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Chairman
of the Jewish Agency: Simcha
Dinitz.
January
1: The first direct flight between Israel and the Soviet
Union takes place. It takes actors of the Tel Aviv Habimah Theater
to Moscow and brings back 125 immigrants to Tel Aviv.
January
23: In a speech in the predominantly Russian neighborhood
of Neve Yaakov, Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir speaks about the need for "a large and strong
Jewish people in a large and strong state." many observers
see this remark as a call to immigrants to settle in the occupied
territories, and as an assertion that Israel must keep the territories
in order to absorb the new immigrants. Soviet Foreign Minister
Eduard
Shevardnadze at once ends the direct flights because, he
says, Israel will not guarantee that the new immigrants will
not settle in the occupied territories.
January:
Israeli officials acknowledge they paid Nicolai Ceausescu's
government 2,000 to 3,000 Dollar for each Jew allowed to emigrate
over the past two decades. Chief Rabbi Moses Rosen would not
confirm the human trade but states: "I suppose it is true."
March:
The flow of immigrants from the Soviet
Union intensifies.
April:
Immigration from the Soviet Union increases. Over 10,000 arrive
during the month of April.
June
12: The 50,000th immigrant of the year arrives.
July
8-18: The rise in immigration, with attendant governmental
measures to provide housing for the newcomers, prompts protests
by native-born homeless families who demonstrate by setting
up tent camps in the centers of various cities.
July:
Over 17,000 immigrants arrive during the month of July.
July:
It is reported that about 15,000 Ethiopian Jews are stranded
in Addis Ababa. About 500 Jews per month had been allowed to
leave for Israel. In the last several months exit visa have
been held up as a way to encourage Israel to supply more military
assistance in the war against insurgents. Israeli officials
say the suspension is a joint decision as Israel is concerned
that non-Jews are among those seeking to emigrate.
September
11: The 100,000th immigrant of the year arrives.
December:
Eleven Jewish families from Albania immigrate to Israel, the
first such immigration in decades.
In
1990 a total of 185,227 Jews leave the Soviet Union for Israel.
New
immigrants in 1990: 199,516.
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January
1-6: A wave of letter bombs reaches Israel from Cyprus
and Greece. No casualties are caused.
January
4: The Habimah
theater performs the play "The Sunset" by Isaac
Babel in Moscow to acclaim.
January
30: The Knesset discusses the Second Channel TV Law.
February
4 : Terrorists attack a tour bus carrying about 30
Israeli tourists near Cairo, killing 11 Israelis and wounding
17.
February:
The US State Department annual report on human rights says that
432 Palestinians were killed in 1989 compared to 366 in 1988
by Israeli security forces or settlers, 128 were killed by other
Palestinians compared to 13 in 1988, and 13 Israelis were killed
by Palestinians in the territories, compared to 11 previously
killed since the Intifada
began. The report concludes that Israeli soldiers continued
to violate rights of Palestinians, causing "avoidable deaths
and injuries."
February
26: The first legal cable TV broadcasting station begins
operations in Rishon LeZion.
February
27 : Poland and Czechoslovakia resume diplomatic relations
with Israel after a 23-year break.
February:
Nelson
Mandela, South African anti-Apartheid leader, meets PLO
Chairman Yasser
Arafat in Zambia. Mandela says Arafat "is fighting
against a unique form of colonialism, and we wish him success
in his struggle."
March
1: US Secretary of State James A. Baker links aid to
Israel to a halt in Jewish settlement in the occupied territories
and demands of Israel
March:
Israel and Bulgaria announce they will resume diplomatic relations
after a break of 23 years.
March:
At a news conference, US President George
Bush states: "The United States does not believe there
should be new settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem."
After protests by US Jewish leaders, the administration issues
a statement that reiterates the long-standing US policy on Jerusalem
- that it must be a united city and its final status should
be determined through negotiations. It does not disavow Bush's
statement.
March
11: A government crisis develops over demands by the
US regarding the composition of the Palestinian delegation to
the peace talks.
March
13: The cable station MTV begins broadcasting in Israel.
March
15 : The 15-month-old coalition government collapses
in a dispute over Arab peace talks. It is the first Israeli
government to fall as a result of a no-confidence vote. Labor
party leader and Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres and Likud leaders could not agree on a peace plan.
The Israeli Knesset dissolves the government. Prime Minister
Yitzhak
Shamir will head the caretaker government.
March:
Former US president Jimmy
Carter visits Syria and then Israel. He says Syrian President
Hafiz al-Assad authorized him to advise Israeli leaders that
Syria was willing to open peace talks and negotiate the future
of the Golan Heights. Carter accuses Israel of violating Palestinian
rights in the territories. Israeli officials say he privately
told them not to settle Soviet Jews in Jerusalem.
April:
President Saddam Hussein of Iraq says Iraq has advanced nerve
gas weapons and threatens to destroy "half of Israel"
if it attacks his country. He denies Iraq has nuclear weapons.
April
2 : Israel launches its second experimental satellite,
"Ofek II". It can last about two months before it
falls back to earth.
April
7 : 150,000 Israelis rally in order to demand a change
in the electoral system.
April
10: Yasser Arafat makes a statement in a Lebanese newspaper:
"I want to say clearly, open fire on the new Jewish immigrants,
be they Soviet, Falasha or anything else. It would be disgraceful
of us if we were to see herds of immigrants conquering our land
and settling our territory and not raise a finger. I want you
to shoot, on the ground or in the air, at every immigrant who
thinks our land is a playground and that immigration to it is
a vacation or a picnic. I give you explicit instructions to
open fire. Do everything to stop the flow of immigration."
April
22: Two IDF helicopters crash in midair over the Jordan
Valley, resulting in seven fatalities.
April
25: Czechoslovakian President Vaclav
Havel arrives in Israel on a state visit.
April:
150 Jewish settlers rent the St. John's Hospice, unoccupied
buildings owned by the Greek Orthodox church in the Christian
Quarter of Jerusalem's Old city. Palestinian and Christian clerics
close holy sites in protest. After a denial, the government
acknowledges that it secretly cofinanced the rental. The Israeli
Supreme Court will order the settlers to leave the buildings.
April:
Acting Prime Minister and Likud leader Yitzhak Shamir is asked
by President Chaim
Herzog to form a government after Labor party leader Shimon
Peres fails to do so.
April:
President Chaim Herzog calls for changes in the nation's electoral
system. "How can citizens watch calmly the present political
phenomena revealing a total contempt for the principles of democracy?"
May
16: The Israeli and Soviet Union soccer teams face
each other for the first time after a break of 34 years. Israel
wins in a game in Ramat Gan, 3:2.
May
20 : Ami Popper, an Israeli gunman who was dishonorably
discharged from the army, kills 7 Arabs laborers and wounds
11 in Rishon LeZion. He is apprehended, and Israeli leaders
condemn the attack. Riots erupt in the territories and more
Arabs are killed.
May
28: An explosive device planted in the Mahane Yehuda
market in Jerusalem causes 1 fatality and 9 wounded.
May
30: The navy foils a major terrorist attack when it
detects the approach to the Israeli shore of two boats carrying
16 terrorists. Four of the terrorists are killed and the rest
captured in a battle at the Nitzanim shore.
May:
At an Arab summit meeting held in Baghdad, President Saddam
Hussein of Iraq threatens to use "weapons of total destruction"
in response to an Israeli attack against Arabs. The main item
on the summit agenda is immigration of Soviet Jews to Israel,
which is denounced as a grave threat to Arab security. Syria
and four other Arab states do not attend the meeting.
May:
Greece establishes full diplomatic relations with Israel.
June:
At a Bush-Gorbachev press conference, Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev threatens to halt the immigration from the Soviet
Jews to Israel unless he is assured they will not be settled
in the occupied territories. Israel responds by saying it has
no plans to settle Soviet Jews in the territories. However,
acting Prime Minister Shamir says a democracy cannot restrict
where people live.
June
11 : Yitzhak Shamir succeeds in forming a new Israeli
government. With 62 votes in the 120-member Knesset, he forms
the first right-wing government since 1984, supported by the
religious parties. Shas leader, Arye
Deri, remains Minister of the Interior. Rabbi Yitzhak
Peretz is reappointed Minister of Immigrant Absorption.
David
Levy is foreign minister, Moshe
Arens is defense minister, and Ariel
Sharon is minister of construction and housing.
June
13 : US Secretary of State James A. Baker criticizes
conditions for peace talks advanced by Israel's new government.
Testifying before Congress, he says, "everybody over there
should know that the telephone number of the White House is
1-202-456-1414. When you are serious about peace, call us."
June:
US President George Bush suspends the 18-month dialogue with
the PLO. He declares the US to be ready to resume talks "any
time" the PLO more clearly condemns the May 30 attempted
attack on the Tel Aviv beaches and disciplines those responsible.
June
20: The Habimah theater performing in East Germany
for the first time, presents "Else" by Motti
Lerner, a play about German-Jewish poet Else
Lasker-Schüler.
July
1: Israel announces that it will free 416 Palestinians
security prisoners as a goodwill gesture in honor of the Muslim
holiday of Id al-Fitre.
July
6-9: Israeli planes attack Hizbollah
targets in Lebanon. The US censures the act.
July
22: Shimon
Peres beats Yitzhak
Rabin in the Labor Party nomination for prime minister in
the next elections.
July
28: An explosive device planted on the Tel Aviv beach
kills a tourist from Canada.
August
2: Iraq
invades and seizes Kuwait. Israel is on full alert.
August
3: Approximately 200 Jewish children from Chernobyl,
Ukraine, site of the nuclear reactor explosion in 1986, are
brought to Israel under the patronage of the Habad Hasidic movement.
August
4: Palestinian terrorists kidnap two teenage boys on
the Ramot road in Jerusalem. Their bodies are found on 6 August.
Several Jews attack Arabs in Jerusalem in response.
August
9: The first test launch of the Israeli Arrow anti-missile
missile is carried out. The missile self-destructs seconds after
the launching.
August
12 : Saddam Hussein says Iraq will withdraw from Kuwait
if Israel agrees to withdraw from the West Bank and Syrian from
Lebanon. The US and Israel reject the "linkage". 300
Egyptian soldiers arrive in Saudi Arabia.
August
30: Iraq threatens to attack Israel. Prime Minister
Shamir warns: Whoever attacks Israel will regret it.
September:
Dr. George Habash, leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine, cuts his ties with Syria and moves his base to
Iraq as a result of Syria's anti-Iraq stance in the Persian
Gulf crisis.
September
5 : An appellate court in New York State denies a request
of the Israeli government to halt publication and sale of "By
Way of Deception: A Devastating Insider's Portrait of the Mossad",
a book written by Victor
Ostrovsky, a former Mossad
agent. Israel alleges that book would disseminate information
that "could endanger the lives of various people in the
employ of the State of Israel." The court actions spurs
book sales.
September
18 : US officials advise Israel that any attack on
Israel by Iraq would result in a vigorous American response
in support of Israel. Among other things, they promise to deploy
two Patriot anti-missile missile launchers in Israel.
September
20: A reserve soldier, Amnon Pomerantz, loses his way
in the al-Bureij refugee camp in the Gaza Strip while driving
to his post and is brutally murdered by a crowd.
September:
Israel and the Soviet Union agree to establish formal consular
ties.
October
1 : Israel announces plans to distribute gas masks
and other chemical warfare gear to the Israeli public.
October
7: A trial distribution of gas masks is carried out
in Yokneam, Ofakim, and Kfar Yona. Nationwide distribution is
scheduled for October 15.
October
8: Dozens of Arabs are killed and over 200
wounded as Israeli police open fire on rioting Palestinians
after they hurled stones from the Temple Mount in Jerusalem
onto thousands of Jews gathered below at the Western Wall to
celebrate the festival of Sukkot.
October
13 : The US gives its support to a proposed UN
resolution condemning Israel for the killing of Arabs on
the Temple Mount and calls for a UN investigation of the event.
The US rebukes Israel for not acting "with more restraint."
October
21: A Palestinian stabs and kills a woman soldier,
a policeman, and a civilian in Jerusalem.
October
28: Brig. Gen. Rami
Dotan of the air force is arrested for accepting bribes.
October:
Saddam Hussein threatens to attack Israel, implying that the
attack would be carried out with long-range missiles.
October:
The US joins the rest of the UN Security Council in deploring
Israel's refusal to cooperate with an investigation by the secretary-general
of the Temple Mount killings.
October:
The Israeli government-appointed panel investigating the Temple
Mount killings blames Muslim clerics for inciting the riot and
justifies the use of live ammunition by the police. However,
it criticizes the police for not averting the violence.
October:
General Mikhail A. Moiseyev, Chief of the Soviet General Staff,
in an interview at the "New York Times" to discuss
the Persian Gulf Crisis says that Israel's bombing of the Iraqi
reactor at Osiraq in 1981 was understandable. "There was
reason for taking the action Israel undertook."
November
1 : UN Secretary-General Javier
Pérez de Cuéllar, reacting to the Temple Mount
killings, suggests a meeting of the 164 nations that signed
the Fourth
Geneva Convention to discuss means of protecting Palestinians
in the West Bank and Gaza.
November:
Israel rejects a UN report suggesting that 164 signatories to
the Fourth Geneva Convention meet to discuss protection of Palestinians
in the territories, saying, "For the 40 years since the
Fourth Geneva Convention was signed there have been dozens of
wars with millions killed and wounded. The international community
has not found reason to convene the signatories even once."
November
2-4: Violent confrontations occur between Palestinians
in the Gaza Strip and the IDF. According to Palestinian sources,
over 150 are wounded.
November
5 : Meir Kahane, 58-year-old founder of the Jewish
Defense League and of the Kach Party in Israel, is assassinated
while speaking in New York. The assassin is alleged to be Egyptian-born
El Sayyid A. Nosair.
November
12: A Palestinian terrorist from Jordan infiltrates
into an IDF outpost in the Jordan Valley and kills the commanding
officer.
November:
Israel invites Jean-Claude Aimee, a senior UN official, to visit
Israel and investigate the Temple Mount killings.
November
25 : An infiltrator slips across the Egyptian border
into Israel and ambushes a bus and three military vehicles,
killing four and wounding 27 Israelis. Two days later, five
Israeli soldiers are killed during fighting in southern Lebanon.
November
27: Five Givati Brigade soldiers are killed in an encounter
with terrorists at Mount Dov on the Lebanese border.
December:
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir meets with US President George
Bush in Washington, D.C., to discuss the Persian Gulf Crisis.
At the conclusion of the two-hour meeting, Shamir states Bush
told him: "There will not be any deal at the expense of
Israel."
December
2: Three Hamas terrorists stab and kill one passenger
and wound three others on a bus traveling from Petah Tikvah
to Tel Aviv.
December
13: A crash of the light IDF plane flying over the
Negev results in the death of four IDF pilots and a woman officer
aboard.
December
14 : Three Israelis are stabbed and killed by Arabs
at an aluminum factory in Jaffa.
December
24: Threats by Iraq against Israel continue. Defense
Minister Moshe Arens warns that if Israel is attacked it will
respond by force.
December
29: At the end of a turbulent day in the Gaza Strip,
the Palestinians report 5 dead and 250 wounded in clashes with
IDF forces.
December:
US President George Bush states he is convinced the US-led coalition
of Western and Arab nations would not fall apart if Iraq attacked
Israel. He also praises Israel for its "low profile position"
in the crisis. "It's not easy. They have their security
they feel could well be at stake from some radical act of Saddam
Hussein."
December:
The US supports a unanimous UN Security Council resolution
criticizing Israel for the deportation of Palestinians. The
text includes Jerusalem in the "Palestinian territories
occupied by Israel since 1967."
December:
Israeli sources report that after three years of Intifada,
Palestinian casualties total 13,017 wounded, 628 killed by Israelis,
and 368 killed by Palestinians. Israeli casualties are 2,880
soldiers wounded, 10 soldiers killed, 1,189 civilians wounded,
and 12 civilians killed. Palestinians held in administrative
detention without charges number 1,076. Palestinians in prison
for Intifada crimes number 9,840.
Inflation
for 1990 drops to 17.6%.
A
golden calf that was an object of worship dating from the 2nd
millennium BCE is unearthed by Harvard University archaeologists
excavating Canaanite ruins near the ancient port city of Ashkelon.
The
four-volume "Encyclopedia of the Holocaust" published
by Yad
Vashem in Jerusalem is edited by Israel Gutman. The editor
of the English edition is Geoffrey Wigoder.
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February:
Austria concludes an agreement with the Committee
for Jewish Claims of Austria which will pay nearly 200 million
dollar in social insurance benefits to about 5,000 Jews who
were 8 to 14 years old when the Nazis annexed the country. The
average pension will be about 3,500 dollar per year and will
be paid for an average of 10 years. In 1987, legislation was
enacted making Jews who were over 14 at the annexation eligible
for such pensions.
February:
Czechoslovakia appoints Rita Klimova ambassador to the US and
Rudolf
Slansky ambassador to the Soviet Union. Both are Jews, and
Slansky is the son of Rudolf
Slansky, former general secretary of the Czech Communist
party, who was hanged in 1952 after a Stalinist show trial.
April:
Over 20,000 Jews celebrate Siyum HaShas, or completion of the
Talmud, at New York's Madison Square Garden. Sponsored by Agudat
Israel, it celebrates the completion of 71/2 years of a page-a-day
study of Talmud by Jews around the world.
April:
East Germany's first freely elected democratic government apologizes
for the Holocaust, ending 40 years of official denial. It accepts
joint responsibility for Nazi crimes, expresses willingness
to pay reparations to victims, and seeks diplomatic ties with
Israel.
April:
A survey of 506 adults in the Moscow area reveals that antisemitism
in the Soviet Union is on the rise. Sponsored by the American
Jewish Committee, it is the first survey to be conducted since
the 1920s.
May:
French President François Mitterand joins about 200,000
silent marchers in Paris who protest antisemitism and the desecration
of 34 graves at a Jewish cemetery in Capentras, in southern
France.
May:
An English-language weekly edition of the "Forward"
begins publication in New York.
May:
The Jewish Theological Seminary of America and YIVO establish
a Jewish studies program at the Moscow State Institute of History
and Archives. Its purpose is to train Soviet students, Jewish
and non-Jewish, in skills necessary to understand and catalog
the vast quantities of Jewish manuscripts now being found in
the Soviet Union.
May
16: American "all-around" entertainer Sammy
Davis Jr., wjo converted to Judaism in 1954, dies.
June:
The Prince
of Asturias Foundation, a private foundation linked to the
Spanish royal family, grants its annual Concord Prize to the
700,000 Sephardic Jews around the world. It is an effort at
reconciliation 500 years after the expulsion of Jews from Spain.
August:
West Germany indicts Josef Schwammberger in the deaths of 3,000
people, mostly Jews, in Poland during WWII while a commandant
of concentration camps. A fugitive for nearly 40 years, he was
extradited in May from Argentina.
October:
A Moscow city court sentences a leader of Pamyat, a Russian
nationalist group, to two years in jail fro disrupting a writers'
forum and shouting, "Kikes, go home to Israel." He
was found guilty of fanning interethnic enmity in violation
of a new law. He sentence will be appealed.
October:
An international commission of experts established to determine
the fate of Raoul
Wallenberg, Swedish diplomat missing since 1945, believes
he may still be somewhere in the Soviet Union's vast penal system.
They are certain, he did not die in July 1947 of a heart attack
in Lubyanka Prison, as was claimed in February 1957 by the then
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko.
December:
Poland's Roman Catholic bishops issue a document condemning
antisemitism and acknowledging that some Poles assisted Nazis
in killing Jews during World War II. The document is to be read
at all masses said on 20 January 1991.
"Das
schreckliche Mädchen" ("Nasty
Girl"), a German film written and directed by Michael
Verhoeven, is a fictional depiction inspired by the factual
experience of Anja Rosmus, who set out to learn what happened
in her hometown, Passau, during the Nazi era, and the ostracism
and harassment she encountered. The film wins an award at the
Berlin Film Festival.
Harry
A. Markowitz, professor of finance at Baruch College of
the City University of New York, and Merton
H. Miller, of the University of Chicago's Graduate School
of Business Administration, are tow of three American winners
of the Nobel Prize in economics.
Jerome
I. Friedman, US physicist, is one of three to win the Nobel
Prize in Physics.
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