State of Israel
 | | Geography | | Land of Israel · Districts · Cities Transportation · Mediterranean Dead Sea · Red Sea · Sea of Galilee Jerusalem · Tel Aviv · Haifa Image File history File links Coat_of_arms_of_Israel. ...
Anthem(s): Hatikvah (The Hope) Capital Jerusalem [1] Largest city Jerusalem Official language(s) Hebrew, Arabic Government Parliamentary democracy - President Moshe Katsav - Prime Minister Ehud Olmert Independence From the United Kingdom - Declaration 14 May 1948 (05 Iyar 5708) Area - Total 22,1451 km² (151th) 8,5501 sq mi - Water (%) ~2...
Image File history File links Flag_of_Israel. ...
Satellite image of the Land of Israel in January 2003, including portions of the State of Israel, Jordan, Egypt, and Lebanon. ...
Map of the districts of Israel There are six main districts of Israel, known in Hebrew as mehozot (×××××ת; singular: mahoz) and fifteen sub-districts known as nafot (× ×¤×ת; singular: nafa). ...
Cities in Israel, by district: // Northern District See also North District, Israel. ...
The Mediterranean Sea is an intercontinental sea positioned between Europe to the north, Africa to the south and Asia to the east, covering an approximate area of 2. ...
The Dead Sea (Arabic: â; Hebrew: ) is both the lowest point on the Earth at 418 metres (1,371 ft) below sea level and falling[2], and the deepest hypersaline lake in the world at 330 m (1,083 ft) deep and 799 m (2,621 ft) below sea level. ...
Location of the Red Sea Image:Red Seaimage. ...
The Sea of Galilee with the Jordan River flowing out of it to the south and into the Dead Sea Kineret redirects here; for the Amgen drug having this tradename, see Anakinra The Sea of Galilee is Israels largest freshwater lake, approximately 53 kilometers (33 miles) in circumference, about...
Jerusalem (Hebrew: , Yerushaláyim or Yerushalaim; Arabic: , al-Quds (the Holy); official Arabic in Israel: Ø£ÙØ±Ø´ÙÙÙ
اÙÙØ¯Ø³, Urshalim-al-Quds (combining the Biblical and common usage Arabic names) is the capital and largest city[1] of the State of Israel with a population of 724,000 (as of May 24, 2006[2...
Tel-Aviv was founded on empty dunes north of the existing city of Jaffa. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
| | History | | Jewish history · Timeline · Zionism · Aliyah Herzl · Balfour · Mandate · 1947 UN Plan Independence · Flag · Austerity · Refugees This article describes the history of the modern State of Israel, from its Independence Proclamation in 1948 to the present. ...
Jewish history is the history of the Jewish people, faith (Judaism) and culture. ...
This is a timeline of the development of Judaism and the Jewish people. ...
Zionism is a political movement that supports a homeland for the Jewish people in the Land of Israel, where Jewish nationhood is thought to have evolved somewhere between 1200 BCE and late Second Temple times,[1][2] and where Jewish kingdoms existed up to the 2nd century CE. Zionism is...
Aliyah (Hebrew: ×¢××××, ascent or going up) is a term widely used to mean Jewish immigration to the Land of Israel (and since its establishment in 1948, the State of Israel). ...
Theodor Herzl, in his middle age. ...
The Balfour Declaration of 1917 was made in a letter dated November 2, 1917 from the British Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour to Lord Rothschild (Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild), a leader of the British Jewish community, for transmission to the Zionist Federation, a private Zionist organization, on the partitioning...
Cisjordan and Transjordan Palestine were incorporated (under different legal and administrative arrangements) into the British Mandate of Palestine, issued by the League of Nations to Great Britain on 29 September, 1923. ...
On 29 November 1947 the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine or United Nations General Assembly Resolution 181, a plan to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict in the British Mandate of Palestine, was approved by the United Nations General Assembly, at the UN World Headquarters in New York. ...
Flag ratio: 8:11 Another common colorization of the flag, using lighter blue. ...
Main article: History of Israel Austerity in Israel: From 1949 to 1959, the state of Israel was, to a varying extent, under a regime of austerity (×¦× ×¢ tsena), during which rationing and similar measures were enforced. ...
| | Arab-Israeli conflict · Proposals | | 1948 War · 1949 Armistice · Suez War Six-Day War · Attrition War Yom Kippur War · Lebanon War Israel-Lebanon conflict Peace treaties with: Egypt, Jordan To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
Geneva Accord October 20, 2003 Road Map for Peace April 30, 2003 The Peoples Voice July 27, 2002 Elon Peace Plan 2002 ...
Combatants Israel Egypt Syria Transjordan Lebanon Iraq Holy War Army Arab Liberation Army Commanders Yaakov Dori Yigael Yadin Glubb Pasha Abd al-Qadir al-Husayniâ Hasan Salama Fawzi al-Qawuqji Strength 29,677 initiallyâ108,300 by December 1948 Egypt: 10,000 initially rising to 20,000 Iraq: 5,000...
The 1949 Armistice Agreements are a set of agreements signed during 1949 between Israel and its neighbors Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. ...
Combatants Israel United Kingdom France Egypt Commanders Moshe Dayan Charles Keightley Pierre Barjot Gamal Abdel Nasser Strength 175,000 Israeli 45,000 British 34,000 French 300,000 Casualties 177 Israeli KIA 16 British KIA 91 British WIA 10 French KIA 33 French WIA 1,650 KIA 4,900 WIA...
Combatants Israel Egypt Syria Jordan Iraq Commanders Yitzhak Rabin, Moshe Dayan, Uzi Narkiss, Israel Tal, Mordechai Hod, Ariel Sharon Abdel Hakim Amer, Abdul Munim Riad, Zaid ibn Shaker, Hafez al-Assad Strength 50,000 troops (264,000 including mobilized reservists); 197 combat aircraft 280,000 troops (Egypt 150,000; Syria...
The War of Attrition was a limited war fought between Egypt and Israel from 1968 to 1970. ...
Combatants Israel Egypt Syria Jordan Iraq Commanders Moshe Dayan David Elazar Ariel Sharon Shmuel Gonen Benjamin Peled Israel Tal Rehavam Zeevi Aharon Yariv Yitzhak Hofi Rafael Eitan Abraham Adan Yanush Ben Gal Saad El Shazly Ahmad Ismail Ali Hosni Mubarak Mohammed Aly Fahmy Anwar Sadat Abdel Ghani el-Gammasy Abdul...
Combatants Israel Phalange South Lebanon Army Amal PLO Syria Commanders Menachem Begin (Prime Minister) Ariel Sharon, (Ministry of Defence) Rafael Eitan, (CoS) Yasser Arafat Strength 76,000 37,000 Casualties 670 9,800 The 1982 Lebanon War (Hebrew: , Milkhemet Levanon, Milkhemet Levanon, Arabic: â), called by Israel the Operation Peace of...
Combatants Hezbollah Israel Commanders Hassan Nasrallah (Secretary General) Dan Halutz (CoS) Moshe Kaplinsky[5] Udi Adam (Regional) Strength 1,000-10,000[2] militants 30,000 ground troops [6] (plus IAF & ISC) Casualties Hezbollah militia: Dead: Hezbollah: 74[3] IDF: 540[4] Captured: 21 Allied militia: Amal: 17[3] LCP...
| | Israeli-Palestinian conflict | | Timeline · Peace process · Peace camp 1st Intifada · Oslo · 2nd Intifada Terrorism · Barrier · Disengagement The Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a part of the greater Arab-Israeli conflict, is an ongoing dispute between the State of Israel and Palestinian people (or state). ...
This is an incomplete timeline of notable events in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. ...
The UN Partition Plan Map of the State of Israel today The Peace process in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has taken shape over the years, despite the ongoing violence in the Middle East. ...
The Israeli peace camp is a collection of political and non-political movements which desire to promote peace, mainly with the Arab neighbours of Israel (the Palestinians, Syria and Lebanon) and encourage co-existence with the Arab citizens of Israel. ...
Intifada A poster from 1990 The First Intifada refers to a series of violent incidents between Palestinians and Israelis between 1987 and approximately 1993, when the Oslo accords were signed and the Palestinian National Authority was established. ...
The Oslo Accords, officially called the Declaration of Principles on Interim Self-Government Arrangements or Declaration of Principles (DOP), were finalized in Oslo, Norway on August 20, 1993, and subsequently officially signed at a public ceremony in Washington D.C. on September 13, 1993, with Mahmoud Abbas signing for the...
The wreckage of a commuter bus in Jerusalem after a suicide bombing on Tuesday, 18 June 2002. ...
Since the failure of the Camp David Summit in the summer of 2000, many acts of terrorism were committed by individuals, militant Palestinian groups, and members of the Palestinian National Authority against Israeli civilians. ...
The barrier route as of May 2005. ...
Israels unilateral disengagement plan (termed in Hebrew: ת××× ×ת ×××ª× ×ª×§×ת Tokhnit HaHitnatkut or ת×× ×ת ×××× ×ª×§×ת Tokhnit HaHinatkut in the Disengagement Plan Implementation Law), also known as the disengagement plan, Gaza Pull-Out plan, and Hitnatkut) was a proposal by Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, adopted by the government and enacted in August 2005, to...
| | Economy | | Science & technology · Companies Tourism · Wine · Diamonds Military industry This article does not cite its references or sources. ...
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Tourism in Israel includes a rich variety of historical and religious sites in the Holy Land, as well as modern beach resorts, archaeological tourism, heritage tourism and ecotourism. ...
The Israeli wine industry is known for its vibrancy, with wineries numbering in the hundreds and ranging in size from small boutique enterprises making a few thousand bottles per year to the largest producing over ten million bottles per year. ...
The Israeli Diamond industry is a world leader in producing cut diamonds for wholesale. ...
The Military equipment of Israel includes a wide array of arms, tanks, planes, cannons, armored vehicles. ...
| | Demographics · Culture | | Religion · Israeli Arabs · Kibbutz Music · Archaeology · Universities Hebrew · Literature · Sport · Israelis To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
The culture of Israel, also called Israeli culture, is inseparable from long history of Judaism and Jewish history which preceded it (i. ...
Arab citizens of Israel[1] is a phrase used to describe Arabs that are not Jewish, who are citizens of the State of Israel. ...
Kibbutz Dan, near Qiryat Shemona, in the Upper Galilee, 1990s A kibbutz (Hebrew: ×§××××¥; plural: kibbutzim: ×§×××צ××, gathering or together) is an Israeli collective intentional community. ...
Modern Israeli music is heavily influenced by its constituents, which include Jewish immigrants (see Jewish music) from more than 120 countries around the world, which have brought their own musical traditions, making Israel a global melting pot. ...
The archaeology of Israel is a national passion that also attracts considerable international interest on account of the regions Biblical links. ...
There are eight official universities in Israel. ...
Hebrew redirects here. ...
Israeli literature is the literature of the people or State of Israel. ...
| | Laws · Politics | | Law of Return · Jerusalem Law Parties · Elections · PM · President Knesset · Supreme Court · Courts The Basic Laws of Israel are a key component of Israels uncodified constitution. The State of Israel has no formal constitution. ...
Politics of Israel takes place in a framework of a parliamentary representative democratic republic, whereby the Prime Minister of Israel is the head of government, and of a pluriform multi-party system. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
The Jerusalem Law is a common name of Basic Law: Jerusalem, Capital of Israel passed by the Israeli Knesset on July 30, 1980 (17th Av, 5740). ...
Political parties in Israel: Israels political system is based on proportional representation which allows for a multi-party system with numerous parties, in which a single party usually has no chance of gaining power by itself, forcing the parties to cooperate and form coalition governments. ...
Elections in Israel gives information on election and election results in Israel. ...
The Prime Minister of Israel (Hebrew: ר×ש ×××ש××, Rosh HaMemshala, lit. ...
President of the State of Israel (Hebrew: × ×©×× ××××× ×, Nasi Hamedina) is the head of state of Israel, but has a largely ceremonial, figurehead role with real power lying in the hands of the Prime Minister of Israel. ...
The modern Knesset building, Israels parliament, in Jerusalem Though similar-sounding, Beit Knesset (××ת ×× ×¡×ª) literally means House of Assembly, and refers to a synagogue. ...
The Supreme Court (Hebrew: ××ת ×××©×¤× ××¢××××, Beit Hamishpat Haelyon ) is at the head of the court system in the State of Israel. ...
Judicial branch is an independent branch of the government which includes secular and religious courts. ...
| | Foreign affairs | | Intl. Law · UN · US · Arab League Foreign relations of Israel deals with some of the following issues: In addition to seeking an end to hostilities with Arab forces, against which it has fought five wars since 1948, Israel has given high priority to gaining wide acceptance as a sovereign state with an important international role. ...
Arguments about the applicability of various elements of international law underlie the debate around the Arab-Israeli conflict. ...
Israel and the United Nations have had very mixed relations, since the states founding on May 14, 1948. ...
Israel-United States relations have evolved from an initial United States policy of sympathy and support for the creation of a Jewish homeland in 1948 to an unusual partnership that links a small but militarily powerful Israel, dependent on the United States for its economic and military strength, with the...
From the time it was established in March 1945, the Arab League took an active role in the Arab-Israeli conflict. ...
| | Security Forces | | Israel Defense Forces Intelligence Community · Security Council Police · Border Police · Prison Service The Israeli Security Forces (ISF) are several organizations collectively responsible for Israels security. ...
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) (Hebrew: צ×× ××× × ××שר×× , [Army] Force for the Defense of Israel), often abbreviated with the Hebrew acronym צ×× Tsahal, alternative English spelling Tzahal, is the name of Israels military forces, comprising the Israeli Army, the Israeli Air Force and the Israeli Navy. ...
The Israeli Intelligence Community (Hebrew: ×§×××ת ××××××¢×× ××שר×××ת) is the designation given to the complex of organizations responsible for intelligence collection, dissemination, and research for the State of Israel. ...
The Israeli National Security Council (Hebrew: ××××¢×¦× ××××××× ×××××) is a council established by the Prime Ministers Office in 1999 during the prime ministership of Binyamin Netanyahu in the framework of drawing lessons from the Yom Kipur War. ...
The Israel Border Police (Hebrew: ×ש×ר ×××××, Mishmar HaGvul) is the combat branch of the Israeli Police. ...
The Israel Prison Service (Hebrew: ש×ר×ת ××ª× ×ס××ר, Sherut Batei HaSohar), commonly known by its acronym, Shabas, is the Israeli prison service. ...
| | Portal:Israel | | This box: view • talk • edit | The World Zionist Organization, or WZO, was founded as the Zionist Organization, or ZO, on September 3, 1897, at the First Zionist Congress held in Basel, Switzerland. The ZO served as an umbrella organization for the Zionist movement. Theodor Herzl, who organized the first Congress, later wrote, "At Basle I founded the Jewish State...Perhaps in five years, and certainly in fifty, everyone will know it." September 3 is the 246th day of the year (247th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
1897 (MDCCCXCVII) was a common year starting on Friday (see link for calendar). ...
The World Zionist Organization [WZO] was founded as the Zionist Organization [ZO] on September 3, 1897, at the First Zionist Congress held in Basel, Switzerland. ...
Basel (British English traditionally: Basle and more recently Basel , German: Basel , French: Bâle , Italian: Basilea ) is Switzerlands third most populous city (166,563 inhabitants (2004); 690,000 inhabitants in the conurbation stretching across the immediate cantonal and national boundaries made Basel Switzerlands second-largest urban area as...
Zionism is a political movement that supports a homeland for the Jewish people in the Land of Israel, where Jewish nationhood is thought to have evolved somewhere between 1200 BCE and late Second Temple times,[1][2] and where Jewish kingdoms existed up to the 2nd century CE. Zionism is...
Theodor Herzl, in his middle age. ...
When the State of Israel was declared fifty one years later on May 14, 1948, many of its new administrative institutions were already in place, having evolved during the regular Zionist Congresses of the previous decades. Some of these institutions remain to this day. David Ben Gurion (First Prime Minister of Israel) publicly pronouncing the Declaration of the State of Israel, May 14, 1948. ...
May 14 is the 134th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (135th in leap years). ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
In January 1960 the ZO changed its name to the World Zionist Organization. The WZO's headquarters is in Jerusalem. Jerusalem (Hebrew: , Yerushaláyim or Yerushalaim; Arabic: , al-Quds (the Holy); official Arabic in Israel: Ø£ÙØ±Ø´ÙÙÙ
اÙÙØ¯Ø³, Urshalim-al-Quds (combining the Biblical and common usage Arabic names) is the capital and largest city[1] of the State of Israel with a population of 724,000 (as of May 24, 2006[2...
Membership and delegations Membership in the WZO was open to all Jews, and the right to vote for delegates to the Congresses was secured by the purchase of the Zionist Shekel. Delegations from all around the world, and from many different political backgrounds and religious traditions, took part in each Congress; delegations/parties were mainly grouped by ideology, rather than by geography. Silver half-shekel struck in the Greek Colony of Taras, during the Punic occupation. ...
Presidents of World Zionist Organization -
Theodor Herzl, in his middle age. ...
David Wolffsohn (October 9, 1856 - September 15, 1914) was a Jewish businessman and prominent Zionist and second president of the World Zionist Organization. ...
Chaim Weizmann and Harry S. Truman, May 25, 1948 Chaim Azriel Weizmann (Hebrew: ×××× ××צ××) (also: Chaijim W., Haim W.) (November 27, 1874 â November 9, 1952) chemist, statesman, President of the World Zionist Organization, first President of Israel (elected May 16, 1948, served 1949 - 1952) and founder of a research institute in...
Nahum Sokolow (1859-1936) was a Zionist leader, author, translator, and a pioneer of Hebrew journalism. ...
Chaim Weizmann and Harry S. Truman, May 25, 1948 Chaim Azriel Weizmann (Hebrew: ×××× ××צ××) (also: Chaijim W., Haim W.) (November 27, 1874 â November 9, 1952) chemist, statesman, President of the World Zionist Organization, first President of Israel (elected May 16, 1948, served 1949 - 1952) and founder of a research institute in...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Nahum Goldmann signing the Reparations Treaty with Germany Nahum Goldmann (July 10, 1894âAugust 29, 1982), was a Polish-born Israeli Zionist and founder and longtime president of the World Jewish Congress. ...
Chairmen of the Executive of World Zionist Organization (and the Jewish Agency for Israel) -
- Ehud Avriel : (1968 - 1972)
- Louis Arie Pincus : (1968 - Oct 1973) , (head of the executive to 1972)
- Arie Leon Dulzin (1st time)(acting) : (Oct 1973 - 1975)
- Pinhas Sapir : (1975 - 12 Aug 1975)
- Arie Leon Dulzin (2nd time)(acting) : (12 Aug 1975 - 6 Jan 1976)
- Joseph Almogi : (6 Jan 1976 - 1978)
- Arie Leon Dulzin (3rd time) : (1978 - Dec 1987)
- Simcha Dinitz : (Dec 1987 - 14 Feb 1994)
- Yehiel Leket (acting) : (Feb 1994 - Feb 1995)
- Avraham Burg : (Feb 1995 - Feb 1999)
- Sallai Meridor : (25 Feb 1999 - 2005 ) , (acting to May 1999)
- Zeev Bielski: (2005 - present)
Simcha Dinitz (June 23, 1929 â September 23, 2003), one of Israels greatest diplomats and statesmen, was the Ambassador of Israel to the United States from 1973 to 1979. ...
Avraham Burg (born January 19, 1955) is an Israeli politician. ...
Zeev Bielski (born 1949) is the current Chairman of Executive of The Jewish Agency and the World Zionist Organization. ...
Sister organizations The finances of the WZO were conducted by the Jewish Colonial Trust (founded in 1899), and acquisition of land was conducted by the Jewish National Fund (founded in 1901). Keren Hayesod (founded 1920) funded Zionist and Yishuv activities prior to the creation of the state of Israel through enterprises such as the Palestine Electric Company, the Palestine Potash Company and the Anglo-Palestine Bank. The JNF logo found on all JNF charity boxes. ...
Keren Hayesod â United Israel Appeal (Hebrew: , literally The Foundation Fund) is the central fundraising organization for Israel throughout the world (except the USA). ...
Yishuv is a Hebrew word meaning settlement. ...
World Zionist Congress From 1897 to 1946 , a Zionist Congress was held every two years in various European cities, save for interruptions during the two World Wars. Their goal was to build an infrastructure to further the cause of Jewish settlement in Palestine. 1897 (MDCCCXCVII) was a common year starting on Friday (see link for calendar). ...
1946 (MCMXLVI) was a common year starting on Tuesday. ...
As of 2006, the WZO is still holding a semiregular World Zionist Congress, based on the same structure it has had for a century. However, support for the concept and voter turnout are waning. Below is a quote from a speech given that year by Ismar Schorsch, then chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary. 2006 (MMVI) is a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Ismar Schorsch is the sixth chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) of Conservative Judaism in the United States, where he is the Rabbi Herman Abramovitz Professor of Jewish History. ...
The Jewish Theological Seminary of America The Jewish Theological Seminary of America, known in the Jewish community simply as JTS, is the academic and spiritual center of Conservative Judaism, and is the movements main rabbinical seminary. ...
- This week I will leave for Israel to attend the World Zionist Congress along with 37 other delegates from MERCAZ, the official Zionist party of the Conservative Movement in the United States. Despite the overblown rhetoric that will be heard in Jerusalem, no one should imagine that this Congress is a matter of any consequence. Zionism is alive and well, but the World Zionist Organization died a long time ago. In Jewish life we simply can't muster the political will to dismantle organizational structures designed for a specific purpose after they have been crowned with success.
- The recent elections in America for the World Zionist Congress prove my point incontrovertibly. Only 150,000 Jews registered to vote and no more than 110,000 of them actually saw fit to vote. Surely more than 2% of American Jewry is devoted to the cause of Zionism! Rather, the existing organizational structure, a relic of the heyday of the pre-state Zionist movement, is no longer adequate to give expression to the nature and expanse of Zionist sentiment in America. And no amount of campaign spending is going to rev up a political machinery encrusted with so much rust.
The 35th World Zionist Congress was held in June, 2006[1]. The largest faction in the World Zionist Congress at present is a coalition consisting of Kadima, Labour-Meretz, Mercaz (representing Conservative Judaism) and ARZA (Representing Reform Judaism.[2][3] Zeev Bielski of Kadima was re-elected WZO Chairman. The next Congress is scheduled for 2010. Kadima (Hebrew: ×§××××, QÄdÄ«mÄh, forward) is a centrist [note] Israeli political party. ...
This article refers to Conservative (Masorti) Judaism in the United States. ...
Reform Judaism can refer to (1) the largest denomination of Judaism in America and its sibling movements in other countries, (2) a branch of Judaism in the United Kingdom, and (3) the historical predecessor of the American movement that originated in 19th Century Germany. ...
Zeev Bielski (born 1949) is the current Chairman of Executive of The Jewish Agency and the World Zionist Organization. ...
For the film, see 2010: The Year We Make Contact. ...
External links - National Association for the Advocacy of Modern Zionism
- WZO – Doing Zionism
- The WZO Hagshama Department (formerly the Student Department)
- World Zionist Congress Gallery
- Exhibit of election posters for WZC elections across the decades.
- brief Schorsch bio at the JTS site
- Full text of his December 1997
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