A kosher paradise: Traveling as an observant Jew in Dubai
The Emiratis have a high sense of customer service and think of everything.
The Emiratis have a high sense of customer service and think of everything.
"It’s impossible that the UN continues with its hypocrisy in budgeting billions for 'Palestinian refugees' but won’t recognize the hundreds and thousands of Jews who were murdered and whose property was plundered in Arab countries," says Israeli Ambassador to the UN Gilad Erdan.
This sensitive question occupies many Jews in the Persian Gulf. Jews from Kuwait say, "The Kuwaiti public isn’t anti-Israel, it has no problem with Jews." In contrast, others in the Gulf estimate that "in Qatar, Dubai’s rival, there is potential that they will sign agreements with Israel."
Small steps could lead to big things as part of genuinely striving for peace in the Middle East. "It’s already clear that other countries are in contact with Israel in an attempt to break new ground," Israeli historian says.
The Emirati Alsharif and the Israeli Haddad, who are both Arabs, met at a Holocaust Memorial Ceremony in a Muslim country, and have been working for two years "to produce a new reality."
With an increasing number of signs in Hebrew on the streets and markets, Hebrew courses for local tour guides, and master’s degrees in Hebrew, the holy Jewish language is apparently taking Morocco by storm.
The Association of Gulf Jewish Communities has also arranged for the shipment of 775 pounds of matzot to be distributed throughout Gulf Cooperation Council states, representing a nearly 20% increase as compared to Passover last year.
The Association of Gulf Jewish Communities is shifting its focus away from an influx of Israeli tourists and towards the more permanent future of a Jewish presence in the Gulf region.
Yosef Bugnum el-Hamali from Abu Dhabi learns from Tel Aviv via Zoom: "When talking in Hebrew with an Israeli, the dialogue and the dynamic becomes harmonious." Isma Al-Atawi from Bahrain, with a BA in Hebrew Language and Literature, has already managed to teach 40 students from Arab countries in the academy that she founded.
Manama cemetery is the only Jewish burial ground still operating the Arab Gulf region.
The first issue of Israel Hayom appeared on July 30, 2007. Israel Hayom was founded on the belief that the Israeli public deserves better, more balanced and more accurate journalism. Journalism that speaks, not shouts. Journalism of a different kind. And free of charge.
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