Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Monument to the Negev Brigade

On one of the weekends we made a trip to the Beer Sheva area to see the Monument to the Negev Brigade created by a famous Israeli architect Dani Karavan. Beer Sheva is the capital of architectural style called brutalism and this monument is a great example of the style.
Eighteen separate concrete elements symbolize Palmach Negev Brigade that fought in the Israeli war for independence. The monument is rather neglected and doesn't have any tourist facilities like bathrooms, water or security guards, however it is still a beautiful and meaningful place to visit. There are two audio stations with info in Hebrew a English. Kids enjoy running around, hiding, climbing the pieces, playing with acoustics and you can take a lot of artistic family photographs.
















Saturday, March 14, 2015

A few interestig facts about Israeli elections...

March 17th. Potentially a crucial day in Israeli history and everyone seems suspiciously calm. I compare it to the 2007 when Obama ran against McCain and Palin, trying to break the long Republican rule and a victory seemed so unrealistic up until the last few months. When some of my friends went door-to-door in New Hampshire trying to convert the state residents one by one. The Hope and Promise won back then, and I now brace for such a miracle here in Israel. Unfortunately most of the people around me are not very optimistic. Many are so disillusioned with the constant changes of governments, wars and high cost of living that they don't believe anything will change no matter who comes to power.

A few interesting facts about our elections:

  1. There is a party that is running under the leadership (OK, spiritual leadership) of a dead person. Rabby Ovadia Yossef.
  2. There is a party advertising itself with only one statement: "Death sentence to the terrorists"
  3. Three letters that each party marks their voting cards with are usually not the letter of the party name. For example Netanyahu's Likud party has מחל, the Zionist Union has אמת  Why make it simple?
  4. Zionist Union is ahead of Likud in the latest polls and this gives us a lot of hope. However their victory still doesn't guarantee that they will be able to build a coalition and form the government. 
  5. Meretz - the truly democratic party in Israel is struggling to get enough votes to pass the threshold of even being considered for Knesset.  Many of their usual voters are strategically ditching the party for Zionist Union to give it a slight lead over Likud.
  6. In a smart move three different Arab parties are running together with projected 13 seats in the Knesset (out of total 120). After the Zionist Union and Likud this is now the third largest party. Will they be invited to the coalition?
  7. We are hopeful because there are some young, brave and smart people in the party lists, like Stav Shaffir from the Zionist Union. Here is the link to her brilliant viral speech (with English subtitles) against the accusation that her party is not Zionist enough. Click on the image:
  8. V15 (Victory15) is a new household name in Israel. It is a grassroots outreach organization created by young Israelis and funded by the US billionaire Daniel Abraham and some other money. It does not affiliate itself with any party but it does call for a change of the current government. "Simply Change" booths and posters like this one could be spotted all around Israel:
  9. 200 current and ex-IDF commanders create an organization and run ads in this weekend's papers saying: "Netanyahu destroyed the US-Israel relationships. Netanyahu failed to uproot Hamas. Netanyahu didn't stop the Neuclear Iran. Real security is more than just words."
  10. Amos Oz, one of the most prominent Israeli writers and a proffesor of literature writes in this Satrday's Haaretz newspaperWe’ll begin with the most important thing, with a matter of life-and-death for the State of Israel: If there will not be two states here, and fast, there will be one state here. If there will be one state here, it will be an Arab state, from the sea to the Jordan River. If there will be an Arab state here, I don’t envy my children and my grandchildren.

Dear friends, please stay with us as we go through these crucial days. What party will get the majority of the votes, whether this party will be able to negotiate a coalition, how long the coalition will last, will the new government be better? For now we are living our Spring of Hope and Promise.

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Anti-Netanyahu Rally, Tel Aviv, Rabin Square, Saturday March 7th






And the best image (borrowed from Haaretz) from the news hot air balloon above the square:

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Hanukkah Flavors

 Hanukkah in Israel is syfganiot (doughnuts) filled traditionally with jelly, in recent years also dulche-de-leche or chocolate.




In Ashkenazim families it is also potato latkes, Here are my, a bit burned. I finally own  a food processor and can shred the potatoes in minutes.



In my husband's Sephardi family of North African origin Hanukkah food are sfinge and fricasse. Fricasse is a fried dough sandwich filled with tuna, pickled lemon, spicy harissa, sweet carrot salad, potato and onion salad and olives.  Sfinge is a sweet treat: rig-shaped fried dough dipped in sugar.






For me any meal is not complete if it doesn't include tahini. I became a tahini freak ever since we returned to Israel making it from the raw state almost daily and ordering any tahini-containing dish at the restaurants. This Hanukkah I learned to make simple and delicious tahini cookies. 


Try it yourself:
3 cups of flour
1 cup of raw tahini from the can
1 cup sugar
baking powder
200 gram soft butter (not salted)

Mix it all, make 40-50 little balls, place them on a parchment paper 2" away from each other, can add a nut on top of each ball, bake for 15 min at 350F (180C). They will still be soft when you take them out and slowly harden. Cool and keep in a sealed container. Enjoy!