In Israeli politicsEvacuation refers to the forced removal of people of Jewish identity from their homes in territory handed over to Arabs, and the accompanying destruction of their property, as part of the policy of Land for Peace. Israels governmental system is based on several basic laws enacted by its unicameral parliament, the Knesset. ... The word Jew (Hebrew: ×××××) is used in a wide number of ways, but generally refers to a follower of the Jewish faith, a child of a Jewish mother, or someone of Jewish descent with a connection to Jewish culture or ethnicity; and often a combination of these attributes. ... Land for peace is a general principle proposed to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict by which Israel would relinquish control of part or all of the territories it occupied in 1967 in return for recognition by the Arab world. ...
Some believe that it bears similarity to the forced removals conducted by the former Apartheid regime of South Africa but differs in that Apartheid was symmetrical with each group having its own area in which members of other groups were forbidden to reside. Under Land for Peace, evacuation is only performed on the Jewish populations and only Jews are forbidden from residing in certain areas. A segregated beach in South Africa, 1982. ... Land for peace is a general principle proposed to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict by which Israel would relinquish control of part or all of the territories it occupied in 1967 in return for recognition by the Arab world. ...
In wilderness_first_aid, evacuation is the transport of a seriously injured person out of the wilderness to the nearest point an ambulance can reach to take them to the hospital, or to the nearest emergency_room.
In bomb_threats, it is usual to evacuate an area by clearing all people out and securing the perimeter, usually until the bomb_squad conclude that there is no bomb, remove it, detonate it safely or dismantle it.
The mass evacuation of a city is also a hypothetical procedure in civil_defense from nuclear_terrorism or a nuclear_war.
Israeli party recruitment drives are notoriously transitory; many party members recruited for leadership races end up letting their membership lapse and voting for other parties at the general election, and relatively few become party activists.
The importance of transparency in an area as politically explosive as land use and settlement construction cannot be overstated, and if private charities are to be assigned a quasi-state role (which is problematic in itself), they should at least be held to the same standards of accountability that apply to government agencies.
Israeli dayanim (rabbinic judges) are appointed by a selection committee similar to the one that picks civil judges, but with a slightly different composition.