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Volume XXI, Issue VI | www.thejewishvoice.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts
22 Adar 5775 | March 13, 2015
Mapping Rhode Island Share your local memories in the gallery (401) exhibit BY IRINA MISSIURO imissiuro@jewishallianceri.org
What do you think of when you hear the word “map”? Are you transported to your high school geography class and countless hours of memorization using index cards? To the days before GPS? What if that same word were to stand for more than just a cartographic representation of a location? What if “map” meant intimate memories, dear moments or collections of “fi rsts”? The fi rst time you tried Del’s Lemonade, the fi rst time you saw a
giraffe at a zoo or the fi rst time you swam in the ocean? Capturing these memory maps is what Mapping Rhode Island is all about. You get a blank map of our state, wake up your creative side and get in touch with your inner artist. You know the ability is there; you just have to access it. So pour yourself a mug of hot tea or coffee, and get to work. Better yet, grab some colorful pens and drive to your favorite coffee shop, where you can enjoy the MAPPING |30
PHOTO | MARSHALL H. COHEN, BIG MARSH NEWS PHOTOS
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaking before a joint session of the U.S. Congress on Feb. 3. House Speaker John Boehner (rear left) and Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), who sat in Vice President Joe Biden’s absence, listened as Netanyahu explained his positions regarding the progress of Iran’s nuclear development. More on the speech on page 9.
Who’s who in Israel’s election? A guide to major blocs likely to enter Knesset BY BEN SALES TEL AVIV (JTA) – When Israelis head to the polls for the March 17 elections, 26 parties will be vying for the Knesset’s 120 seats – including such fringe groups as the Pirate Party, which supports total government transparency and freedom of information on the Internet, and the Green Leaf party, which advocates marijuana legalization. Fewer than a dozen, though, are likely to earn the 3.25 per-
cent of the popular vote necessary to enter Knesset. They fall broadly into five major blocs.
Right Wing
Major parties: Israel’s biggest political bloc, the right wing or its offshoots, has led Israel for the past 14 years. The flagship Likud favors a hawkish foreign policy, and most of its lawmakers oppose Palestinian statehood. On economic policy, the party tacks conservative, promoting free markets, privatization of
state industries and reduced regulation. Current polls show Likud running neck-and-neck atop the polls with the center-left Zionist Union, which stands the best chance of unseating current Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. To Likud’s right is Jewish Home, a religious pro-settler party that also favors free market reform. Historically a sectoral party representing Israel’s religious Zionist community, Jewish Home has successfully
broadened its base in recent years by emphasizing its opposition to Palestinian statehood and its efforts to reduce Israel’s high cost of living. Jewish Home is predicted to come in fourth or fi fth in the balloting. Smaller right-wing parties include Yisrael Beiteinu, a faction originally founded to promote Russian immigrant interests that was hit with a major corruption scandal weeks after elections were called last year. Also competing is the far-right
Yachad party, a unification of hard-line Orthodox politicians and West Bank settlers. People to watch: Benjamin Netanyahu, 65, the Likud chairman and current prime minister, is vying for his fourth term. Netanyahu’s campaign has emphasized his strong stance on defense issues and the dangers of a nuclear Iran, but he has drawn intense criticism for his controversial speech to Congress on ELECTION | 12
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