All posts by IZC

Google Buys WAZE (Israel GPS program) for $1 Billion

Google announced on Tuesday that it had closed its deal to buy Waze, a GPS navigational app developed by Israeli start-up Waze Mobile that features real-time traffic data provided by users to help drivers find the fastest route to a destination. The deal is values at about $1.1 billion.

Waze has nearly 50 Million users around the world.

Google said Waze would remain separate from its own Maps service. Some of Waze’s real-time traffic data will feed into Google Maps, however, and Google plans to incorporate its powerful search capabilities into Waze.

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Waze achieved all the demands it presented to Google in the negotiations: Waze’s activity will remain in Israel, Google cannot fire a single employee out of Waze’s 107 workers, and the entire acquisition sum – about $1 billion – will go into the pockets of the investors, founders and employees in cash, without stocks whose value would change unexpectedly, while they manage their business and employees with the use of software like paystub online.

Google will complete the acquisition within about a month in a bid to integrate Waze into the Android 5.0 operating system, expected to be launched this year.

To download the app click here.

What the video of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu congratulate the CEO and founders of WAZE one their successful sale to google (in Hebrew).

 

(Taken from NYTimes and YnetNews)

Yom Ha’atzmaut 2013

Here is a collection of videos to celebrate Israel’s 65th birthday!

65 Things We Love About Israel in 65 Seconds:

http://youtu.be/Y6U5GC_OtR4

Created in Israel – Part of your life:

PM Netanyahu’s Greeting for Yom Ha’atzmaut

 

Thanks for watching, and chat sameah!

Israel 65th Independence Day Celebration at Marquee

ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAY 65th CELEBRATION WITH DOR CHADASH at MARQUEE NYC on Monday, April 15, 2013 @ 8PM with SPECIAL GUEST MAYOR MIKE BLOOMBERG

New York, NY ‐‐‐ (Monday, April 15, 2013) This year, the annual Dor Chadash Israeli Independence Day Celebration event promises to be the largest 65th birthday party for Israel outside of Israel. Over 1000+ young professionals are expected at the newly renovated and recently opened Marquee nightclub. The party is being sponsored by many Jewish and Israeli organizations, as well as other companies and individuals, from around the city and the world, that all support Israel. Together there is a consensus of how important Dor Chadash and the Yom Ha’atmaut Celebration are to keeping New York City’s younger generation engaged with and committed to Israel. Special guests include Mayor Mike Bloomberg and Consul General of Israel, in New York, Ido Aharoni, who will both address the crowd.

Sponsors include: UJA‐Federation of New York, Jewish Communal Relations Council (JCRC), Jspace, EL AL Airlines, Yedhiot Aharonot (Israeli newspaper), American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israeli House, The Jewish Agency, Ariel Property Advisors, Friends of the Israeli Defense Forces (FIDF), American Friends of Bezalel, Nefesh B’Nefesh, Jdate, Strength to Strength, Strength to Strength Young Executives, the Israeli Bobsled and Skeleton Federation, Osem, Jewish National Fund (JNF) and Plus972 Design and Marketing Solutions.
Dor Chadash will host the invite‐only, VIP Pre‐Reception before the main event, on Monday, April 15th, from 645pm‐8pm. Guests will include representatives from the Sponsor Organizations, Israeli and local Government Representatives, VIP celebrities and members of the Press.

MAIN EVENT DETAILS:
VENUE: MARQUEE (289 10th Avenue (between 26th & 27th St) NYC 10001)
6:45 PM ‐ DOORS OPEN / STEP & REPEAT / VIP RECEPTION
8:00 PM ‐ YOM HAATMAUT CELEBRATION PARTY with SPECIAL GUESTS
EVENT PAGE: www.jspace.com/independenceday
FACEBOOK: www.facebook.com/events/549247295093490
PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE: www.dorchadashusa.org

DOR CHADASH (Hebrew for “New Generation”) is a movement aimed at bringing Israeli cultural, educational, and social events to the New York City community and to people everywhere who share a mutual passion for Israel.
Every year, Dor Chadash is proud to present the YOM HAATZMAUT CELEBRATION of ISRAEL’S BIRTHDAY together with 100+ organizations and companies representing the many faces of those supporting Israel and contributing to Israel’s strong and positive presence in New York City’s many industries and communities.

For more information, please contact:
Jonathan Frenkel, Executive Director, DOR CHADASH
(908) 616‐9776 / jonathan@dorchadashusa.org

20 Photos That Change The Holocaust Narrative

This past  Monday, April 8th was Yom Hashoah, a day when  Israel commemorates the Holocaust. Here are some pictures in honor of this day.

Victims. Helpless. Downtrodden.

That’s the narrative that’s been spread about Jews for the last 70 years since the Holocaust. We’ve embraced it to our detriment. We can’t seem to address antisemitism without running to the world and screaming that we’re being persecuted, rather than standing up strongly in defiance, aware of our own inner strength.

The Holocaust has scarred us, a yetzer hara (sneaky bastard of a voice in our heads), that keeps trying to tell us how we are defined by our past, controlled by events that happened to us, instead of using those moments as points of growth.

And, in a weird way, that’s why all those images of us looking so helpless, so gaunt, in heaps of nameless bodies, have become a morbid fascination for us. We, and by extension the rest of the world, have chosen to define the Holocaust with these images.

But there are other images. Images that show a more subtle, more true, story. A story that shows our inner power, our inner turmoil in dealing with a situation we cannot comprehend, our attempts to gain justice, and our final steps into moving above and beyond our past and into a new future.

These are the images you will see below. Some of them may be disturbing to you. Some of them may inspire you.

But in the end, they do one thing that we desperately need as a people: they tell the real story of the Holocaust. A story that goes beyond victimhood and into our present-day lives. And today, on Yom HaShoa, 2013, it’s about time that story got told.

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For some reason, we don’t usually hear about American Jewry during World War II, so you may be heartened to know that in 1933, American Jews organized a nation-wide boycott of Nazi-Germany. Such a show of support, in so united a way is displayed beautifully in this picture from a rally in 1937.

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This incredible photo has made the rounds recently as well. It depicts Jews in hiding during Passover in Poland, baking matzos, their faces alight and happy. As we’re leaving Passover now, may we be strengthened by their resolve. Image originally found in the Yad Vashem Archives.

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This incredible image depicts Jews, not in hiding, but within an transit camp in Holland lighting a Menorah on Hanukkah. If you look carefully, you can see just how packed this room is.

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This image is of a man in the Jewish Brigade, a segment of the British Army that fought the Germans in Italy in 1944. The rocket says “Hitler’s Gift”.

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Taken in Buchenwald just after its liberation by the incredible photographer Margaret Bourke-White, this image is so powerful not just because it shows the pure joy of liberation, but because it turns these men who we have almost turned into mythic creatures into normal folks. The kind that celebrate with champaign and cigarettes. I hope they’re still celebrating, wherever they are.

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This photo has made the rounds after the recent passing of Rabbi Herschel Schachter, depicted leading this Shabbat service shortly after the liberation of Buchenwald. There is something beyond moving about this image that shows the prisoners, still in their garb, still in their prison, but liberated and celebrating the most important day of the week. Read more about this incredible rabbi in this obituary in the New York Times.

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This once in a lifetime image depicts Holocaust survivors at the moment of realizing they are liberated. This is such candid, raw photo you would think it was taken on a cellphone at the spur of the moment. Read more about the story behind this photo here.

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Seriously, how is this image not beyond famous by now? Depicting a woman at the moment of her liberation, so skinny you can hardly see her, her face is aglow and alive. As if she was never imprisoned.

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This is actually a cleaned up version of a photo posted by u/FTZ on Reddit. It depicts his grandfather, recently liberated from the Holocaust, aiming a gun at a Nazi soldier. It’s hard to know just what is happening in this photo or what happened afterwards, but it starkly depicts another side of the liberation of the Jews. Whether this photo inspires or depresses, it shows us just how complicated the idea of justice can be, and how Jews have still struggled with it so many years after the Holocaust.

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This image, taken by the incredible photographer and writer, Ruth Gruber, depicts a group of Holocaust survivors attempting to enter the United States on a ship called the Henry Gibbins that was being hunted by the Nazis. These were the only refugees to be sheltered by the United States throughout the war. Some notable passengers went on to do great things, such as, “Dr. Alex Margulies, who became a distinguished radiologist and contributed to Cat scan and MRI technology; Rolf Manfred, instrumental in developing the Minuteman missile and Polaris submarine; Leon Levitch who became a composer; and Dr. David Hendell who became a dentist and pioneered the bonding of teeth.” Read more about Ruth Gruber and the ship here.

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Taken in Rishon Lezion, Israel, this image depicts two Holocaust survivors at their wedding. The bride (center), is named Chana Keller, and she survived a 800 km (500 mile) death march. I can’t even image the happiness being depicted in this picture.

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This image of an unknown teenager singing in a DP Camp (where they held Holocaust survivors for a while) is just so beautiful. There’s something incredible at seeing an image of so many survivors in one picture, smiling, and with this girl in the center looking absolutely joyous.

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Aleksander Kulisiewicz, a Holocaust survivor, composed 54 songs while he was in a concentration camp, and performed them for fellow inmates in secret gatherings. He later went on to perform these songs in the 60′s.Read more about his incredible journey here.

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A group of skinheads demonstrated in the streets of Växjö, Sweden in 1985. This woman, a Holocaust survivor, was one of the first to rush in and attack these men. Moments later, thousands of angry citizens swarmed the men and chased them until they finally locked themselves in a bathroom in a train station and had to be rescued by police.

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This image was shared on Reddit by u/BobtheGuy with the title, “It’s Holocaust Remembrance Day. So here’s my adorable Holocaust surviving grandparents“. Here’s an incredible description of their journey in his own words: “They actually found a Rabbi to marry them in the camp when they learned they were getting separated. The next day they were split up to different camps and didn’t know if the other was alive for the remainder of the war. They found each other in 1945 and the rest is history.”

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This image, showing a Holocaust survivor looking into the eyes of her granddaughter, went a bit viral on Facebook, and you can read the story about how it got digitized here. This is exactly why we need to digitize more and more of these incredible images.

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Perhaps one of the most gorgeous photos ever taken at Yad Vashem, the Holocaust museum in Jerusalem. This image shows a young religious Jew looking up into the Hall of Names, an exhibit in the museum.

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The moment I saw this image of this Holocaust survivor who went skydiving in San Diego with his grandson (not pictured), I knew this was the image I had to end this post on. Nothing better depicts the unlimited future for Holocaust survivors and their descendants. Nothing better encapsualtes the true freedom we can have when we use our past to grow instead of hold us back. Nothing is more beautiful than a man once in bondage in a world of total freedom. May we all realize how we’re also flying through the sky.

 

Good Deeds Day in Israel: Flash-waltz

Forty students from the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance took a slightly different approach to flashmobs, in their spontaneous “flashwaltz” performance at the Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem on Tuesday.

While flashmobs usually consist of spontaneous pre-choreographed dance performances, this mob had a slightly more classical approach to a quite contemporary movement. The student musicians performed Tchaikovsky’s Waltz of the Flowers in the lobby of the new Sarah Wetsman Davidson Hospital Tower.

As more and more student musicians join the musical extravanganza, doctors, patients and passers-by are also invited to contribute to the performance by waltzing to the music. By the end of the video, the Hadassah Hospital lobby is filled with dozens of wood and brass instruments, and dancing hospital patrons.

The ‘mob’ was organized in honor of Good Deeds Day, an annual event that now takes place in over 50 countries worldwide, but originated in Israel. The event is dedicated to reaching out to “those less fortunate and the vulnerable,” said the description on the YouTube video posted by the Hadassah Hospital.

In light of their success, the students have decided to schedule regular concerts at the hospital.

(Taken from: Jpost.com)

Ed Koch and Israel

Shalom!  

We are all saddened to learn of the passing of former New York Mayor Ed Koch. We join our fellow New Yorkers in honoring his memory with a special edition of Israel Line.

  Mr. Mayor, this one’s for you. 

Israel Saddened by Passing of Ed Koch


Earlier today, February 1st, 2013, the Consulate General of Israel in New York released the following statement:

“This morning we lost a great friend, one who stood not only by the Jewish people and the State of Israel, but also by humanity.  The Consulate General of Israel in New York was deeply saddened to learn of the passing of our dear friend, Ed Koch. History will remember Ed Koch as one of its greatest leaders, who epitomized everything that we love about the world’s greatest city. He was always outspoken, true to his word and a staunch defender of human rights. The ties between New York and Israel, between the United States and Israel, are as strong as they are today because of towering figures such as Ed Koch.”

Take a Stroll Down Ed Koch Street in Tel Aviv! 

During a trip to Israel in 1990, Tel Aviv honored the New York City mayor by naming a street after him. Click the image below for  a Google Street View! 

  

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Ed Koch thought about his final resting place, famously worrying that his body might end up somewhere besides Manhattan.  He also weighed with great care the inscription on his headstone, which was placed at Manhattan’s Trinity Church Cemetery in 2009.The grave marker is inscribed with words spoken by Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl before he was killed by militants in Pakistan:

“My father is Jewish, my mother is Jewish, I am Jewish.”

 The former three-term mayor of New York, who died Friday, explained the selection in a 2012 interview with the Journal. “Well, that’s me, too,” he said of Mr. Pearl’s last words.

“I think that statement is as important as the most holy of all statements in Jewish ritual,” Koch said. “I think that every Saturday, we ought to say, ‘My father’s a Jew, my mother was a Jew, and I’m a Jew,’ with great pride.

(Taken from the Consulate General of Israel in New York’s newsletter)

Candidates court Jews in LA mayoral race

Los Angeles’s proportionally small Jewish population may hold the key to election victory.

JEWISH L.A. The Fairfax district

JEWISH L.A. The Fairfax district Photo: Arthur Wolak
Several leading candidates running for mayor of Los Angeles have been busy courting the Jewish vote and stressing their own Judaic ties in a race in which the city’s proportionally small Jewish population may hold the key to victory.

Los Angeles’s primary election is scheduled for March 5 and in an election expected to receive a low number of votes, the high turnout among Jewish voters could prove critical for candidates.

Three of the leading candidates for mayor recently stressed their connections to Judaism at a debate at the Beth Jacob Orthodox synagogue in Beverly Hills.

Councilmen Eric Garcetti, councilwoman Jan Perry and city controller Wendy Gruel all stressed their close ties to the Jewish community at the event.

Garcetti, a Democrat, is the son of a Mexican-American father and a Jewish mother of Russian ancestry, Perry is an African American who converted to Judaism in the 1980s, and while Gruel is not Jewish, her husband is and their son is being raised in the faith. Also running are two non-Jews: Emanuel Pleitez and Republican Kevin James.

During the Beth Jacob debate, 89.3 KPCC Southern California Public Radio reported that Garcetti told attendees that his “family came here as dreamers and as doers… fleeing wars – on my father’s side, the Mexican Revolution; on my mother’s side from pogroms under the czars.” According to The Los Angeles Times, he called himself a “kosher burrito.”

Garcetti, who reportedly attends a non-denominational congregation, attempted to gain traction with Jewish voters by reminding them of his past support for captive soldier Gilad Schalit.

Both he and Perry were reported as saying that they would allow Jewish values to inform their decisions.

Perry said she would work for families struggling to pay rising tuition costs for private Jewish day schools and that her Jewish identity is integral to her identity.

Seeming to describe herself as something of an amalgam who represents the different racial groupings in the diverse American city, Perry defined herself as “a woman who is African American, chose to become Jewish and speaks Spanish in a city where all doors are open to me,” according to KPCC radio.

Gruel attends synagogue and sends her son to Hebrew school. When asked by the local Jewish Journal newspaper why she lives a Jewish life but has not converted, she replied that conversion “certainly is a part of my perspective of something I would like to do.”

“I believe in the Jewish tradition and religion, the values that the community have are important to me. About giving back, about the good moral values, about being part of a community,” Gruel told the Journal.

One journalist from KPCC radio noted that although Jews make up only 6 percent of the city’s population, they are represented disproportionately in elections due to their high voter turnout as a community.

One estimate pegged the Jewish community as representing up to 17% of all ballots cast in the race for the city’s top executive.

While some community members have expressed suspicion that the candidates are playing up their Jewish ties merely to garner votes, local federation leader Sam Yebri disagreed, telling the The Los Angeles Times that, in his opinion, the candidates are “not showing up at Jewish events in 2012 and 2013 because there’s an election looming. None of them are strangers to the Jewish community.”

(Taken from Jpost.org by Sam Sokol)

Budapest court orders Holocaust denier to visit memorial

Hungarian Jewish Community President at the Holocaust memorial site.

A court in Budapest has convicted a Hungarian Holocaust denier to a suspended 18 month jail sentence. The judge also ordered him to visit either Auschwitz, the Budapest Holocaust memorial site or Yad Vashem in Jerusalem at least three times and to write down his thoughts afterwards. It was the first conviction for Holocaust denial in Hungary under a new law enacted in 2010. The sentence also bans the unemployed computer technician from attending political rallies or events. The 42-year-old man had held up a banner at a rally which stated, in Hebrew, ‘The Holocaust never happened’. The man was arrested by police 15 minutes later.

Recently, anti-Semitic and anti-Roma incidents in Hungary have risen strongly, and Nobel Prize laureate Elie Wiesel last year returned a decoration given to him by Hungary in protest at the glorification of pro-Nazi World War II leaders in Hungary. The president of the World Jewish Congress, Ronald Lauder, also spoke out against incitement to hatred directed at Jews and Roma. Lauder urged Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktór Orbán in November to take distance himself from the extremists and to take “decisive actions” against those who perpetrate attacks against Jews and Roma. Orbán has been accused of pandering to nationalists, amid renewed tributes to Hungary’s wartime leader Miklós Horthy, an ally of Adolf Hitler, and the rehabilitation of some anti-Semitic writers.

An estimated 600,000 Hungarian Jews died in the Holocaust.

Picture above: Hungarian Jewish Community President Péter Feldmájer at the Budapest Holocaust memorial site.

(Article taken from: worldjewishcongress.org)