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  • ULTRA ORTHODOX JEWISH
    Kobi Gideon
    boy
    Daily life
    jerusalem
    jewish
    kid
    kids
    meah shearim
    Neighbourhood
    play
    ultra orthodox
    young
    Ultra-Orthodox Jewish children run in the street of the religious neighborhood of Mea Shearim, Israel, on 02 September 2008. Some 1.5 million children in Israel began the new school year 01 September.Photo by Kobi Gideon / FLASH90
  • ULTRA ORTHODOX JEWISH
    Kobi Gideon
    boy
    Daily life
    jerusalem
    jewish
    kid
    kids
    meah shearim
    Neighbourhood
    play
    ultra orthodox
    young
    Ultra-Orthodox Jewish children run in the street of the religious neighborhood of Mea Shearim, Israel, on 02 September 2008. Some 1.5 million children in Israel began the new school year 01 September.Photo by Kobi Gideon / FLASH90
  • ULTRA ORTHODOX JEWISH
    Kobi Gideon
    boy
    bus
    Daily life
    jerusalem
    jewish
    kid
    kids
    meah shearim
    Neighbourhood
    play
    snapshot
    ultra orthodox
    young
    Ultra Orthodox Jewish kid looks on in a bus, at the street of the Jewish neighborhood of Meah Shearim in Jerusalem. on Sep 02, 2008. Photo by Kobi Gideon / FLASH90
  • ULTRA ORTHODOX JEWISH
    Kobi Gideon
    boy
    bus
    Daily life
    jerusalem
    jewish
    kid
    kids
    meah shearim
    Neighbourhood
    play
    ultra orthodox
    young
    Ultra Orthodox Jewish kids look on from a window of a bus, in the street of the Jewish neighborhood of Meah Shearim in Jerusalem. on Sep 02, 2008. Photo by Kobi Gideon / FLASH90
  • RIGHT WING ACTIVISTS
    Michal Fattal
    Beit Zafafa
    Itamar Ben Gvir
    Israeli flag
    right wing
    Right wing activists Itamar Ben Gvir and Baruch Marzel are stoped by the police as they try to reach the elementary school of Beit Zafafa in order to place there a new Israeli flag instead the one that was burned yesterday, before the visit of Israeli president Shimon Peres, September 02, 2008. Photo by Michal Fattal /FLASH90
  • RIGHT WING ACTIVISTS
    Michal Fattal
    Beit Zafafa
    Itamar Ben Gvir
    Israeli flag
    right wing
    Right wing activists Itamar Ben Gvir and Baruch Marzel are stoped by the police as they try to reach the elementary school of Beit Zafafa in order to place there a new Israeli flag instead the one that was burned yesterday, before the visit of Israeli president Shimon Peres, September 02, 2008. Photo by Michal Fattal /FLASH90
  • RIGHT WING ACTIVISTS
    Michal Fattal
    Beit Zafafa
    Itamar Ben Gvir
    Israeli flag
    right wing
    Palestinian
    activist
    donkey
    palestinians
    A Right wing activist offers an Israeli flag and argues with a Palestinian man at the entrance of Beit Zafafa in Jerusalem, September 02, 2008. Right wing activists Itamar Ben Gvir and Baruch Marzel were stoped by the police as they tried to reach the elementary school of Beit Zafafa in order to place there a new Israeli flag instead the one that was burned yesterday, before the visit of Israeli president Shimon Peres. Photo by Michal Fattal /FLASH90.
  • RIGHT WING ACTIVISTS
    Michal Fattal
    Beit Zafafa
    Itamar Ben Gvir
    Israeli flag
    right wing
    Right wing activists Itamar Ben Gvir and Baruch Marzel are stoped by the police as they try to reach the elementary school of Beit Zafafa in order to place there a new Israeli flag instead the one that was burned yesterday, before the visit of Israeli president Shimon Peres, September 02, 2008. Photo by Michal Fattal /FLASH90
  • RIGHT WING ACTIVISTS
    Michal Fattal
    Beit Zafafa
    Itamar Ben Gvir
    Israeli flag
    right wing
    A Right wing activist hangs Israeli flags at the entrance of Beit Zafafa in Jerusalem, September 02, 2008. Right wing activists Itamar Ben Gvir and Baruch Marzel were stoped by the police as they tried to reach the elementary school of Beit Zafafa in order to place there a new Israeli flag instead the one that was burned yesterday, before the visit of Israeli president Shimon Peres. Photo by Michal Fattal /FLASH90.
  • MIDEAST ISRAEL PALESTINIANS
    Michal Fattal
    Beit Zafafa
    Palestinian
    donkey
    palestinians
    An old Palestinian man rides on a donkey at the entrance of Beit Zafafa in Jerusalem, September 02, 2008. Right wing activists Itamar Ben Gvir and Baruch Marzel were stoped by the police as they tried to reach the elementary school of Beit Zafafa in order to place there a new Israeli flag instead the one that was burned yesterday, before the visit of Israeli president Shimon Peres. Photo by Michal Fattal /FLASH90
  • ISRAEL FINLAND
    Michal Fattal
    Yad Vashem
    Holocaust Memorial museum
    Finland Foreign Minister
    Alexander Stubb
    Finland's Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb (R), accompanied by Dr. Robert Rozett, looks up at the photographs displayed in the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial museum in Jerusalem, on September 02, 2008. Photo by Michal Fattal / FLASH90.
  • ISRAEL FINLAND
    Michal Fattal
    Hall of Names
    Yad Vashem
    Holocaust Memorial museum
    Finland Foreign Minister
    Alexander Stubb
    Finland's Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb looks up at the photographs displayed inside the 'Hall of Names' in the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial museum in Jerusalem, on September 02, 2008. Photo by Michal Fattal / FLASH90.
  • ISRAEL FINLAND
    Michal Fattal
    Hall of Names
    Yad Vashem
    Holocaust Memorial museum
    Finland Foreign Minister
    Alexander Stubb
    Finland's Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb puts on a Kippah before entering the 'Hall of Remembrances' at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem, on September 02, 2008. Photo by Michal Fattal / FLASH90.
  • ISRAEL FINLAND
    Michal Fattal
    Hall of Names
    Yad Vashem
    Holocaust Memorial museum
    Finland Foreign Minister
    Alexander Stubb
    Finland's Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb rekindles the eternal flame, commemorating the six million Jews killed by the Nazis in the Holocaust, in the Hall of Remembrance at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, on September 02, 2008. Photo by Michal Fattal / FLASH90.
  • ISRAEL FINLAND
    Michal Fattal
    Hall of Names
    Yad Vashem
    Holocaust Memorial museum
    Finland Foreign Minister
    Alexander Stubb
    Finland's Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb (R) lays a wreath in the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial's 'Hall of Remembrances' in Jerusalem, on September 02, 2008. Photo by Michal Fattal / FLASH90.
  • ISRAEL FINLAND
    Michal Fattal
    Hall of Names
    Yad Vashem
    Holocaust Memorial museum
    Finland Foreign Minister
    Alexander Stubb
    Finland's Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb (L), accompanied by Dr. Robert Rozett, looks up at the photographs displayed inside the 'Hall of Names' in the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial museum in Jerusalem, on September 02, 2008. Photo by Michal Fattal / FLASH90.
  • GHAJAR
    Hamad Almakt
    Arab
    border
    controversial
    Ghajar
    muslim
    sign
    stop
    village
    Ghajar is an Alawite village on the Hasbani River and on the border between Lebanon and Israel. August 2, 2008. Prior to the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, this village was in Syria. When Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria in 1967, Ghajar remained as "no man's land" for two and a half months until its food reserve ran out. Lebanon refused to take control of the village as it was in 1967 totally in Syrian territory. Eventually the village's leaders negotiated with the Israeli authorities and accepted living under Israeli rule. In 1981 most villagers agreed to become Israeli citizens. In the 1978 South Lebanon conflict, Israel invaded and occupied southern Lebanon. The northern half of the village thus came under Lebanese control. There is an Israel Defense Forces checkpoint at the entrance to the village from Israel, and a fence surrounding the entire village, but there is no fence or barrier dividing the Israeli and Lebanese sides of the village. Hezbollah uses the Lebanese side of the village as a base to spy on Israel, and has also tried to attack Israeli soldiers from the area several times. Photo by Hamad Almakt/ Flash 90.
  • GHAJAR
    Hamad Almakt
    Arab
    border
    controversial
    Ghajar
    muslim
    sign
    stop
    village
    Ghajar is an Alawite village on the Hasbani River and on the border between Lebanon and Israel. August 2, 2008. Prior to the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, this village was in Syria. When Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria in 1967, Ghajar remained as "no man's land" for two and a half months until its food reserve ran out. Lebanon refused to take control of the village as it was in 1967 totally in Syrian territory. Eventually the village's leaders negotiated with the Israeli authorities and accepted living under Israeli rule. In 1981 most villagers agreed to become Israeli citizens. In the 1978 South Lebanon conflict, Israel invaded and occupied southern Lebanon. The northern half of the village thus came under Lebanese control. There is an Israel Defense Forces checkpoint at the entrance to the village from Israel, and a fence surrounding the entire village, but there is no fence or barrier dividing the Israeli and Lebanese sides of the village. Hezbollah uses the Lebanese side of the village as a base to spy on Israel, and has also tried to attack Israeli soldiers from the area several times. Photo by Hamad Almakt/ Flash 90.
  • RAMADAN
    Abed Rahim Khatib
    Candy
    palestinian
    ramadan
    sweet
    traditional
    vendor
    palestinians
    A Palestinian vendor displays traditional sweets for sale on the second day of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan on September 02, 2008. Photo By Abed Rahim Khatib/ Flash 90
  • PORT WORKERS DEMONSTRATION
    Yossi Zamir
    Demonstration
    labor court
    man
    Port worker
    Port workers demonstrate in front of labor court in Jerusalem. September 2, 2008. National Labor Court Judge Steve Adler last night ordered the Ministry of Finance not to include new port reforms in the 2009 economics arrangements bill that it will distribute to the ministries tomorrow, at least until the next hearing on the subject on September 21. He also ordered the port workers to return to regular work, after a week of disruptions, which included hundreds of workers abandoning their posts last night to hold a demonstration outside the courthouse. Photo by Yossi Zamir / Flash 90.
  • PORT WORKERS DEMONSTRATION
    Yossi Zamir
    Demonstration
    labor court
    man
    Port worker
    Port workers demonstrate in front of labor court in Jerusalem. September 2, 2008. National Labor Court Judge Steve Adler last night ordered the Ministry of Finance not to include new port reforms in the 2009 economics arrangements bill that it will distribute to the ministries tomorrow, at least until the next hearing on the subject on September 21. He also ordered the port workers to return to regular work, after a week of disruptions, which included hundreds of workers abandoning their posts last night to hold a demonstration outside the courthouse. Photo by Yossi Zamir / Flash 90.
  • PORT WORKERS DEMONSTRATION
    Yossi Zamir
    Demonstration
    labor court
    man
    Port worker
    Port workers demonstrate in front of labor court in Jerusalem. September 2, 2008. National Labor Court Judge Steve Adler last night ordered the Ministry of Finance not to include new port reforms in the 2009 economics arrangements bill that it will distribute to the ministries tomorrow, at least until the next hearing on the subject on September 21. He also ordered the port workers to return to regular work, after a week of disruptions, which included hundreds of workers abandoning their posts last night to hold a demonstration outside the courthouse. Photo by Yossi Zamir / Flash 90.