Showing posts with label Israel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Israel. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 24

Israel Smartphone Photography: 'All Along the Watchtower, Princes Kept The View...'

(Device: Nexus 5)

Cue Jimi Hendrix... this moody #blackandwhite photo of the ancient Nimrod's Fortress Mamluk (13th Cent.) stronghold in northern #Israel is the first of a series I'll be posting in coming days on making the most of your #smartphonephotography and #mobilephotography. While my main #Smartphone is an #LGV20, these images were shot on a #nexus5x and #Nikon #D750 and edited in #SnapSpeed and #Lightroom, and Lightroom Mobile.


Make sure to follow my channels to get the inside info on how to rock your #androidography #LG #Samsung #Nexus, #iPhone #iphoneography and other #smartphone models: www.davidbrianbender.comhttps://www.instagram.com/davebrianbender/https://www.facebook.com/davidbrianbender

(Camera: Nikon D750/Tokina 11-16)
 (Camera: Nikon D750/Tokina 11-16)
           (Camera: Nikon D750/Tokina 11-16)
 (Camera: Nikon D750/Tokina 11-16)
(Device: I'm shooting with my LGV20, but the photo itself was shot with a Nexus 5)
 (Camera: Nikon D750/Tokina 11-16)
 (Device: Nexus 5)

Sunday, January 8

Tracing Torah: a ‘Seeing Israel’ Smartphone Photo Essay


Torah scroll completion .jpg-204603
As night gathers over the birthplace of Kabbalah, a devout Jewish scribe readies his tools alongside a nearly-completed Torah scroll (Click on the photos to view a full-sized image in a new browser window. All photos: www.davidbrianbender.com, All Rights Reserved. “Behind-the-scenes” photographic notes follow).
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As he prepares, cool, pine-scented air wafts through the painted arches of Safed’s striking 16th Cent. Abuhav Synagogue.
Torah scroll completion .jpg-203908
Mulling the task ahead, Meir Biton carefully scans the Biblical text.
Torah scroll completion .jpg-201813
Torah scroll completion .jpg-203454
Alongside the unrolled scroll awaits a compact, ornately decorated Sephardic-style wooden enclosure.
Torah scroll completion .jpg-201717
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Biton’s ink-stained fingers deftly carve, and then attach a nib to a split bamboo stylus, and he takes a seat at a cloth-covered table along the bima.
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Biton and others present intently study the quality of the hand-lettering, previously prepared by another scribe.
In the sacred silence, Biton whispers an ancient blessing to help focus on his crucial deed; one misspelled letter would invalidate the entire scroll.
Torah scroll completion .jpg-202231

“I have placed God before me, always”
 (Ps. 16:8), emblazoned above the opening to the Aron Kodesh, where the scrolls are kept
This is the second such Torah donated by the Elishkovs of Rishon L’tzion, both occasions marking the Bar Mitzva of sons of the Georgian immigrant family.
Torah scroll completion .jpg-204450

One after another, Biton gently rests the hand of the son, then, father and then guests upon his own, as he repeats the sacred act, painstakingly inking letter after letter.
Each Jew is enjoined to write their own Sefer Torah; this ritual allows them to partner in the holy moment, and become living links in the chain they themselves forge.
Torah scroll completion .jpg-204629
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Pen inks parchment, as the faintly traced Hebrew letters become the last word of the five Books of Moses: Israel.
Torah scroll completion .jpg-210223
After the ceremony, the scroll takes its place among the other scrolls brought over the centuries from locations across the Middle East, back to their ancestral home.
Torah scroll completion .jpg-202012

A synagogue member kisses a Torah scroll, reposing within the Aron Kodesh.
Photographic notes:
My main camera setup is a Nikon D300 and assorted macro to telephoto lenses, however, impromptu opportunities like this prove the dictum that “the best camera is the one you have with you.”
Initially, I’d just ducked into Abuhav earlier for evening services, and hadn’t known of the planned event.
I shot these images with a Samsung Galaxy Note 3, via the Better Camera app. I carefully set the ISO (the sensor’s sensitivity to light), exposure, white balance for the fluorescent lights, and, finally, set macro or standard focus settings, depending on the shot.
But no matter what level camera/smart/phone you may be using, here are two important suggestions:
*Always shoot at the highest resolution possible, so you’ll have more to crop from later.
*Don’t preset in any effects (HDR, “Instagram,” etc.), since they make it near impossible to correct later, and can easily be added in via a stand-alone editing app instead.
Flitting around the action (well, as discreetly as possible…), I tried to get as many angles as possible, at different aperture and focus settings. I tried to avoid the all-too-common Smartphone and DSLR “eye-level-now-everybody-smile-for-the-camera!” shots.
Editing in Lightroom 5, I tightly cropped and vignetted several of the shots, both to draw attention to the specific subject, and to suggest the drama of the moment.
I saved the images in lower-resolution .jpg format, as seen here, as well as far higher .tiff. Both .tiff and in-camera .raw save all the information in the image, thus allowing far great flexibility in editing the image afterward.
I welcome your thoughts and feedback on this first in what I hope to develop into a photo essay series, featuring various sites and events in Israel.
I’ll do my best to share both the story in the photos themselves, and take you behind the scenes of how I got the shots.
In order to foster a two-way dialogue with you, the reader, and beginner and intermediate photographer, feel free to include your photos of the same locales in your comments so we can “contrast and compare” results.
(Click on the photos to view a full-sized image in a new browser window. All photos: www.davidbrianbender.com, All Rights Reserved). Original essay at http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/inking-the-sacred-chain/

Friday, July 8

Israeli Police Deport Two 'Flightilla' Activists to Greece (exclusive photos)


Two Israeli police officers confer at the arrivals hall of Ben-Gurion International Airport early Friday morning, July 8, 2011. (Photo: Dave Bender, All Rights Reserved)

The Israel Police ratcheted down visible security at Ben-Gurion International Airport a notch overnight Thursday, after Israel gave foreign carriers a blacklist of more than 300 suspected hostile, pro-Palestinian activists headed here on flights.

Wednesday, April 13

Jerusalem: Old City (Photo)


Jerusalem Alleyway: Old City
(Dave Bender: All Rights Reserved)

Wednesday, February 9

Egyptian Revolution Blues (Musical Video)

"Political satire - written while riots were still raging in Cairo, 2011." Sandy Cash

Monday, January 10

"Roman Wars Against Cleopatra Instigated By The Jews"

Forget all you've read about Jewish/Israeli plots against the Arab world using vultures, sharks, and spiders and snakes and all the rest of the animal kingdom for that matter. That's all so "old skool." Well, new skool, actually, since it turns out that, according to Egyptian TV, we're ALSO behind this:

"Roman Wars Against Cleopatra Instigated By The Jews"


Day-um! I mean, are we good at this world control stuff, or what?

Me? I prefer this version. It got 100's of percent more truthiness per gram of matza:

Tuesday, June 22

'Israel Okays Plan to Raze Palestinian Squatters' Homes'


Palestinian nationalistic graffiti at the entrance to a home in Jerusalem's Silwan neighborhood. (Dave Bender - All Rights Reserved)

By Dave Bender
The Jerusalem Municipality says it wants to move the residents temporarily during construction, and then relocate them at the same location, but in better housing. The master plan includes replacing roads, water and sewer infrastructure, adding municipal services, hotels, and an archaeological park. Palestinians are skeptical of Israel's promises and intentions. Read more.

Friday, May 14

Single Chinese Woman 'Be-moms' Orphaned Toddler for Israeli Heart Surgery



By Dave Bender, Hao Fangjia
Quan Shiyi, a volunteer of Beijing, China, is caring for a one-year-and-half-old orphan suffering from a life-threatening congenital heart defect.

Gretel, her English name, is 26 years old and unmarried, and had never looked after a baby, even not changed a diaper. But all that changed in 2009 when she met Qian Baoxin at an orphanage in Beijing, where Gretel volunteered as a translator.

There, she learned the meaning of motherhood. Read the rest
.

Sunday, May 9

From Shanghai to Jerusalem: A Jewish Refugee Looks Back

Ninety-four-year-old Sarah Ross of Jerusalem is eyewitness to the birth of two modern nations, both led by ancient peoples: China and Israel. She grew up as a Jewish refugee in Shanghai during World War II, and has lived in Israel since 1948.



Text version.

Wednesday, February 24

Irrefutable Proof the Mossad Was Behind Dubai!


They've started selling the t-shirt:

"SALES OF Mossad-themed T-shirts, available by mail order, have risen tenfold since the Israeli spy agency was linked to last month’s assassination in Dubai.

"Despite the fact that Israeli leaders are refusing to confirm or deny Mossad involvement, orders for the garments have flooded in over the past few weeks – from Israelis and particularly from diaspora Jews."

Also: ¡¡pooɯ ɯıɹnd ǝɥʇ uı ʇǝƃ oʇ ƃuıʇɹɐʇs Heh.

(H-T: EoZ)

Tuesday, February 23

'Debacle or success? Experts doubt Mossad's role in Dubai assassination'

My first published article for China's Xinhua News Agency, datelined Jerusalem (yes, you read that right):
News Analysis: Debacle or success? experts doubt Mossad's role in Dubai assassination

By Dave Bender, Gur Salomon, David Harris

JERUSALEM, Feb. 22 (Xinhua) -- Israeli analysts on the Mossad cast doubt on international reports assuming the legendary spook shop is behind the killing of top Hamas commander, Mahmoud al- Mabhouh in a Dubai hotel room on January 19, and whether the operation was even a success.

Read more.

(The article is a compilation of three stories that I edited together, Gur's, David's, and mine, which was part of a video interview I held this week with Yediot Aharonot intel, and investigative report, Ronen Bergman, on the liquidation and it's aftermath).

Sunday, January 24

Israel: Just Jew it (developing post)

Which is to say that I'm returning to Israel, to resettle after three amazing years working and living here in Georgia among some pretty amazing folks, both in Atlanta and elsewhere, statewide.


Atlanta skyline. (Dave Bender, All Rights Reserved)


Rav Kook wrote:
"When people are asked why they are unwilling to settle in Eretz Yisrael [The Land of Israel] right now, they have all types of cheshbonot - calculations - as to why now is not the time.

One says his chesbon is that his children need to finish school or college; another's chesbon is that he has to vest his pension, and so on.


If we look in the Torah, though, we will see that before the Jewish people entered Eretz Yisrael, they first killed the King of Chesbon.

Once the King of Chesbon is killed, the decision to move to Eretz Yisrael becomes easy."
In more contemporary terms:



This post will be developed and expanded, as I try to get more nuanced feelings about this whole process of being here and there down on pap- 'er, blog...


Sunset panorama outside the Jaffa Gate of Jerusalem's Old City. (Dave Bender, All Rights Reserved)

Comments welcome.

Friday, November 13

Correction: Univ. of Ga. Student Newspaper Revives 'Cheap Jew' Canard

(Correction: the following item is from the University of Georgia's independent student newspaper, The Red & Black, and has no connection to Emory University, as earlier, mistakenly, cited. DB)



Cartoonist Bill Richards' editorial cartoon in University of Georgia's "Red & Black," newspaper on Thursday, November 12, 2009:
http://media.collegepublisher.com/media/paper871/stills/s5nf7pr1.jpg

Shows two Israeli soldiers standing near a barbed-wire and fenced gate, with a sign overhead calling it "Checkpoint Chaim," reminiscent of the Berlin Wall along what could be presumed as the West Bank security barrier.

The letters, "IDF" are written on the back of one soldier, and a word bubble over the other soldier, with a Jewish star on his helmet, says:
"And to think we got all this great stuff on clearance."
Furious letters to the editor are here: http://media.www.redandblack.com/media/paper871/sections/20091113Opinions.html

From one letter, penned by several organizations:
"In the cartoon, there are three clear anti-Semitic overtones: the use of a stereotypical Jewish name in "Checkpoint Chaim", the placement of the Jewish star on the Israeli soldier's helmet and the suggestion that Jews care most about saving money in the caption.

"To the reader: What did these three references add to the political opinion of the cartoon? The slur in the caption takes an edgy, yet legitimate political cartoon and turns it into an ugly smear.
[...]
"Serving and representing the diverse community of the University of Georgia, The Red & Black should exercise extreme caution in their editorial decisions regarding race or religion, especially in the context of editorial cartoons. We call upon the leadership of The Red & Black to publish a retraction and to condemn anti-Semitism on campus."
Other angry replies are here:
http://media.www.redandblack.com/media/storage/paper871/news/2009/11/13/Opinions/Mailbox-3831597.shtml

The Red & Black's reply?:
http://media.www.redandblack.com/media/storage/paper871/news/2009/11/13/Opinions/Editors.Note.On.Editorial.Cartoon-3831602.shtml
"The Red & Black received numerous comments about Thursday's editorial cartoon.

"We would like to clarify that the cartoon was not intended to be offensive or a comment on any one religion.

"This newspaper staff would never condone that kind of hatred, and we hope students on campus stand up against it.

- The Red & Black editors"

Wednesday, September 9

9/11 Audio Exclusive: Reactions in Jerusalem's Old City

On the evening of September 11th, 2001, I visited Jerusalem’s Old City to gather reactions in the wake of the attacks, as a reporter for The Jerusalem Post newspaper. While some Palestinians celebrated, calling it a fitting response to US support for Israel, other Christian and Muslim Arabs were dismayed by the scope of the horror.

Frightened American tourists from Arkansas and Oklahoma scurried through dark alleys of the Muslim Quarter's Via Dolorosa seeking refuge. In the Jewish Quarter, Jewish seminary students from New York watched the fall of the World Trade Center towers in stunned disbelief on a television at a local pizza parlor. Some managed to contact loved ones, but others called in vain, trying to reach family members thought to have been in Manhattan that morning.

Audio podcast: http://www.davebrianbender.com

Sunday, August 9

Video Profile: Women in The Israeli Army ('Current TV')

Current TV (yes that Current TV of North Korean-reporter "fame") take a close-up look at two female soldiers serving in the Israel Defense Forces: one, a combat ground forces medic, and the second a UAV operator in the Air Force:

Sunday, August 2

MadLib Replies to My Readers on Israel



From
Barry Rubin, but applicable to so many situations, especially many of my readers:
Dear Reader: Thank you for your note explaining why

___ Israel is to blame for not having destroyed Hizballah
___ Israel is to blame for not having destroyed Hamas
___ Israel should win total victory
___ Israel should invade the Gaza Strip and take it over
___ Israel is going to collapse because of the demographic gap

___ Israel is doing hasbara all wrong and you have the solution

___ Israel should make its main priority answering all the idiots who attack us rather than going about our business
___ Israel should make huge concessions to the Palestinians just in case they might like to make peace after getting them

___ Israel should make huge concessions to the Syrians just in case they might like to make peace after getting them

___ Israel should let Hamas stage terrorist attacks and not respond to show we are nice people, those of us who are still alive
___ All of the above


I very much appreciate your taking the time to write. Your interest in Israel is very much welcomed by people here.
Given the clarity of your ideas, if you are Jewish, permit me to suggest you:

___ Make aliya and join the army

___ Make aliya and pay taxes

___ Make aliya and have a lot of children

___ Make aliya and find out it isn’t so simple to entertain you and gratify your wishes

___ All of the above


If the above does not apply to you, you aren't Jewish or you are not interested in all those alternatives, perhaps you might consider the need to:


___ Get another hobby

___ Focus on dictatorships in Iran and Arab states to see how they treat people

___ Think what it is like to live under an Islamist regime

___ Do some actual reading and research on the Middle East before mouthing off

___ All of the above

In future, please feel free to write to someone else. Otherwise I will be happy to send you my rates for corresponding with you. We accept checks, cash, and credit cards.
Sincerely yours, Barry Rubin
(For Barry Rubin's blog on Middle East issues, see http://www.rubinreports.blogspot.com where you can also subscribe. or the work of the GLORIA Center including MERIA Journal and subscriptions, http://www.gloria-center.org)

Otherwise, drop me a line at my website, http://www.davebrianbender.com

Monday, June 22

Israeli Policy Advisor on Iranian Jewry's Security & Israel (Updated Audio)


Dr. Eran Lerman (Photo: Dave Bender - All Rights Reserved)

Israel’s incoming Deputy National Security Advisor for Policy, Dr. Eran Lerman, says that while growing riots and unrest in Tehran and other parts of Iran over disputed presidential elections may herald a Persian “Prague Spring,” the outcome for Iranian Jewry may be far less idyllic.

By Dave Bender - http://www.davebrianbender.com

In an hour-long talk given in Atlanta on Tuesday, June 16, Lerman addressed the possibility of sharper, US-led international sanctions to rein in Tehran’s nuclear ambitions in the wake of recent Korean missile tests and suspected Iranian cooperation:

“The dam, if you wish, which has already been cracked by North Korean behavior, will be brought down with another crack in Iran. What will come flooding in is an arms race in the region, and beyond the region which will pose a very real threat that this will soon come to blows — nuclear blows — one thing that any American administration is obliged to prevent from happening.”

Lerman, in a multi-city US speaking tour prior to taking up his new post in July, discussed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s policy speech in the wake of US President Barack Obama’s Cairo address, during a wide-ranging talk given at Congregation Young Israel of Toco Hills.

Turning to historical aspects of the situation, Lerman listed several parallels between Western reactions to Iran’s behavior during and since the 1979 revolution, and the ascent of Nazi Germany before and during WWII:

"Anyone who’s familiar with the internal workings of the Nazi regime would know that it was much more brittle in '38 than it seemed from the outside. This is something that has stuck in my mind since I read [William] Shire’s majestic work — and there’ve been many confirmations of this ever since: the German High Command was convinced that this little, crazy corporal from Munich is taking them to a war in which they will be wiped out — turns out to be true.

"They feared that if the British and French stand up to [Hitler], and the Russians will come in on the side of the Czechs – the Czechoslovak state had a formidable military – and that this combination will be much too strong for Germany to handle. And so they prepared, in case he came back from Munich with war on his hands, to arrest him – and 'terminate his contract,' as they say.… The commander of the German forces had a plan laid out — in detail.

"Instead, the 'genius' comes back victorious. And we paid for this mistake with 60 million lives, [and] six million Jews, and many others."

When this reporter asked about the fate of the estimated 20,000 to 30,000 Iranian Jews remaining in Tehran and other major cities who could be held as hostages against any Israeli military action against the Tehran regime, Lerman, a past deputy chief of the Israeli Defense Forces Intelligence Strategic Planning department, sighed and offered a bit of black humor:

“Look – we have to bitterly joke about these people who were give an opportunity to leave in [19]50, were given an opportunity to leave in [19]70, were given an opportunity to leave in [19]80, and are still there – therefore [the Iranian authorities] will hang them as ‘Zionists.’

“But bitter jokes aside,” Lerman said, “it is an issue,” and cautiously offered an even more bitter prospect – that of Israel being forced to choose between self-preservation and the security of an ancient Jewish diaspora community: “It is simply something that we will have to weigh against the larger [pause] considerations that may involve our very survival [pause] as a people and as a state.”


Go here for more, including audio excerpts of the talk.

(This post's audio & text will be updated - check back soon)

Monday, May 25

Mr. Virtual Crap, Meet Mr. Mideast Fan...

From the JPost:
The upcoming home front drill, Turning Point 3, is based a scenario in which "a combined missile and rocket attack on Israel from all sides combined with terror attacks from within," and is "not a fictional scenario," Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilan'i told members of the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on Monday.

Vilna'i briefed the committee on the state-wide drill, scheduled to begin on May 31. The threat of missiles hitting mainland Israel "is not unrealistic," Vilna'i continued. "If a war breaks out, that is probably what would happen."

Yeah, well alright then.

Trying mightily to unstress as I type in all the tags below... even if I always did appreciate the Israeli penchant for "cutting to the chase," about what's at stake.

Monday, May 18

Gratitude, Ambivalence Over Christians Backing Israel (Exclusive Audio)

This is a radio feature I wrote and produced last year for Georgia Public Broadcasting. I'm posting it now, in it's relevance to today's meeting between U.S. President Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.

Some 2,500 pro-Israel Christians, led by Texas mega-church minister, John Hagee, gathered at an Atlanta-area church in a stirring show of support for the Jewish State. While some American Jews fear a religious agenda behind the bear hug of love, Israelis appreciate someone in their corner in a hard and hostile world.

Wednesday, May 13

The Pope in Israel: Great Live Radio Interview Wrap

Colleague Judy Lash Balint offers a great wrap-up on the Papal visit to Israel, and Palestinian Authority areas with veteran Seattle radio host Dave Ross on KIRO Radio, the CBS affiliate in the Pacific NW.

Listen here.

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