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#dizengoff
todaycoza · 7 months
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-Priitty Tall Order-
16 February 2024
547 x 2082 Digital Edited
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My Violence Fiend cosplay WIP #chainsawman #chainsawmancosplay #denji #hayakawaaki #pochita #power #makima #nayuta #yoru #asa #violencefiend #galgali #arai #kobeni #cosplay #dizengoff #dizengoffcenter (at דיזנגוף סנטר תל אביב) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cot3EtIDKZZ/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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girlactionfigure · 2 years
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jontycrane · 9 months
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Tel Aviv
The opposite of Jerusalem, Tel Aviv is modern, secular, flat, and filled with scantily clad bronzed beautiful people enjoying its lengthy beaches. It is one of the buzziest cities I’ve ever been to, home to seemingly endless wonderful places to eat, and a constant stream of people walking, running, cycling or scooting around. The main attraction for many are the kilometres of beaches, each with…
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gaiagalit · 2 years
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כיכר דיזנגוף תל אביב (Dizengoff Square Tel Aviv)
photographed by Israel Bardugo
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travelblog · 2 years
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Watched A Rainy Day in New York at LEV Cinemas in Tel Aviv where they offered reserved seating and Hebrew subtitles all for 40 shekels, or $12.
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satellitebroadcast · 24 days
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Resistance News Network: Telegram
In an act of resilience and steadfastness, the young Adam Khazem from Jenin camp fearlessly defies the occupation besiegement and plays anthems on a loudspeaker supporting the resistance as he walks around the streets of the camp. Adam Khazem is the younger brother of the martyr Raed Khazem, the executor of the “Tel Aviv” operation on Dizengoff street from 2022 and the martyr Abdulrahman Khazem who was assassinated in the camp. “I’m Adam Khazem and I have brothers who are martyrs- Raed Khazem and Abdulrahman Khazem. And I’m here to enrage the occupation army. They can’t break us, and they are unable to do anything.”
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jloisse · 3 months
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🟢 Martyr Izz El-Din Al-Qassam Brigades:
The nightmare of the rising of the West Bank, Al-Quds, and the revolutionary cells from the 1948 occupied lands is inevitably coming.
- Abu Obeida 7/7/2024
Note:
On the dial is written Gaza, West Bank (where the bullet is pointing), Al-Quds, and 48.
The signs reads in Hebrew, "Dizengoff Street," a central street in "Tel Aviv" where martyr Raed Hazem carried out an operation in 2022 and where Yayha Ayyash orchestrated operations in 1994.
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Your immigration journey deserves expert guidance! Discover our top tips for selecting the right NJ Immigration Lawyer at Dizengoff and Yost—because you deserve the best support!
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Immigration Lawyer Northeast Philadelphia
If you're seeking to reopen your USCIS immigration case, reach out to the experienced team at the Law Offices of Dizengoff and Yost. Let us guide you through the process of filing Motions to Reopen.
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girlactionfigure · 2 years
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[Breaking News]
9:55pm 3 Wounded in Tel Aviv Terror Attack
An Arab terrorist opened fire in Tel Aviv on Dizengoff street on Thursday evening around 8:40 PM.
He shot 3 people who are in moderate, serious and critical condition.
An off-duty policeman and off-duty soldier shot and killed the terrorist.
Police are searching for a possible second terrorist. The mayor has asked residents to stay indoors as the search.
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The Muqata
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Summary of a Conversation - Erez Biton - Israel/Morocco
Translator: Lisa Katz (Hebrew)
What does it mean to be authentic, to run down the middle of Dizengoff Street and shout in Judeo-Arabic “Ana min el-Maghreb, ana min el-Maghreb”? (I am from the Atlas mountains, I am from the Atlas mountains).   What does it mean to be authentic, to sit in Café Roval in a colorful robe (an agal and a zarbiyah, kinds of clothing), or declaim: my name is not Zohar, I am Zaish I am Zaish (a Moroccan name). Neither this nor that, and nonetheless a different language strikes the mouth until gums crack, and nonetheless spurned and beloved scents pounce and I fall between the chairs lost in the jumble of voices.
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mariacallous · 1 year
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(JTA) — Israeli, observant Jews living in the United States, and especially here on the West Coast, are aware of  the time difference between them and Israel at the beginnings and endings of holidays. While Israel celebrates — or commemorates — meaningful days, I’m behind, still preparing. So unlike my family and friends in Israel who observe Yom Kippur and found out only after their sundown what transpired on Monday in Tel Aviv, I read reports and watched videos of the clash between secular and religious Jews in Dizengoff Square as it unfolded.
Feeling both devastated by the ruining of Yom Kippur prayers and angry at the provocation and manipulation by those who organized the Tel Aviv services, I entered Judaism’s holiest day with a heavy heart and teary eyes.
And yet, in the days since, I also found some reason for hope that this painful moment was a watershed in Israel’s path, in which secular Israeli liberals may claim Judaism on their own terms, despite a religious establishment that sees Orthodoxy as its only legitimate expression.
In brief, Rosh Yehudi (translated “Jewish head”), an organization whose goal is to spread Orthodox Judaism in secular Israel, received approval from the Tel Aviv municipality to conduct Yom Kippur services in Dizengoff Square. These services have been taking place since the early days of the pandemic, and many people — observant and secular alike — attend them. This year the municipality approved the services so long as they would not include a mechitza, a physical divider separating men and women, a decision that the courts supported. The context of the city’s decision was the ongoing assault by the government and its followers (in the name of religion) on the core values of Israeli liberals — specifically gender equality.
Rosh Yehudi declared it would abide by this condition and many people who just wanted to pray came to its services. Yet right after Yom Kippur started, religious activists — supported by the police on site — created a makeshift divider out of Israeli flags. In response, secular protesters, many of them affiliated with the mass movement to protest the government’s efforts to weaken Israel’s judiciary, interrupted the services by whistling, chanting “Shame!” and removing the makeshift divider, ultimately stopping the services. Similar protests of public Orthodox Yom Kippur services took place at other sites throughout Tel Aviv and other predominantly secular cities within Israel.
For decades, Yom Kippur in Israel has been a unique day. Despite a lack of laws regulating the day, no cars are seen on the roads. Praying, biking, walking and talking, observant and secular Jews mix in the streets and synagogues across Israel. But the events of the last nine months in Israel destroyed that fragile harmony.
Israel is once again caught in a war of narratives. Is it a story of Orthodox activists defying the court’s decision and intentionally causing provocation, forcing gender segregation in the bastion of Israeli secularism? Or is it a story about how Israeli liberals, protesters and the left hate religion and religious Jews?
Setting aside the blame game, the events of Yom Kippur raise two sets of questions for Israel’s future. The first is the nature of the Israeli public square as it relates to Israel’s Jewish character. What should be the boundaries of tolerance to illiberal practices such as gender separation when they are a part of a religious practice? Was the city right to limit the traditional form of Orthodox prayer due to the public nature of the space? Were the protesters wrong in not respecting this tradition? Should attempts at the religionization of the public sphere and political climate be ignored or taken into consideration?
The more profound question — and the one that is much harder to answer — revolves around the nature of Judaism itself. Who claims what in the name of Judaism will have lasting repercussions for the future of Israel long after the particulars of this year’s Yom Kippur are forgotten? And to that end, I want to suggest that a possible change is afoot in how secular Israeli liberals see Judaism.
For decades, Israel has been caught in a social dichotomy: right-wingers are seen as conservative and religious or traditional, whereas left-wingers are seen as liberal and secular. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu embraced this dichotomy as early as 1997 when he claimed that the Israeli left “had forgotten what it means to be Jewish.” He doubled down on this view at the end of Yom Kippur this year when he stated, “The leftists had rioted against Jews.”
This dichotomy is also promoted by the Israeli left. About a week ago, former Meretz leader Zehava Galon shared the following post on X: “The problem with Israeli society is the assumption that there is wisdom in Judaism even though it is a manifest of Orthodox Jewish men who weren’t particularly smart. It’s time for us to realize that … their cart is full of inciting and dangerous nonsense, and it’s time we left it on the side of the road.” Galon represents the view of many in the Israeli liberal camp today who say they are ready to abandon Judaism, which they equate with Orthodoxy interpreted in the most extreme way.
Indeed, for decades haredi and Religious Zionist rabbis and politicians in Israel have sought to dictate only one option for Judaism: an uncompromising religious Orthodoxy. This conception profoundly contradicts the values of Israeli liberals, and therefore many like Galon say they reject Judaism in any form. But in doing this, Israeli liberals also allow the most extreme elements within Israeli Judaism to deepen their grip and shape Judaism as they see fit.
As a result, secular Israeli liberals reduce themselves to a marginalized minority within Israeli society, the majority of whose members seek a connection to tradition and Judaism and distance themselves from values that run counter to it. Surveys show that only a minority of the general Israeli public supports the protesters’ actions on Yom Kippur, regardless of the motivations or provocations of the services’ organizers. If faced with an either/or choice between a discriminatory version of Judaism and universalist liberalism, the Israeli majority will choose the former.
For a long time, only a minority of Israelis actively worked against this dichotomy. Liberal Religious Zionist, Conservative and Reform Jews, as well as Jewish Renewal activists, mostly stood alone in trying to create and defend a liberal Israeli Judaism. But in the aftermath of Yom Kippur, this might be changing.
Opposition leader Yair Lapid shared on X that his neighbor didn’t fast on Yom Kippur for the first time in 30 years to spite the other camp. His response was telling: “You lost. You gave them ownership of your Judaism.” He went on to offer the following observation:
We don’t have anything to prove. And we don’t need anyone’s approval that we are good Jews. We have our own version, no less whole. The version that says that we chose to live in this country because we have roots here. That the Bible is our book, that the Hebrew of Ezekiel and Isaiah is the language of our dreams, that we are part of a community that has memories and commitments. We are the flag bearers of a Judaism that is not messianic, not racist, not arrogant and not violent.
Unlike Galon’s view that implicitly rejects all Judaisms because of how Orthodox Judaism is interpreted today by the government and its followers, Lapid offers an alternative vision by laying claim to a more expansive version of Judaism, whether based on beliefs, culture and/or a shared history.
A nascent but growing chorus of voices in Israel is creating just such an alternative. At nearby HaBima Square in Tel Aviv, a Conservative, egalitarian service took place at the end of Yom Kippur. The Neilah prayer that closes Yom Kippur started with 20 participants and ended with 300. Secular neighborhoods in northern Tel Aviv have plans to build a public secular sukkah and conduct egalitarian Hakafot (dancing with the Torah) on Simchat Torah. And as a response to Police Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir’s ultimately abandoned plans for a prayer/provocation on Dizengoff Square, the protest movement offered public, egalitarian prayer on HaBima Square Thursday night, which hundreds attended.
Two days after Yom Kippur, Magi Otsri, a writer and legal scholar and one of the protest movement’s leading online figures, posted a short video that went viral. In it, Otsri notes that Israeli Orthodoxy’s unwillingness to change the halacha of separating men and women during prayer is based on sexist, power-based notions of women created by men. She asserts that in the past biblical rules were easily changed when it suited religious decision-makers. What’s fascinating is that the secular, Tel Aviv-based Otsri uses arguments that were until now only employed by people internal to Orthodoxy (such as religious feminists). Referring to religious mechanisms for bypassing the prohibition on making loans with interest and the religious rules of war, Otsri is not making her argument on strictly liberal grounds but employing the language of Judaism.
Today, more than ever, Israeli liberals are at a crossroads. In the past nine months, they have articulated a Zionism they have embraced and claimed as their own. Will they leave Judaism behind, or will they claim it too?
Given the rate of shocking events in Israel, discerning social trends in Israel from afar can be overwhelming. But amid the conflicting narratives and deafening discourse, I want to encourage those who care about Israel to listen for and encourage the softer and more subtle sounds of Judaism in the words and deeds of Israeli liberals.
The events on Yom Kippur might lead to a self-fulfilling prophecy of a religious war, where Israeli Judaism will be lost to the hands of religious extremists and Israeli liberalism will disconnect entirely from Judaism. Such an outcome is desired by some in both the Orthodox and liberal camps, not to mention the government. But this is not a foregone conclusion, as the words and deeds of Israeli liberals after Yom Kippur reveal. There is an alternative: a more humanistic and pluralist vision of Judaism that Israeli liberals ought to embrace and nurture if they want to win over Israeli society to their vision of the future.
In Jewish tradition, the High Holidays are days of judgment for the past year and a time for resolutions for the coming year. According to tradition, divine judgment starts on Rosh Hashanah, but the verdict is only submitted for enforcement on the last day of Sukkot, or Hoshana Rabbah — to give people every last chance to set a new course.
The events on Yom Kippur were undoubtedly heartbreaking, but we are still only halfway through the High Holidays. There is no better time in the Jewish calendar for Israeli liberals to change the trajectory of Israeli Judaism. As a member of the protest movement posted the day after Yom Kippur, “The protest movement should do for Judaism what it did for the flag. Embrace [it]. Hard.” Instead of blaming the people or groups responsible for the old dichotomy, we just might be witnessing Israeli liberals taking responsibility for a Judaism they believe in.
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daz4i · 1 year
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couldn’t fall asleep yesterday so i thought of like. what sort of relationship i’d have with bsd characters irl. and it’s interesting. here’s my insight
i call tecchou my bungou bestie for a reason bc we would definitely get along. he’s got a lot of things similar to one of my irl besties too - probably the one i’m closest to - so i can like, say it with confidence even
akutagawa also. i’ve had so many besties like him throughout my life. we will meet on thursday in dizengoff center and sit on the floor together until security kicks us out. might get piercings together.
i would fall so hard for chuuya and kunikida. i’d be sooooo down bad for them both. esp kunikida tbh.
chuuya would probably think i’m annoying and try being polite to me at first, but i think will eventually start liking me? at least a little bit. or maybe i just want to hope he would lol
kunikida will adopt an “i can fix him” mindset i think (while originally watching the anime i said i’m like if you put katai and dazai in a blender and i still stand by that. and this is why i think kunikida would try to fix me or at least care abt me in return. this is accurate science trust me)
speaking of dazai. instant enemies. both of us can’t stand people who are similar to us, and, well, we’re similar. lots of passive aggressive jabs and fake niceness. might eventually become friends to talk shit together if we’re forced to be in the same place/social situation for long enough
fyodor would not care much for me at first but i’ll probably think he’s hot and interesting to i’ll play into his ego and we’ll become closer. i’ll let him manipulate me idm. he could hurt me so easily if he wanted but i don’t think he will bc he won’t gain much from it. eventually i’ll get tired of him tho so we’ll stop talking gradually
now. the most interesting thought i had. which is also what started it all. is nikolai. bc like dazai he is also very similar to me, so i probably wouldn’t like him at first. we will have some weird rivalry i think. but then see we understand each other a lot, AND that we see the world in different ways, and this will get us closer. enemies to lovers situation. i’ll become obsessed with him and i hope he will in return too. it will probably go up in flames bc he doesn’t want to be obsessed. lots of drama. no moment of rest with us two god bless
these are all the thoughts i had. hbu besties? who is your bungou bestie? who would you fall in love with irl? who would fall in love with you in return, do you think? do share.
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crypttiraven · 1 year
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I'm here at Dizengoff Center
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italianiinguerra · 1 year
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9 settembre 1940, la Regia Aeronautica bombarda Tel Aviv
Tel Aviv letteralmente “collina della primavera” è una città dalla storia molto recente, venne infatti fondata nel 1909 da un gruppo di 69 famiglie residenti della vicina città di Giaffa, guidati dal futuro sindaco Meir Dizengoff. Il nome della città fa riferimento a un passo della Bibbia,nel Libro di Ezechiele, infatti la “collina della primavera” è proprio il luogo dove nella visione del…
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