Showing posts with label Aviel Schneider. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aviel Schneider. Show all posts

Friday, November 18, 2016

Israel Braces for Another Dry Winter - Aviel Schneider ISRAEL TODAY

Israel Braces for Another Dry Winter

Friday, November 18, 2016 |  Aviel Schneider  ISRAEL TODAY
The climate models for the upcoming winter in Israel are not encouraging. For eight years Israel has been going through dry winters. In the last few weeks this topic has often been discussed in the media. Most fear a dry winter, with or without the models.
Even though Israel’s desalination plants are increasingly responsible for national water supplies, they are not an alternative to the necessary rainfall. The water level of the country’s main reservoirs are falling every year.
Israel’s Meteorological Service reported this week that there is a 35 percent chance of a rainy winter, a 37 percent change of an average winter, and a 27 percent chance of a dry winter. It would seem difficult to accurately predict what kind of winter we will have from these numbers.
“The models in our region have never been accurate compared to tropical areas,” explained Dr. Yoav Levi, who heads the Research Department of the Meteorological Service. “In the past five years, we have only twice accurately projected the winter months.”
For Dr. Baruch Ziv, a climate researcher at the Open University in Tel Aviv, the real start of winter is still to come. “A few weeks will pass before the first fierce rain will arrive in Israel,” Ziv told the Israeli daily Yediot Ahronot. “This is a problem for us. A November without precipitation is an expensive problem for our farmers, as they have to irrigate their dry fields with the irrigation system.”
Dr. Ziv also pointed out that precipitation in Central Europe has intensified considerably in recent years. But Israel is always left out. In 2010, Israel was surprised when a dry November was followed by a massive snowstorm in December.
“The climate is shifting, and this makes it very difficult to offer reliable weather forecasts,” said Dr. Ziv. Nevertheless, local farmers and religious Jews continue to pray that the land will be abundantly blessed this winter, despite the forecasts.
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Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Leonard Cohen: On the Frontline With His Israeli Siblings - Aviel Schneider ISRAEL TODAY

Leonard Cohen: On the Frontline With His Israeli Siblings

Wednesday, November 16, 2016 |  Aviel Schneider  ISRAEL TODAY
The passing of Leonard Cohen was the source of great mourning in Israel. The Canadian Jewish legend had always seen himself as a brother to all Israelis.
During his nearly 60-year music career, Cohen often visited Israel and even worked on a kibbutz for a time in the 1970s.
But his most notable visit came during the Yom Kippur War in 1973, when he put a European tour on hold and rushed to the Sinai to be with Israel’s frontline troops. His impromptu first performance in the desert dust standing amid tanks and other military equipment was a huge source of comfort to Israel.
Cohen himself was so overwhelmed by the experience that he retreated to a rock at the corner of the encampment and penned the popular song “Lover Lover Lover.” In the final verses of the song, Cohen offered encouragement to Israel’s soldiers:
And may the spirit of this song May it rise up pure and free May it be a shield for you A shield against the enemy
For a full eight weeks, Cohen traveled with famed Israeli musician Matti Caspi, visiting the widely dispersed Israel Army camps across the Sinai and uplifting the exhausted soldiers fighting for the survival of the Jewish state.
Cohen at the time was already a world-famous musician and performer, having previously given two concerts in Israel. Caspi later recalled how he, Cohen and two other popular Israeli singers - Oshik Levi and Pupik Arnon - drove from base to base in an old Ford Falcon. The quartet called themselves the “Geneva Conference” after the international forum that was attempting to bring an end to the bloody conflict.
His traveling companions noted that despite his international star status, Cohen refused a special tent or room, preferring instead to sleep on the ground amongst the soldiers.
Many of the soldiers who met Cohen during his desert tour told of the great love he had for the people of Israel. When he returned to perform in Tel Aviv seven years later, Cohen told the audience about how the courage of those soldiers had inspired him.
Shortly after the Yom Kippur War and his time in the Sinai, Cohen published one of his best albums, New Skin for the Old Ceremony. The lyrics of several of the hit songs were clearly influence by the war and his experiences with the Israeli troops.
In the upcoming December issue of Israel Today Magazine, I write more about Leonard Cohen, who was an inspiration to so many Israelis, myself included.
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Wednesday, November 9, 2016

God Bless America and Israel - Aviel Schneider


God Bless America and Israel

Wednesday, November 09, 2016 |  Aviel Schneider
Republican Donald Trump has won the election and will be America’s 45th president. In Israel, as in the other countries, the political drama in the US was followed closely. From the Israeli perspective, many believed the 70-year-old Trump was better for their nation’s interests than Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.
In the eyes of most Israelis, Clinton is a female version of current US President Barack Obama. She represents nothing new in terms of US policy, and most especially in terms of foreign policy in the Middle East. And according to the Israeli and Arab media, naive US policy in this region bears much of the blame for the current turmoil.
Israeli government ministers, who were forbidden by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to comment publicly on the election, quietly feared that Clinton would only exacerbate the Middle East’s problems, to Israel’s detriment. At the same time, Trump is a big questions mark, and there is some risk in his taking the helm.
But it was precisely for this reason that many of my colleagues in the Israeli media, local politicians and experts felt that it was better to venture a gamble with Trump and hope for a new foreign policy for the Middle East.
Yesterday’s spectacle in America was very reminiscent of our last national election in Israel. The media predicted Netanyahu would lose, and drove that message home at every opportunity, only to see the incumbent prime minister soar to an easy victory. In both cases, the mainstream media was either badly misinformed or was deliberately trying to influence the election results.
Either way, all we can say today is “God bless America and Israel!”
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Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Muslim Inscription Acknowledges Jewish Temple - Aviel Schneider ISRAEL TODAY

Muslim Inscription Acknowledges Jewish Temple

Tuesday, November 01, 2016 |  Aviel Schneider  ISRAEL TODAY
An inscription from the early Islamic period has been added to the pile of evidence attesting to a long Jewish connection to Jerusalem’s Temple Mount, contrary to recent decisions taken by the United Nations.
The inscription, which was found during the excavation of a mosque in the Palestinian village of Nuba near Hebron, refers to what is now called the Dome of the Rock as “Bait al-Maqdess,” the Arabic version of “Beit Hamikdah,” which is Hebrew for the Temple.
According to Israeli archaeologists Asaf Avraham and Peretz Reuven, the unique inscription dates to the 10th century, and further confirms that for centuries after the Islamic conquest, Muslims continued to link Jerusalem’s Temple Mount to the Jewish Temple of the Bible. Numerous Islamic sources from the time attest to this.
Avraham and Reuven noted in a press conference last Thursday that early Islam drew much from Judaism, leading to the building of the Dome of the Rock where the Temple previously stood.
“At the start of the Muslim period, religious rites were held inside the Dome of the Rock compound that imitated the ceremonies conducted in the Jewish Temple,” Avraham explained.
In more recent years, Arab Muslim leaders in Israel and abroad have vociferously denied any historical connection between the Jews and the Temple Mount, even in the face of their own religion’s documentation.
It has been frustrating for Israel to see the “Christian” West join in this fiasco, but despite attempts to rewrite history, the truth will always be revealed.
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Friday, October 7, 2016

Uproar Over Jerusalem Cable Car Plans - Aviel Schneider ISRAEL TODAY


Uproar Over Jerusalem Cable Car Plans

Friday, October 07, 2016 |  Aviel Schneider  ISRAEL TODAY
Plans to build a new cable car over Jerusalem's Old City are causing an uproar, particularly from paranoid Muslim leaders.
The full article appears in the October 2016 issue of Israel Today Magazine.
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Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Foreigners in Israel vs. Jews in Europe - Aviel Schneider ISRAEL TODAY

Foreigners in Israel vs. Jews in Europe

Tuesday, September 27, 2016 |  Aviel Schneider

While foreigners feel safe in Israel, fear is rising among Jews in Europe. Why? Israel is different from the so-called “Christian West” in that it keeps Jewish laws, most of which stem from the Bible.
The full article appears in the October 2016 issue of Israel Today Magazine.
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Thursday, March 10, 2016

Survey: Muslims are Ignorant About the Al-Aqsa Mosque - Aviel Schneider ISRAEL TODAY

Survey: Muslims are Ignorant About the Al-Aqsa Mosque

Wednesday, March 09, 2016 |  Aviel Schneider  ISRAEL TODAY
A growing number of Muslim scholars admit they have no real religious connection to the Temple Mount.
The full article appears in the March 2016 issue of Israel Today Magazine.
CLICK HERE to read it all
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