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Thailand, Bangkok. Escalator in MBK, an eight-storey marble mall, one of the biggest shopping malls in Asia. October 2006, Photo by Michal Fattal/ Flash90.
Israeli children ride their bikes on an empty treet in Tsour Hadassa neighborhood on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar MUnday 2ct.2006.Photo by Nati Shohat / Flash90
Israeli children ride their bikes on an empty treet in Tsour Hadassa neighborhood on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar MUnday 2ct.2006.Photo by Nati Shohat / Flash90
Ultra orthodox Jewish men check a citron, also known as etrog, for blemishes, in Jerusalem, October 2, 2006. Citron is one of the four items used during rituals on the week-long Jewish holiday of Sukkot. Sukkot commemorates the Israelites´ 40 years of wandering in the desert and a decorated hut or tabernacle is erected outside religious households as a sign of temporary shelter. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi /Flash90
Ultra orthodox Jewish men check a citron, also known as etrog, for blemishes, in Jerusalem, October 2, 2006. Citron is one of the four items used during rituals on the week-long Jewish holiday of Sukko. Sukkot commemorates the Israelites´ 40 years of wandering in the desert and a decorated hut or tabernacle is erected outside religious households as a sign of temporary shelter. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi /Flash90
Orthodox jews check myrtle branches to determine if they are ritually acceptable as one of the four items used as a symbol on the Jewish holiday of Sukkot in the orthodox Jewish neighborhood of Mea Shearim in Jerusalem October 2, 2006. Sukkot commemorates the Israelites´ 40 years of wandering in the desert and a decorated hut or tabernacle is erected outside religious households as a sign of temporary shelter. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi /Flash90
View of the remains of Lifta, Israel on October 02, 2006. During the Biblical and Roman periods, Lifta was known by Nephtoah, the Byzantines called it Nephtho, and the Crusades referred to Lifta with Clepsta. Photo by Haim Shohat /Flash90