East by seasoned journalists from the region and beyond

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Articles

(1)

IT’S RISKY BEING ALIVE THESE DAYS

Lay of the Land reports on the 2023 World Summit on Counter-Terrorism (10-12 September) at Reichman University

By David E. Kaplan

Northern Exposure. Defense Minister Gallant points out a new runway built by Iran in Lebanon close to Israel’s border.

Could the Yom Kippur War of 50 years ago and 9/11 of 22 years ago have been predicted and hence prevented? The World Summit against Counter-Terrorism convenes annually on the anniversary of 9/11 at Israel’s Reichman University bringing together top practitioners and academicians in multifarious fields from across the globe. They engage with their Israeli counterparts to secure a safer tomorrow.

IT’S RISKY BEING ALIVE THESE DAYS

(Click on the blue title)



(2)

I SLEEP ILL AT NIGHT

Something is happening in Israel today that fills its citizens with trepidation

By Stephen Schulman

Bibi’s Buddies. Itzik Zarka whom the PM is proud to pose calls protesters “whores” and wishes them to “burn” like in the Holocaust.

The Israel of 2023 is not the country this writer envisaged when he immigrated in the late 1960s from South Africa, imbued with the idealism of his youth movement. The uptick in venomous verbiage and behavior of government members and their supporters is leaving “a bad smell in the air.”

I SLEEP ILL AT NIGHT

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WE ARE ALL SIGNATORIES TO THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

By Yaakov Hagoel, Chairman of the World Zionist Organization

Israel’s Rebirth. David Ben-Gurion publicly pronouncing the Declaration of the State of Israel, May 14, 1948, in the old Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Rothschild Street.

Israel’s ‘Declaration of Independence’ belongs to the people, and besides the 37 actual signatures on it, there are millions more transparent signatures of every citizen. For this writer,  “each of us” are no more or no less signatories “with his own special pen, values, stories and hopes.”

WE ARE ALL SIGNATORIES TO THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

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LOTL Cofounders David E. Kaplan (Editor), Rolene Marks and Yair Chelouche

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While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

The Israel Brief- 18-21 September 2023

The Israel Brief – 18 September 2023 PM clarifies controversial comments. Is Saudi freezing normalization talks? Ben Gurion statue set on fire. German Ambassador rebuked.



The Israel Brief – 19 September 2023 Netanyahu sits down with Musk. EU- Saudi Peace plan?Tunisia blames Israel for deadly storm. Air Haifa to launch soon.



The Israel Brief – 20 September 2023 Drama at the UNGA. Counter-terror operation in Jenin. Tank stolen. Police advise those who can, to carry firearms. 



The Israel Brief – 21 September 2023 Saudi normalization closer. Biden and Bibi meet. Emirati and Israeli FM’s meet. Yom Kippur. 






While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

IT’S RISKY BEING ALIVE THESE DAYS

Lay of the Land reports on the 2023 World Summit on Counter-Terrorism (10-12 September) at Reichman University

By David E. Kaplan

When Israel’s minister of defense, Yoav Gallant, said from the podium at the 2023 World Summit of Counter-Terrorism  held at Reichman University in Herzliya that “We have our eyes looking through binoculars and our finger on the trigger,” it set the tone. The countries represented at the Reichman summit all face severe threats to their national security. Some more than others. Israel, most of all!

The day Gallant chose to say this was portentous.  After all, the date marked the 22nd anniversary of 9/11 and the Summit  was holding a special ceremony for the victims of 9/11 and terrorism worldwide. It was also noted by the Summit moderator and Israeli war veteran Jonathan Davis that the following month would mark the fiftieth anniversary of the fateful Yom Kippur War, where Israel came the closest to being – in the wish off its enemies – “Wiped off the map.”

The message from both cataclysmic events  – 9/11 and the Yom Kippur War  –  was the element of “surprise” and it permeated the 2023 Summit throughout. Both the USA and Israel were caught unprepared and both countries paid a heavy price – physically and psychologically. It forced both countries to recalibrate their respective collective mindsets and has impacted their foreign policies ever since.

Speakers from both countries repeated that  the failures before the Yom Kippur War as with 9/11 could be summed up in one word –  IMAGINATION or the lack thereof. “We failed to think out of the box and expect the unimaginable,” said one speaker, while another relating, to all the US agencies and departments before 9/11, said. “We each had a piece to the puzzle but we failed to slot them together. Why? Because we were not talking to each other.” 

Reichman University’s Counter Terrorism Institute that hosts the World Summit is dedicated to rectifying this. With its lectures, simulations, workshops and networking, the summit is the most influential event in the field of counter-terrorism today. Hardly surprising, the Summit was called:

 “SECURING TOMORROWenhancing the Couter-Terrorism efforts in a changing world”

And towards “Securing Tomorrow”, we heard Israel’s Mossad Director, David Barnea, reveal that Israel’s intelligence services and their foreign partners had foiled in just over the past year- “27 Iranian-orchestrated terrorist plots.”

Riveting Revelations. Mossad director David Barnea reveals on September 10 at the World Summit on Counter-Terrorism at Reichman University that Israel’s intelligence services and their foreign partners have foiled 27 Iranian-orchestrated terrorist plots over the last year.

Showing a video that exposed the deep Iranian involvement in terrorism around the world, including the confessions of terrorists who were sent to attack Israelis and Jews by official Iranian intelligence and security organisations, the Mossad director said, “The Iranian regime is no longer able to deny its involvement.”

He exposed Tehran as having tasked some of the terrorists with targeting specific people and offering thousands of dollars for every Israeli attacked. “The squads that were captured, the weapons that were seized together with them, all had clear targets,” Barnea revealed, noting that the attempts were global “…. in Europe, Africa, the Far East and South America.”

Most importantly, Barnea warned, Iran needs to understand that it “has no immunity.”

The message from the Mossad head was loud and clear:

I would like to take advantage of this podium to state that any harm done to any Israeli or Jew in any way whatsoever, and I mean in any way whatsoever, via proxy or Iranian alike, will elicit a response against the Iranians who dispatched the terrorists and the policymakers who authorized the terror units. I mean what I say. The price will be exacted from deep inside Iran, in the heart of Tehran.”

These are serious words  from a serious man heading a serious organization. Iran – be warned!

From the words of Israel’s national intelligence agency  head to the minister of Israel’s defense, Iran was at the centre of the web.  No longer shying away from their nefarious activities, Iran today is brazen in its pursuit to blot out the Jewish state.

Defense Minister Yoav Gallant visually revealed how Iran is establishing an airport in in the Qalaat Jabbour mountain region in southern Lebanon, 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the Israeli border, which is being used “for terror purposes.”

Danger on Israel’s Doorstep. Defense Minister Yoav Gallant points out at Reichman University conference on September 11, 2023 a new runway built  by Iran in southern Lebanon close to Israel’s border. (Photo: Ariel Hermoni/ Defense Ministry)

Standing at the screen and pointing, Gallant continued:

In the pictures, you can see the Iranian flag flying over the runways, from which the ayatollah regime plans to operate against the citizens of Israel. In other words: the land is Lebanese, the control is Iranian, and the target is Israel.”

This is one lethal cocktail that Israel cannot allow to remain unanswered.

Enemies at the Gates. A close-up of the new Hezbollah runway in southern Lebanon presented at the World Sumit on Counter-Terrorism at Reichman University in Herzliya by Defense Minister Yoav Gallant who identifies an Iranian flag. (Defense Ministry)

Like Mossad head Barnea’s warning the day before, IDF  head Gallant was no less assertive in his warning:

If it comes to a conflict, we will not hesitate to activate the lethal force of the IDF. Hezbollah and Lebanon will pay heavy and painful prices.”

With talk of not being “surprised” there was one big glaring surprise – and it concerned the Prime Minister.  Structuring his career as the flag bearer in the fight against the threat of Iran, it was a surprise to many at the Summit –  particularly following Defense Minister Galant’s revelation with aerial photos of the airfield in Qalaat Jabbour in Lebanon which he said was for Iranian ‘terrorist purposes’ – that Netanyahu remains so invested in the ‘Judicial Overhaul’. Many are of the opinion that it is undermining Israel cohesion and deterrence. While Prof. Uriel Reichman, Founding President of Reichman University, in his opening remarks spoke on the damaging impact of Netanyahu judicial overhaul, warning of a potential “explosion”, it was mainly at the panel discussion on ‘Security and Counter-Terrorism Threats to Israel’ that this issue was seriously addressed. Sitting on this panel were Israel’s former, but remaining influential esteemed heavyweights in defense, security and intelligence, namely:

Col. (Res) Omer Bar Lev, Former Minister of Public Security and Former Commander of Sayeret Matkal; Maj. Gen. (Res) Aharon Farkash, Former head of Miliary Intelligence in  the IDF; Maj. Gen. (Res) Amos Gilead, Executive Director, Institute for  Policy & Strategy; Maj. Gen. (Res) Gershon Hacohen, Former Commander, Northern Corps, and Lt. Gen. (Res) Moshe “Boogie” Ya’alon, Former Defense Minister and Chief of Staff.

Talking Heads. Experienced input on a ‘countering terrorism threats to Israel’ panel debate (l-r) moderator Dr. Dana Wolf, Lt. Gen.(Res) Moshe “Boogie” Ya’alon, Col.(Res) Omer Bar Lev, Maj. Gen.(Res) Aharon Farkash, Maj. Gen. (Res) Amos Gilead,  Maj. Gen. (Res) Gershon Hacohen. (Photo: D.E. Kaplan)

All spoke persuasively on the major threats – Iran, Hezbollah, Hamas  until the last question, which the moderator referred to as “the elephant in the room,” and hence could not be avoided, the judicial overhaul that is undermining Israel’s security. All down this esteemed line, the panelists spoke against Netanyahu’s obsession with the judicial overhaul as being an obstacle to safeguarding Israel from real rather than imagined threats. Israel under its current leadership was unnecessary taking its eye off the ball much to its enemies glee.

Over three days, addressing theatres of conflict and potential conflicts, speakers from the military, intelligence agencies, police forces, academia, diplomacy and think tanks from all over the world, locked horns to work for a more secure future to avoid catastrophic surprises.

We heard from Britain’s Foreign Secretary, James Cleverly,  FBI director Christopher A. Wray, the UN’s Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Tor Wennesland and many theorists and practitioners who have as their goal – to “partner” with Israel to save lives from terrorism.

But for this writer, what sounded most eerily terrifying, particularly in keeping with the Summit’s caution of preparing for the “unimaginable” was the arise in this millennium of   “algorithms and terrorism”, which is the malicious use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) for terrorist purposes.

UK Support. While emphasizing at the World Summit on Counter-Terrorism that Great Britain “will always stand by Israel’s right to self-defense,” UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly stressed his country’s continued support for a two-state resolution as a resolution to the conflict. (photo credit: Avshalom Sassoni/Maariv )

Although terrorist organisations have to a certain degree, traditionally tended to employ various forms of “low-tech terrorism” such as firearms, blades and vehicles like in the streets of Israel or unsophisticated projectiles from Gaza,  terrorism itself is not static. The nature of this ugly beast is that it is ever-changing. It is an evil that morphs and re-shapes under new guises. The only constant is its  goal – the killing of innocent civilians, hence the subhead of the Summit was counter-terrorism for a “changing world” and therefore as AI becomes more widespread, the barriers to entry of potential terrorists will be lowered by less need for technical expertise to employ it. This is frightening as speaker after speaker on this issue in the session ‘GENERATIVE AI – Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism’ cautioned.

Therefore, the question confronting the civilized nations of the world is not a question of “if” but rather of “whenAI will become a major instrument in the terrorist’s toolbox. When that does occur, how will the international community respond?

Today, we see the ugly faces of terrorism. In a less transparent AI world of tomorrow, the terrorists may be faceless – We need to be prepared.



Time Out. The writer during the lunch break at the World Summit was happy to meet with members from the South African Embassy (l-r) Colin Winkler former chief accountant at the SA Embassy, David Kaplan, Phadime Choshane and Derek Arnolds.  





While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

I SLEEP ILL AT NIGHT

Something is happening in Israel today that fills its citizens with trepidation

By Stephen Schulman

I sleep ill at night, my slumber is restless and I do not breathe easy. I sleep ill because I am worried. I worry about my beloved country. I worry about our children and our grandchildren. I worry for their future here and how this country will be, for what I see at the present leaves me deeply unsettled.

Over half a century ago, I left South Africa the land of my birth and came to live in Israel. Like many of my friends and fellow graduates of a Zionist youth movement, who came too, I was imbued with an idealism to help contribute to a Jewish state that was both liberal and democratic. After completing our studies, we left our families and came alone. We were not cockeyed optimists. We were perfectly aware that Israel was a young state born in especially difficult circumstances, coping with many problems. There was much to be done, but we wished to do our part. With the passing of time, we worked in our professions, did our army service, married and raised families. We are part of the country and feel pride in its achievements. However, something has changed, bad things have been happening and I am filled with trepidation.

Proud to Picture. The same man Itzik Zarka (left) –  whom prime minister Netanyahu is proud to pose with for a selfie during a Likud Party faction meeting at the Knesset in 2018 is in 2023 calling anti-judicial overhaul protesters “whores” and saying that he wishes “another six million would burn,” a reference to the Holocaust. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)

”Ashkenazim may you burn in hell.”  “Not for nothing did six million die. I’m proud.  If only six million more would burn.”  Words that would make Goebbels, Streicher and all their despicable followers, knowing that their vicious antisemitism was alive and flourishing, beam with happiness and satisfaction. If anyone in his/her naiveté thinks that these foul utterances issued from the mouth of a most extreme neo-Nazi, they err gravely.  They were said by forty-nine-year-old Yitzhak Zarka, a Jew from Ma’ale Efrayim, a settlement in the State of Israel, who was relating to the anti-judicial overhaul protestors.

Zarka, in spewing his vicious and venomous hatred desecrates the memory of the six million martyrs, man, woman and child who were murdered in the Holocaust. It also deeply insults and defiles all the Holocaust survivors both from Europe and the Arab countries that fell under the yoke of Nazism. It insults the memory of my late father-in-law Meir who lost his entire family and my late mother-in- law Tsilla who while surviving the war, lost her father and a brother. It insults the memory of my dear friends: Yehuda whose family was persecuted in Libya and Uri who hailed from Iraq.

This individual’s sick jubilation over the Holocaust and his fervent desire for another one to occur to all the Jews of Ashkenzi (European) descent living in Israel and in the Diaspora does not suffice. In a feverish mind stoked and warped by a consuming and blind hatred, all logic and decency has long been defenestrated. In a twisted, perverted line of thought defying all comprehension, he curses them, for in his eyes, not only were the six million who perished deserving victims but they and all their descendants are of the same ilk as their murderers.

Never Again! Israel comes to a standstill on Yom HaShoah remembering the mass murder of six million Jews in the Holocaust while in 2023, a “proud” Likud activist Itzik Zarka, desecrates their memory by referencing the anti-judicial overhaul protestors as “Ashkenazim” whom he hopes “If only six million more would burn.” 

In any enlightened country, and as is happening in Europe, such pronouncements are considered a clear contravention of the law and would arouse public opprobrium. It goes without saying that the speaker or writer of them would be speedily hauled into court and prosecuted.

The Holocaust and the persecution and expulsion of Jews from the Arab countries is seared in Israel’s conscience. Zarka’s vituperative statement is clearly a criminal offense and it would be expected that the arm of the law swiftly reach out for him. It would be expected that he be publicly condemned by members of the government for his harmful statements.

Shockingly and shamefully, not so in present day Israel!

We have yet to hear of his prosecution, and silence reigns supreme. It is a silence both disgraceful and ominous and the reason is quite simple. Zarka is not just (like most of us) another common garden variety citizen. Zarka is a member of the Likud Party. Zarka is not a simple party member either. Zarka is a  faithful, veteran Likud activist who is highly esteemed by fellow members and greatly valued for his efficacy in garnering votes mainly among his fellow Sephardic (Jews who have come mainly from the Arab countries) citizens . Zarka is even more highly esteemed by quite a few Likud ministers in the present government for giving them his vital support in obtaining them a high placing in party elections. There is a well known adage: “Never bite the hand that feeds you votes!” Therefore this influential gentleman must be assiduously cultivated, his affection and loyalty secured and scrupulous care taken not antagonize him and earn his enmity. So, when he has a celebration like a birthday party, there is always an impressive bevy of fawning Likud party notables, including the Speaker of the Knesset and assorted ministers, bearing gifts, bowing and scraping, waiting patiently in the long line to congratulate, flatter, embrace and be photographed with the man of the moment.  Not for nothing is there a picture of him hugging and bussing our prime minister.

Darker side of Zarka. Itzik Zarka (centre) at a rally in support of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is today supporting the moral decline of the Jewish state by his ugly dangerous rhetoric.(Photo Tomer Neuberg/Flash90)

Bibi Netanyahu in his usual spin declared that the miscreant would be expelled from the party – which Zarka’s wife promptly denied and said would never happen. And, as to be expected, on the morn, he mumbled some lame excuse and claimed his grandfather was a Holocaust survivor. What difference does that make?

I sleep ill for there is a bad smell in the air. It is the stench of moral and ethical putrefaction. It is the stench caused by politicians, choosing to turn a blind eye and prefer self interest over moral obligation to their citizens. It is amoral Realpolitik at its ugliest. Not one Likud member of the Knesset, not one single minister from the same party, to their everlasting shame, has opened his/her mouth. It is not only the silence of assent. It is the silence that condones an egregious act that deeply offends so many citizens and harms the country’s social cohesion. It is the official stamp of silence that makes such behaviour the norm.

To add insult to injury, there are many of the party faithful who see no wrong, view it as a trifling incident and justify such behaviour. “I do not remember any other party that expelled any of its members for excessive anger,” was one mealy mouthed pronouncement.

Is this the ‘Face’ of Israel 2023? A prime minister (right) that is allowing the hard-fought Jewish state to unravel and Itzik Zarka, a spewer of hatred against fellow Jews, who is a veteran and highly respected Likud activist. (photo: Mark Israel Sellem)

Growing up in South Africa, antisemitism was par for the course and I experienced it in various ways. Nevertheless, never in my darkest dreams did I think that I would have to live in Israel in July 2023 to encounter it in its vilest and most toxic form and see its purveyor speak with impunity. Never in my darkest dreams, did I think that I would see such abominable behaviour accepted with equanimity by members of his party. Never did I imagine that not one minister in the coalition government (and our small country is gifted with 31 of them!), to their everlasting shame, would open his/her mouth in condemnation and disassociate him/her self from the speaker.

South Africa has Julius Malema, notorious for his abhorrent racism. It appears that we might have his doppelganger living here. How many of his repulsive clones walk around in our country?

Tragically, this sick behaviour is not an aberration. It is symptomatic of this culture of public and political discourse that is now eroding the very foundations of our society and has become a norm. Civility, politeness, mutual respect and common decency have long gone the way of the dinosaurs with rudeness, vulgarity, intolerance, insults and disrespect superseding them. Verbal violence: bullying, threats and intimidation is becoming commonplace.

South African ‘export’ that Israel can do without. Is this South African politician, Julius Malema, notorious for his abhorrent racism who some Israelis would be proud to emulate?

Is this an exaggeration? Look no further than the floor of the Knesset and the behaviour of certain ministers. A few days ago, our Minister of Transport’s car was stopped at gates of an army base by a security guard. As she felt that her entrance was unnecessarily delayed and her pride hurt, in her arrogance and rage she ordered her driver to proceed regardless. Ignoring his pleas that he would run over personnel, she repeatedly shouted at him:

Drive, drive, drive!”

With such an example it is no wonder that violence is no longer limited to being verbal and has become part and parcel of daily life.

My sleep is troubled. This is not the country I envisaged and I worry for the quality of its future. It took many generations to build but is being rapidly destroyed. What shall it be like for our grandchildren?



About the writer:

Stephen Schulman is a graduate of the South African Jewish socialist youth movement Habonim, who immigrated to Israel in 1969 and retired in 2012 after over 40 years of English teaching. He was for many years a senior examiner for the English matriculation and co-authored two English textbooks for the upper grades in high school. Now happily retired, he spends his time between his family, his hobbies and reading to try to catch up on his ignorance.






While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

WE ARE ALL SIGNATORIES TO THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

By Yaakov Hagoel, Chairman of the World Zionist Organization

When talking about the Declaration of Independence, one usually focuses on its resounding opening sentences:

 “The Land of Israel was the birthplace of the Jewish people. Here their spiritual, religious and political identity was shaped. Here they first attained to statehood, created cultural values of national and universal significance and gave to the world the eternal Book of Books“, or in one of the following paragraphs, which talk about the natural and historical right to the land, the call for peace with all the inhabitants of the land and the partnership in the fight against Nazi evil.

All this is good and important. The Declaration of Independence is truly a work of thought of precise wording, every word of which was examined and weighed by the heads of the Jewish population on the eve of the establishment of the State. But no less is the last part of the scroll, dedicated to signatories.

David Ben-Gurion at the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1948 (Photo: GPO)

Thirty-seven people were privileged to sign the founding document of the State, headed by David Ben-Gurion of course, and among them also Golda Meir, Moshe Sharret, Rabbi Yehuda Leib HaCohen Fishman Maimon and many others. Every time I look at the signature section, I come across David Remez‘s signature.

Why specifically  Remez’s signature? Because it is the most prominent of them all. Most of the signatories used a pen brought especially for the event by the People’s Administration that intended  uniformity for the signatures. Remez brought his own pen with him, a special and thick pen, and to this day  his signature stands out as the most prominent name among the signatories.

For me, the story of David Ramez’s signature – he has many accomplishments to his credit since the early days of the Yishuv, as a Knesset member and cabinet minister – is not just a historical anecdote. There is an important message, especially during  these days. Recently the Declaration of Independence has become a symbol of the national controversy that is burning within us. Some say it is all mine, and others say it is all mine. There are those who maintain  that the values that they support  are the correct balance between the different levels of government and the other side  which says that these values are actually the opposite.

But the truth is neither here nor there. The Declaration of Independence belongs to the entire Israeli public, and besides the thirty-seven actual signatures on it, there are millions more transparent signatures of every citizen. Everyone signed the scroll – each of us with his own special pen, values, stories and hopes. Over the years we learned to unite around the scroll, to add more and more signatures at the bottom, and today the Declaration of Independence is the place where all these signatures are gathered, and on the basis of which the Israeli partnership grows.

The Declaration of Independence must not be read as if it supports only one side of the political map. Such an appropriation will erase from it many signatures of Israelis, partners on the way. What we must do is the opposite: take out each and every one of us his special pen, re-sign the scroll, find our unique place within this founding text – and then take all these pens and continue to write, together, the great Israeli story.







While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

Lay of the Land Weekly Newsletter- 14 September 2023

Unveiling the contours and contrasts of an ever-changing Middle East landscape Reliable reportage and insightful commentary on the Middle East by seasoned journalists from the region and beyond

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The Israel Brief

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SHANA TOVA – HAPPY NEW YEAR

Israel is a miraculous country globally admired for finding solutions against military threats to making breathtaking breakthroughsin medicine, science, and technology. We are not the “Start-Up Nation” by accident – We earned it!We owe it to ourselves to match these achievements in our political arena.May the sound of the shofar herald with the New Year also new beginnings –New understandings and New efforts to outreach and find solutionsleading to peace between peopleLay of the Land wishes you all a happy and healthy New Year.



Articles

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ELITISM AND THE JUDICIARY

Disentangling the toxic from merit-based judicial elitism

By Lawrence Nowosenetz

Battle of the Buildings. High Court and Knesset face off in a showdown with democracy hanging in the balance.

With insights and experience of being a former Acting Judge of the Hight Court in South Africa, the writer now living in Israel, weighs in on the judicial issues rocking this nation and beyond.

ELITISM AND THE JUDICIARY

(Click on the blue title)



(2)

TAKE A WEIGHT OFF YOUR MIND

What if your weight is not the real issue?

By  Justine Friedman

Weighing up the Issues. Maybe step off and step up to new approaches for an improved wellbeing.

Making “Losing Weight” the focus of your thoughts and efforts may cause you to “try crazy eating plans that are unsustainable.” Your most important steps are not on the scale advises the writer – a clinical dietician – but finding solutions best suited to you.

TAKE A WEIGHT OFF YOUR MIND

(Click on the blue title)



(3)

LAW REFORM 101

Israel should avoid replicating South Africa’s National Party shenanigans

By Peter Bailey

Gambling with the Gavel. Hanging in the balance is more than the judiciary but the country’s democracy.

While there might be little global precedent on the Reasonableness Law, there is certainly precedent material with regard to a democratically elected government trying to usurp the authority of a High or Supreme Court and the end result. The writer looks at the South African experience as a guide for Israel to avoid.

LAW REFORM 101

(Click on the blue title)



(4)

HIGH ANXIETY

UNTIL 120 – A REALITY CHECK

A poem by Solly Kaplinski

Commuting to Contemplating. While the body travels in one direction, the mind wonders and worries in another.

Even something as mundane as riding on a bus, becomes in Jerusalem an existential experience. Is it paranoia or reality? The writer, a resident and commuter in Jerusalem, shares his observations, anxieties and intimate insights through a poem.

HIGH ANXIETY

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While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).