Daylife Select
A point & click tool to create dynamic content portals. Learn More »
There is no pinned content in this Editor's Picks module.
Click here to learn more about content pinning.
Nearly four years after he suffered a 'significant stroke,' all of which time he has been in a coma, the government of Israel is still paying for a car and driver and many other perquisites for former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Full Article at Israel Matsav
(IsraelNN.com) The Ometz organization for Clean Government and Social and Legal Justice wants to know why the government is still paying for Ariel Sharon’s car and driver, given that he is bedridden and unconscious. Full Article at Arutz Sheva
Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon looks through a pair of binoculars which still have the lens caps on during a visit to Adam military camp near Tel Aviv January 7, 2002. View Photo »
I think the idea that it is possible to continue keeping 3.5 million Palestinians under occupation–yes it is occupation, you might not like the word, but what is happening is occupation–is bad for Israel, and bad for the Palestinians, and bad for the Israeli economy
(IsraelNN.com) The Ometz organization wants to know why the government is still paying for Ariel Sharon’s car and driver, given that he is bedridden. Ometz asks: "Why should he receive a car and a driver, when he doesn’t use them? Full Article at Arutz Sheva
A new book, Where Heaven and Earth Meet: Jerusalem's Sacred Esplanade is an antidote to extremism about the holy city's Temple Mount, revered by Jews as site of the biblical temples and sacred to Muslims as the site of the al-Aksa mosque. Full Article at The Scotsman
For decades, under Menachem Begin, Yitzhak Shamir, Binyamin Netanyahu and Ariel Sharon, the Likud was the ideological and practical partner of the settlement enterprise in the West Bank. Full Article at Jerusalem Post
FILE - In this Feb. 10, 2003 file photo, Assaf Ramon, right, sits with his family, right to left, siblings Tal, Yiftah and his mother Rona who holds her daughter Noah, alongside Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, far left, during a state memorial cere... View Photo »
An important characteristic of the Israeli economy ... is its ability to withstand crises. That was seen, for example, during Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's illness, when Hamas took power in the Palestinian Authority, and other events, during which the economy continued to function well and show impressi...
Driving south of Tel Aviv on Israel's coastal highway, you can't miss them: hundreds of single-family homes with red-tiled rooftops, built among green fields. Getting closer, you notice the temporariness of the neighborhood. Full Article at Newsweek
I would have to guess that this is obvious to most Israelis, but for those of you abroad may find it enlightening. Full Article at Israel Matsav
There are no results for this module. Edit this module to change the search term used to query Wikipedia
Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon looks through a pair of binoculars which still have the lens caps on during a visit to Adam military camp near Tel Aviv January 7, 2002.
View Photo »FILE - In this Feb. 10, 2003 file photo, Assaf Ramon, right, sits with his family, right to left, siblings Tal, Yiftah and his mother Rona who holds her daughter Noah, alongside Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, far left, during a state memorial ceremony at Ben Gurion International A...
View Photo »Israeli Foreign Minister and Kadima party leader Tzipi Livni (C) sits in front of a huge portrait of former Israeli premier Ariel Sharon at her party's election campaign headquarters in Petah Tikva near Tel Aviv on Febuary 10, 2009.
View Photo »Israel's Foreign Minister and Kadima party leader Tzipi Livni (C) addresses supporters in front of a picture of former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon during a campaign event in Tel Aviv February 8, 2009.
View Photo »An election campaign poster of Israeli Foreign Minister and Kadima party leader Tzipi Livni is reflected on the windows of a bus in Jerusalem on February 8, 2009. Israeli voters are choosing a new government in an election on February 10 that is expected to return the right wing to power.
View Photo »People campaign for Israeli Defence Minister and Labour party leader Ehud Barak in Jerusalem on February 8, 2009. Israeli voters are choosing a new government in an election on February 10 that is expected to return the right wing to power.
View Photo »Israelis walk past a torn election campaign poster of Avigdor Lieberman, leader of the far-right Yisrael Beitenu party, in Jerusalem on February 8, 2009. Israeli voters are choosing a new government in an election on February 10 that is expected to return the right wing to power.
View Photo »Israelis walk past a torn election campaign poster of Avigdor Lieberman, leader of the far-right Yisrael Beitenu party, in Jerusalem on February 8, 2009. Israeli voters are choosing a new government in an election on February 10 that is expected to return the right wing to power.
View Photo »People walk past an election campaign poster of Israeli Foreign Minister and Kadima party leader Tzipi Livni in Jerusalem on February 8, 2009. Israeli voters are choosing a new government in an election on February 10 that is expected to return the right wing to power.
View Photo »Israeli Likud party leader and former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) speaks to the media as he meets with locals during a visit to the "Ariel Sharon observation point" in the Israeli settlement of Beit Arieh in the occupied West Bank on February 6, 2009.
View Photo »Israeli Likud party leader and former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks to the media during a visit to the "Ariel Sharon observation point" in the Israeli settlement of Beit Arieh in the occupied West Bank on February 6, 2009.
View Photo »Israeli Likud party leader and former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu visits the "Ariel Sharon observation point" in the Israeli settlement of Beit Arieh in the West Bank on February 6, 2009.
View Photo »FILE - In this Feb. 10, 2003 file photo, Assaf Ramon, right, sits with his family, right to left, siblings Tal, Yiftah and his mother Rona who holds her daughter Noah, alongside Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, far left, during a state memorial ceremony at Ben Gurion International A...
View Photo »I think the idea that it is possible to continue keeping 3.5 million Palestinians under occupation–yes it is occupation, you might not like the word, but what is happening is occupation–is bad for Israel, and bad for the Palestinians, and bad for the Israeli economy
An important characteristic of the Israeli economy ... is its ability to withstand crises. That was seen, for example, during Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's illness, when Hamas took power in the Palestinian Authority, and other events, during which the economy continued to function well and show impressi...
From the Israeli perspective, at least, the Gaza problem was supposed to have been solved in August, 2005, when Ariel Sharon, then the Prime Minister, closed down the Jewish settlements on the Strip and withdrew Israeli forces. The international community and the Israeli left wing applauded the move.
Over the years, a historical Photoshop [rendition] has erased from the public memory figures that were prominent in their protest against Yitzhak Rabin. While no one will forget Prime Minister Netanyahu's photo at the Zion Square, people such as [former premiers] Ariel Sharon, Ehud Olmert and [MK] Tzahi...
Mr. Ayalon is a former captain in the Israeli army who served as foreign policy adviser to prime minister Ariel Sharon and as Israel's ambassador to the United States from 2002 to 2006.
demand that we implement a simple and clear policy against the Islamic Movement. In Ariel Sharon’s first government, Raed Salah was tried and sat in prison… If we show weakness towards him and towards other Arab imams who incite to violence, this will bring upon us even worse riots in the future.
There are no results for this module. Edit the module to change the search term used to query Twitter.
