Nostalgia Sunday – 60 Years of Army Radio

One of Israel’s many funny ironies is that its hippest radio station is an army unit. Israel Defense Forces Radio or Galei Zahal — GLZ for short (pronounced galatz) — which officially began transmitting in 1950 after having kept the Jewish public informed during the 1948-9 War of Independence, has traditionally been Israel’s most up-to-date radio station for news, programming and music — even the phone-in traffic watch on subsidiary Galgalatz.

GLZ has had a huge influence on Israeli popular culture as the first station to eschew formal Hebrew in favor of colloquial Hebrew. Some say it created “infotainment” in Israel. It certainly has, for generations, served as an unofficial journalism school for soldiers who’ve gone on to become Israel’s leading lights in news and entertainment. Click here for Y-net’s take on the glitzy, glamorous crowd who came to celebrate the station’s 60th anniversary this past Thursday night, and here for the video on Walla!.

In the spirit of celebrating GLZ’s birthday, there was a day of special programming, that can be accessed online. And the IDF’s English-language website presented a list of Five Facts About Galei Tzahal. They are:

1. Army broadcasts were started by Prime Minister and first Minister of Defense David Ben Gurion following the sounds of celebratory trumpets and the national anthem.
2. Galgalatz, a GLZ offshoot that mainly broadcasts music and traffic reports along with reports by the National Authority on Road Safety, was established in 1994. Today it is the most popular music station on Israeli radio.
3. Galgalatz’s name is a combination of the words galgal (wheel), a link to the issue of road safety and GLZ, its parent station’s name.
4. In 1958, GLZ moved from its original headquarters at the Manchil school in Ramat Gan to Jaffa, where its location remains to this day.
5. For years, GLZ’s chief grammar and semantics editor has been legendary Dr. Avshalom Kor, who teaches courses on proper Hebrew for the station’s new writers and hosts the station’s linguistics corner. Language lessons? Yes! Because GLZ is a division of the IDF Education & Youth Corps.

On its Hebrew site, the station created an online quiz entitled “Test Yourself – What Do You Know About GLZ?” that promises to stump even the most die-hard of fans.

And if you’d like to listen to GLZ or Galgalatz not only do they broadcast online but you can take a live peek into the studio too!

Helping Israel While You Waste Time

January 25, 2009 - 1:31 AM by · 1 Comment
Filed under: Blogging, General, Life, Pop Culture, Technology 

There are some people (lots, actually) who really get into role-playing fantasy type games – nowadays, mostly online. They’re a waste of time, as far as I’m concerned. These are the same people who like thrill rides at amusement parks, I have noticed. Not me; I can’t be bothered with online games (who has time?) and for me, just driving down the highway is enough of a thrill ride!

But helping spread Israel’s message online is something I always have time for. And believe it or not, I discovered an online game that does exactly that! It’s called PMOG, “The Passively Multiplayer Online Game.” Basically, you take on “missions” that entail your surfing through internet in a guided format. The author of a mission assembles web site s/he wants to introduce people to, and you get points for visiting. You can also lay mines at sites, which explode (the screen shakes a little) when a fellow PMOGer surfs to the site (they lose points, too). You can also “leave some love,” ie points, for someone to pick up at the site. There are also associations, merit badges, weapons, defensive measures, etc. – all the “tools of the trade” that you would find on a fantasy game site, except this one takes place all over the internet.user_default

The Israel connection in PMOG comes with the missions members can organize and leave for others. PMOG users who take missions (for which they earn points) are directed to sites by the mission organizers, the idea being that they discover sites – and information – they might not have known. A few enterprising people have built Israel missions. One, called “Israel media,” took me to sites like the Israel Internet Statistics, and a couple of pages about anti-Israel bias in the media. Another mission is sort of an Israel travelogue, taking users to sites describing sites in Israel.

Most of the missions in PMOG, it should be noted, are “fun” missions, like “Wizards and other Magical Beings,” “National Peanut Butter Day,” “Ukeleles,” etc. Of course, a game is supposed to be fun – but this one is educational, too. Why not some missions on Israeli medical advances, or hi-tech stories (I’ve got a couple I could contribute!). PMOG could be an interesting educational tool!

Fred Teng Gets It

January 14, 2009 - 9:58 PM by · 1 Comment
Filed under: A New Reality, coexistence, General, Life, Politics, Profiles, War 

Given the avalanche of hate against Israel on the internet, at anti-Israel protests around the world, and in the media (of course!), it’s easy to believe that “nobody” likes us. By “nobody,” I mean, of course, folks from the wide world. And even if they are willing to overlook our “crimes” in Gaza (no, of course I don’t mean that), they still don’t “get it” – they just can’t understand what we’re up against. missile1

So I wanted to share with you a message I got from a friend who’s in New York right now. There was a big pro-Israel rally this past Sunday, featuring speakers from the Jewish and general community. According to the message I got,

“The most powerful speaker at Sunday’s massive rally for Israel was Fred Teng, president of the Chinese Community Relations Council of NY. His words would have been exceptional even coming from an Israeli — and how much more striking for having come from the heart of a New Yorker and a member of the Chinese community.”

Suffice to say Mr. Teng “gets it.” He’s got Hamas’ number – comparing them to the gangs of big American cities who get their jollies running drive by shootings against innocent people. In the words of Mr. Teng,

“Enough is enough”

“These Qassam Rockets and the people behind them are like Drive-by Shootings. We have to put every gang member away for good, not just the ones that did the shooting. These Qassam Rockets and the people behind them are like a Fire in the Forest, You can’t STOP only half of the fire in the forest, and thinking you will be safe. If your house is next to the fire, you won’t think so. It is not the Qassam Rockets; it is the people behind the Qassam Rockets that we need to go after. This is an epidemic threat to the entire world.

“In the last 60 years, every gesture of peace by Israel only met with escalated violence. Every peace proposal, whether it is multi-lateral, bi-lateral, or uni-lateral was never honored by the terrorists. However, in this time of extreme difficulties, we shall not lose hope. We shall say yes to Peace. We shall say yes to Life. And we shall forever say yes to an eternal Israel Am Yisrael Chai.

Maybe someone should tell this guy we have an election coming up? Sounds like he’d make a good prime minister!

Foto Friday – Behind the lens with Israel Press

January 9, 2009 - 5:47 PM by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Art, Foto Friday, General, Israeliness, Life, War 

If a news photographer does the job right, they will render themselves anonymous. Viewers will focus on the image itself and forget that there was someone who created that image. But there are people behind the lens, often a phalanx of them, roasting in the hot sun in hopes of spotting Madonna, Leonardo DiCaprio and Bar Refaeli or any other visiting or local celebrity; standing around for hours while police drag the Yarkon river at a crime scene; or, as they have for the second week in a row, laying their lives on the line on the Israel-Gaza border.

Getting the shot, however, involves a great deal of hanging out, watching and waiting, and shutterbugs might click off a few shots of their own to stave off the boredom. Often, the subject is the person standing next to them.

tomeriko_gaza_press_by_koko_2Photo credit: Koko

Tomeriko, photo editor and staff photographer at Yediot Aharonot, is also the founder of a Israel Press, a Flickr page where Israeli news photographers upload the pictures they take of one another. Taken as a whole, the pictures document a tiny brotherhood – including a few sisters – of people who know each other very well.

tomeriko_gaza_press_by_koko_4Photo credit: Koko

“I started it because I had a lot of pictures of photographers from all sorts of events and didn’t know what to do with them,” explains Tomeriko. “At first, I thought I would send the pictures individually but I also wanted other people to see them. So I started the Flickr page and uploaded about 1000 pictures. When the other photographers heard about it, they started to send pictures to me. It’s kind of a family album.”

tomeriko_gaza_press_by_koko_5Photo credit: Koko

“It came from boredom,” laughs photographer Gilad Kavalerchik. “If you look at the beginning of the album, you’ll see a lot of pictures from football games and so on. But it’s become a way of having a souvenir of an event.”

Right now is not at all boring and Kavalerchik is running between jobs in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, and the front, where he managed to snap a few such mementos.

tomeriko_gaza_press_by_gilad-kavalerchik_2Photo credit: Gilad Kavalerchik

tomeriko_gaza_press_by_gilad-kavalerchik_1Photo credit: Gilad Kavalerchik

Tomeriko emphasizes that Israel Press is a non-commercial enterprise, and isn’t intended for people to promote themselves or their news organization. He is very careful, however to credit each image, and provide contact information. He’s also divided Israel Press into disciplines – news, sports, camera-persons, reporters and of couse, the celebrity press. (The t-shirt in this photo says “Caution- Paparazzi before you”).

tomeriko_caution_paparazziPhoto credit: Tomeriko

Some of the photos are exercises in photographic composition.

tomeriko_michael-kremer-and-boazPhoto credit: Tomeriko

Sometimes, they are opportunities to try out in-camera effects, as in this picture of veteran photographers Koko and Moshe Shai, at the starting line of the Tel Aviv night run this past summer.

tomeriko_koko-and-moshe-shaiPhoto credit: Tomeriko

Others document the camaraderie of a particular event – like the DiCaprio-Refaeli paparazzi stakeout – where photographers camped out for days. “This is our work. This is our shared experience,” says Koko.

tomeriko_paparazzi_coffeePhoto credit: Tomeriko

tomeriko_paparazzi_readingPhoto credit: Tomeriko

Israel Press is a closed group with membership limited to Israeli photographers both here and abroad. Says Tomeriko: “You have to register to comment. Of course, people are interested in the behind-the-scenes of the media and we want people to see the pictures, but it’s really for us.”

Since the war started, Tomeriko has added some new photos of what the front is like behind the camera. “We’ve gotten some e-mails from people who want to give us encouragement, which is very nice. I posted them on the site.”

Coexistence Exists

January 4, 2009 - 4:38 PM by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Blogging, coexistence, General, History and Culture, Israeliness, Life, Politics, Religion 

It’s no surprise that main stream news is focusing on the current situation in Gaza and southern Israel. Watching CNN’s coverage Israel looks like a battlefield right out of any epic war movie. The images are constantly played over and over again—which means I get worried phone calls from America, over and over again.

But there is more to life than the images on the news. In Jerusalem, all is pretty much quiet. Yes, tensions are high and I feel the added stress, but life is still not the media’s picture of Israel. In fact there is more coexistence happening on a daily basis than most people are aware of.

Here is Jerusalem Jews and Arabs work together building fancy new high rises or the new light rail train across the city. Today I spoke with an Arab-Israeli who was taking a five-minute-break from his moving job. He sat drinking coffee with his co-workers, both Arabs and Jews, and spoke about the weather (the very cold Jerusalem winter) and my dog’s funny looking sweater (I though he might be cold, but the dog clothing thing is just not for me). The point is that small talk still exists—talking still exists and not all forms of communication are from one rocket to another.

On a larger scale, I think back to the recent coexistence projects I filmed in the Israeli mixed cities of Acre and Lod. Again, the news’s projection is all about violence and crime in these areas, rather than focusing on the positive stories taking place.

Most people now think of Acre as that city that had riots this past Yom Kippur. But Acre quickly recovered from the fighting and both sides remain relatively calm during the current military operations. When I was there in November, I didn’t feel tensions, but rather found the coexistence projects’ efforts really taking effect. The Israel21c video below shows some of the projects, sponsored by the Jewish Agency, that are taking place in Acre.
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Last month, I filmed a story about a new coexistence project in Lod. Aviv Wasserman, a native Israeli, founded The Lod Community Foundation about six months ago with the goal of getting this poverty-stricken city back on its feet. Aviv is hardcore, and now lives in Lod where he has set up shop in his apartment. From his office-apartment to monthly meetings, he has built a network of concerned citizens that want to rebuild the city together. Lod is a very diverse city (Jews, Arabs, Russians, Ethiopians, Bedouins, Christians, etc.), but Aviv has managed to have representatives from each community take part in the committees and meetings. Again, you can watch the video below to learn more about his incredible project.
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So, there you have it, the other side of conflict. It does exist, even if it doesn’t make the news.

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