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Welcome to The Times of Israel’s Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what’s happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday.
Zman Yisrael editor Biranit Goren and health reporter Renee Ghert-Zand join host Amanda Borschel-Dan on this episode marking Yom Hashoah, Israel’s National Holocaust Remembrance Day.
Even as President Isaac Herzog called for the Israeli people to put aside their differences over the judicial overhaul last night during the official ceremony marking Yom Hashoah at Yad Vashem, in Tel Aviv MK Boaz Bismuth of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party was forced to leave a ceremony at a synagogue after participants heckled him and threatened violence. Why does this worry Goren ahead of next weeks Memorial Day ceremonies?
In the year since 2022's Yom Hashoah, the Tracing Services at Magen David Adom — the Israeli branch of the International Red Cross — has received 150 requests for help in locating relatives and renewing family ties. Over the years, it has aided in the reunion of hundreds of relatives, including six siblings. How does it go about this work eight decades following World War II?
Israel’s Labor party suffered a crushing blow in the November elections and now the four-seat party seems to be in disarray. This week we heard that it’s dropped out of the judicial overhaul negotiation talks at the President's Residence and yesterday we learned that its few MKs are forcing leader Merav Michaeli to get their approval for her decisions. What’s happening here?
Finally, we hear about a European grassroots effort in which several young leaders are taking the initiative and organizing coexistence clean-up projects for the thousands of Stolpersteine or stumbling blocks that are embedded in sidewalks in European towns and cities.
Discussed articles include:
Israel grinds to a halt as siren wails to commemorate 6 million Holocaust victims
As Israel remembers Holocaust, Herzog says commemoration must be ‘above all dispute’
Likud MK shouted down by anti-coalition hecklers at Holocaust Remembrance Day event
Magen David Adom aids Shoah survivors seeking lost relatives
Labor MKs seek to replace leader Michaeli, claim party’s future depends on it
Citing ‘deals in the dark,’ Labor party quits judicial overhaul talks with president
In grassroots effort, young Europeans clean ‘stumbling stones’ to gleam like beacons
Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts.
IMAGE: Visitors at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem light memorial candles dedicated to individuals killed in the Holocaust, April 17, 2023. (Yad Vashem)
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to The Times of Israel’s Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what’s happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday.
Zman Yisrael editor Biranit Goren and health reporter Renee Ghert-Zand join host Amanda Borschel-Dan on this episode marking Yom Hashoah, Israel’s National Holocaust Remembrance Day.
Even as President Isaac Herzog called for the Israeli people to put aside their differences over the judicial overhaul last night during the official ceremony marking Yom Hashoah at Yad Vashem, in Tel Aviv MK Boaz Bismuth of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party was forced to leave a ceremony at a synagogue after participants heckled him and threatened violence. Why does this worry Goren ahead of next weeks Memorial Day ceremonies?
In the year since 2022's Yom Hashoah, the Tracing Services at Magen David Adom — the Israeli branch of the International Red Cross — has received 150 requests for help in locating relatives and renewing family ties. Over the years, it has aided in the reunion of hundreds of relatives, including six siblings. How does it go about this work eight decades following World War II?
Israel’s Labor party suffered a crushing blow in the November elections and now the four-seat party seems to be in disarray. This week we heard that it’s dropped out of the judicial overhaul negotiation talks at the President's Residence and yesterday we learned that its few MKs are forcing leader Merav Michaeli to get their approval for her decisions. What’s happening here?
Finally, we hear about a European grassroots effort in which several young leaders are taking the initiative and organizing coexistence clean-up projects for the thousands of Stolpersteine or stumbling blocks that are embedded in sidewalks in European towns and cities.
Discussed articles include:
Israel grinds to a halt as siren wails to commemorate 6 million Holocaust victims
As Israel remembers Holocaust, Herzog says commemoration must be ‘above all dispute’
Likud MK shouted down by anti-coalition hecklers at Holocaust Remembrance Day event
Magen David Adom aids Shoah survivors seeking lost relatives
Labor MKs seek to replace leader Michaeli, claim party’s future depends on it
Citing ‘deals in the dark,’ Labor party quits judicial overhaul talks with president
In grassroots effort, young Europeans clean ‘stumbling stones’ to gleam like beacons
Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on iTunes, Spotify, PlayerFM, Google Play, or wherever you get your podcasts.
IMAGE: Visitors at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem light memorial candles dedicated to individuals killed in the Holocaust, April 17, 2023. (Yad Vashem)
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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