30.6.21

Journey by Moonlight

This is a picture of the first Pushkin Press English language edition of Antal Szerb's 1937 masterpiece novel Journey by Moonlight. I am still in the immediate aftermath of having just finished reading it, but I'm prepared to confidently proclaim that it is already among the best books that I have ever read. 

I can't say that I have followed the same exact trajectory as Mihaily, the story's main protagonist, but there are some very similar personal parallels. It's late already, but I'll be adding more about this book soon. More than anything also, it brought back a lot of nostalgic feelings for my own stay in Rome some years back. 

28.6.21

6/27/21

Israeli search and rescue volunteers from the IDF's Palchatz unit arrive in Surfside, Florida to assist with the immense effort to save lives following the horrific collapse of a residential building on Thursday.

Giorgio Viera/AFP


27.6.21

Jaffa Road in the Rain

Jaffa Road, the heart of West Jerusalem, during a rainy day in November 2011. This photo was taken during the earliest days of the Jerusalem Light Rail's launch, which had recently been completed after a long and arduous development. 

Navot Miller. Wikicommons.

24.6.21

גלעד שליט התחתן עם ניצן שבת

Gilad Shalit married his longtime girlfriend, Nitzan Shabbat, today at a wedding hall in central Israel. It's hard to contextualize the many feelings I have right now and to adequately put them into words. But I will simply say that seeing the photos from today has made me very emotional, and of course, extremely happy. 

They also bring back a lot of memories from Fall 2011. From the moment when a weak and emaciated looking Gilad Shalit stepped off an IAF helicopter and saluted then Ramatkal Benny Gantz and was received with a hug, to the next immediate embrace of his father who he hadn't seen in over six years, the same feelings are all still there. I have many thoughts on the overall prisoner release deal, but bringing Gilad Shalit home was plainly the right thing to do. It was also Benjamin Netanyahu's highest moment in office as Prime Minister.

Ynet. Matan Katzman

I had just finished Miluim around the same time back then. Scott was visiting from London and I had just met Karina only a few weeks earlier in a local cafe near my small Florentine flat on Rehov HaMashbir off Shuk Levinsky. I was working mostly nights and hadn't yet left for Berlin. There's a lot more to write and I'll try and tackle some of it in due time, ideally soon, but for now I'm simply overjoyed.  

Jaffa St, Jerusalem

Jaffa Street in Jerusalem.

1907

Library of Congress


19.6.21

זהו זה

The Balfour protests at Kikar Paris at their peak in 2020. For well over a year Israelis mobilized to demonstrate against then Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the corruption allegations he faced.

Oded Balilty/NYT

14.6.21

A New Era

It's hard to believe that this is finally the end of twelve consecutive years of Benjamin Netanyahu as Prime Minister of Israel. Like so many Israelis, I can't help but think back to what feels like another lifetime ago before Netanyahu took office for the second time. Unlike millions of younger Israelis who only know an Israel under the leadership of Bibi, I'm reminded of where I was in my life back when Ehud Olmert was in his last year as Prime Minister before the March 2009 election that returned Bibi to power. 

I had just drafted into the IDF in November 2008 and spent the initial months of my service up north in the hills of the Upper Galilee, which happened to coincide with the outbreak of Operation Cast Lead that winter. It was a chaotic period to say the least and I ended up briefly shipping off down south during the hostilities in Gaza and Southern Israel before starting kav elsewhere. The Second Lebanon War was also a fresh memory and I still distinctly remember the time when Ehud Barak visited Michve Alon as Defense Minister and met with members of my pluga. The leadership changes to the military under Barak and then IDF Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi allowed the army to retool and improve in the wake of what happened in Lebanon. Despite the recurring rounds of warfare with Hamas, this also ultimately set the ground for Netanyahu's rather successful track record of security as Prime Minister. Despite his rhetoric, Bibi has always been a cautious and deliberate leader and during the past twelve years, Israeli civilian and military casualties from war and terror have never been lower.

During weekend leave back in my South Tel Aviv flat, I'm reminded as well of certain memories of the city from a distinct time and place. The illegal warehouse raves, Riff Raff on Gruzenberg, the Ben Atar squat, the legendary Purim street parties that would go into morning well beyond daybreak, and more. In retrospect, it felt like a different Israel back then. Yet, all of these personal recollections are intertwined. There's a lot more to elaborate on, but in short, the twelve years of Netanyahu and Likud as the leading governing power has left a deep imprint on Israeli society in many ways.

But Israel has always been bigger than one person, and as much as Netanyahu has achieved and accomplished, it's clear that towards the end of his second tenure as Prime Minister he allowed an obsession with power to corrupt his leadership and decision-making. The irony is that Netanyahu was not ousted by his ideological opponents. Labour and Meretz have long ceded influence and lost constituency power among Israelis. But instead, his downfall came from those former allies on the right such as Naftali Bennett, Gideon Sa'ar, and Avigdor Lieberman, close partners who he had betrayed one too many times. The calculated risk to dishonestly dissolve the unity government with Gantz did not pay off and only preempted Netanyahu's inevitable removal from office after failing once more in the last election this March. After failing to conclusively create a mandate and establish a right wing coalition after an unprecedented four elections in two and a half years, Netanyahu's political career was on borrowed time. As opposition leader, I don't expect his influence to diminish immediately, but with the rise of Nir Barkat and recently retired Mossad director Yossi Cohen as potential successors, the future of Likud will likely not include Benjamin Netanyahu.

I can only wish nothing but success and the best of luck to Israel's new Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and Alternate PM and Foreign Minister Yair Lapid. May they safeguard our nation and its citizens while spreading light to all around the power.

Emmanuel Dumand/AFP

12.6.21

Le Parc Monceau 1877

French impressionist Gustav Caillebotte's 1877 oil on campus painting Le Parc Monceau. This painting is one of only two works that Caillebotte worked on that featured Le Parc Monceau in Paris, which was located close to his own home on rue de Miromesnil in the city's eighth arrondissement. 

10.6.21

Abbaye Sainte-Marie de la Résurrection d'Abu Gosh

The entrance to the Benedictine Monastery in the village of Abu Ghosh just outside Jerusalem. The monastery is also known as the St Mary of the Resurrection Abbey.

Fr Brice

9.6.21

Life on Sandpaper

The original Hebrew version cover of Yoram Kaniuk's 1968 memoir Life on Sandpaper. Kaniuk's book charts his journey as a young man after he finished his army service and his subsequent experiences leaving Israel and living in New York, and to a lesser degree, in Paris as well.

6.6.21

Bournemouth and the UK

Beaches in the UK, such as this seaside scene here in Bournemouth, have been packed all weekend. The British government is now facing a sensitive situation regarding the planned full reopening of all societal sectors on June 21st. My prediction is that restrictions will not be entirely eased, which is the cautious and smart approach, given the need to increase full vaccination rates in order to thwart new variants. 

PA Wire

5.6.21

Antal Szerb

Hungarian author Antal Szerb's passport from 1931.

3.6.21

A New Era

Regardless of what transpires over the next week or so before the vote the swearing in vote, assuming it takes place, the fact that the members of this coalition were each able to agree to partner together marks a historic moment in Israeli society and Israeli politics. Pictured are party leaders, Yair Lapid of centrist Yesh Atid, Naftali Bennett of religious right wing Yamina, and Mansour Abbas of the Arab-Israeli Ra'am party. 

נוואף א-נבארי

1.6.21

Moshe Dayan

Moshe Dayan during his tenure as IDF Chief of Staff. Dayan served as Rav Aluf from 1953 - 1958 and later as Defense Minister from 1967 -1974.

Wikicommons

Dahlia Ravikovich

 Dahlia Ravikovich, Israeli legend.

TLV1.FM
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