| Chairman
of the Executive of the Jewish Agency and the WZO: Sallai
Meridor and Zeev
Bielski.
Director
General of the Jewish Agency: Moshe
Vigdor.
Treasurer
of the Jewish Agency: Shai
Hermesh.
January:
15,000 young Jews from around the world are participating
in short-term programs run by the Jewish Agency and birthright
Israel.
January:
A delegation
of Japanese members of Parliament visit the Absorption Center
in Mevasseret Zion.
January
19: The partnership between the Jewish Agency and the
Foreign Ministry develops a unique online
course to help individuals and communities worldwide promote
a positive image of Israel.
January
23 : A special task
force is set up at the initiative of the Jewish Agency is
launching a program for helping residents of Sderot and the
area deal with trauma.
January
23: The Minister for Jerusalem and Diaspora Affairs,
Natan Sharansky, and JAFI Chairman, Sallai Meridor, release
the annual Israeli Government Report on Global Anti-Semitism
for 2004.
January
25: The Jewish Agency and the Ministry of Absorption
renew the Fund for Immigrant Students Alone in Israel, which
provides students $150 per month to help cover tuition and living
expenses. The program has awarded 4,000 scholarships to new
olim who might otherwise drop out of school because they could
not afford to continue.
January:
The Jewish Agency provides 89 students of Jordan Valley College
with scholarships
totaling NIS 225,000.
February
13: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon decides
to bring the last of the eligible Falash Mura to Israel by the
end of 2007. (More.)
Februar
20 - 22: Board of Governors.
February
21: The cabinet votes that by the end of 2007 around
13,000 Falash
Mura will be brought to Israel.
February
21:The President's
Award for Jewish Education in the Diaspora ceremony takes
place at the President's residence in Jerusalem.
March
3: Max
Fisher, US Jewish leader and founding chairman of the Jewish
Agency's Board of Governors, dies aged 96.
March
4: Some 60,000 French Jews are interested in immigrating
to Israel, according to Bar-Ilan University research conducted
by Dr. Arik Cohen.
March
6: A study carried out by the Hebrew University and
funded by the Jewish Agency reinforces findings suggesting that
there is a drop in support for Israel among U.S. Jews, especially
among youth and university students.
March
15: Nane Annan, wife of UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
and niece of Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg, visits the Jewish
Agency Absorption Center in Mevasseret Zion.
March
17: Following the recent anti-Semitic events in France
and growing reports that Jews are afraid to identify openly
as Jews on the street, the Chairman of the Jewish Agency for
Israel, Sallai Meridor, decides that during his visit to Paris
he will wear a kippa wherever he goes.
March
18: The director general of the Jewish Agency's immigration
and absorption department, Mike
Rosenberg, is asked to step down after more than seven years
heading the organization's flagship department.
March
20 - 24: In conjunction with the Jewish Agency for
Israel’s People-to-People Center over one hundred doctors,
professors, and medical professionals attended the first International
Maimonides Conference on Medicine and Ethics.
March
27: Around 1,000 Jews from France arrive
in Israel on a mission that is to mix solidarity, politics and
soccer.
March
28: An external audit
finds that funds transferred by the Jewish Agency to the World
Jewish Congress were not earmarked for paying the pensions of
WJC employees, but to finance WJC activities.
March
31: Chairman of the Jewish Agency, Sallai Meridor,
welcomes
the High Court decision that those who study for conversion
in Israel and undergo conversion abroad will be recognized as
Jews by the Law of Return.
April
7: The Jewish Agency and the Prime Minister's office
sign a long term contract for Project MASA whereby the government
of Israel will allocate $10 million per year. This commitment
will grow by $10 million a year until it reaches $50M. MASA
will connect and engage a new generation of Jewish leadership
through dramatically increasing the number of students on long-term
Israel programs.
April
12: The Jewish Agency sponsored high school soccer
team comprising Jewish kids, new Ethiopian immigrant youth
and Arab teenagers reaches the final of the Jerusalem High School
League Mayor's Cup.
April
21: The Jewish Agency publishes the Aliyah statistics
for the countries of the former Soviet Union.
April
29: The Jewish Agency's education department recently
publishes a new study program that tries to provide answers
to various questions concerning Jewish demography.
May
10: In a surprise move, Jewish Agency Chairman Sallai
Meridor tells Prime Minister Ariel Sharon that he will step
down at the end of June. An acting chairman will be appointed
at the end of June, after the meeting of the agency's board
of governors, and a permanent chairman will be selected when
the World Zionist Congress meets in the summer of 2006.
May
16: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon names Ra'anana Mayor
Ze'ev
Bielski as his candidate for the leadership of the Jewish
Agency, to replace Salai Meridor. Bielski is expected to serve
as Jewish Agency head for one year, until the end of Meridor's
current term.
May
19: The new Herzl Museum is inaugurated. The complex
on Mount Herzl includes a state-of-the-art museum with the most
modern audio-visual effects, and a Zionist learning center.
Among the artifacts on display are the desk on which Theodor
Herzl wrote "The Jewish State" which was published
in 1896 and documents from the First Zionist Congress held in
Basel, Switzerland between August 29th and 31st 1897.
May
24: With less than three months left to the disengagement,
the Construction and Housing Ministry has chosen Amigur, a subsidiary
of the Jewish Agency, to manage the housing of evacuated settlers
in the Ashkelon-Nitzan area.
May
29: The Jewish Agency launches "MASA",
a new program aimed at bringing 20,000 young Jews to Israel
each year by 2008. (Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's speech
at the opening event.)
June
7: Former minister Natan Sharansky has submitted his
candidacy
for the position of Chairman of the Jewish Agency.
June
15: Efforts are being increased to bring more Ethiopian
immigrants to Israel in what would make up the largest mass
aliya in years.
June
16: A Likud internal court declines a request to prevent
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon from fielding Ra'anana Mayor Ze'ev
Bielski as his candidate for interim chairman of the Jewish
Agency.
June
19: Former Diaspora affairs minister Natan Sharansky
is elected as World Likud's candidate for the post of Jewish
Agency chairman in what is being viewed as an anti-disengagement
statement.
June
20: In a surprise move, the Reform Movement announces
that it is nominating Ra'anana Mayor Zeev Bielski as its candidate
for Jewish Agency chairman, dramatically weakening Natan Sharansky's
chances of being elected to the position.
June
24: The Zionist General Council unanimously elects
Ra'anana mayor Ze'ev Bielski as interim chairman of the Jewish
Agency after former minister Natan Sharansky removes himself
from the race.
June
28: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon speaks
at the Jewish Agency Assembly 2005.
June
28: A beaming Zeev Bielski takes the stage in front
of the assembly of the Jewish Agency for Israel, vowing
to be their emissary to the Jewish people as they elected him
in a unanimous show of hands.
June
30: "The beauty of this place is that it is constantly
busy dealing with long-range issues - about what we can do so
that the Jewish people and the State of Israel will be strong
20 or 30 years from now," comments
departing Jewish Agency chairman Sallai Meridor, on the institution
he has headed for the past six years. (More.)
June
30: Ten percent of North American Jews are interested
in living in Israel, either permanently or temporarily, a comprehensive
market
study ordered by the Jewish Agency discovers.
(Next
Page.)
|
January:
Early fortifications
are uncovered in the Lower Galilee.
January:
Both Israeli chief rabbis, Yona Metzger and Shlomo Moshe Amar,
confirm the religious law which forbids Jews to enter the Temple
Mount.
January:
Orange, the color of the flag of the Gush Katif Regional Council,
becomes the hallmark of the residents of the Gush.
January:
The January unemployment rate stands at 9.9 percent, marking
the continuation of a downward trend that began in January 2004,
Central Bureau of Statistics figures show. Currently, Israel
is home to about 265,000 unemployed.
January
5: A terrorist infiltrates the Erez crossing terminal
in the Gaza Strip, activates an explosive device, hurls grenades
and opens fire. He is killed by an IDF force.
January
9: The Vatican will loan the work of Moses Maimonides,
one of Judaism's most celebrated rabbis and sages, to Israel
this year in a gesture meant to improve relations between Catholics
and Jews.
January
10: Mahmoud
Abbas (Abu Mazen) is confirmed as the winner of the Palestinian
presidential elections. He receives 62% of the vote.
January
10: The vice chairman of Citigroup, Stanley Fischer,
agrees to serve as the next governor of the Bank of Israel.
January
10: Labor-Meimad joins the government. United Torah
Judaism joins the coalition. The Knesset confirms the new unity
government with a 58:56 vote. The left-wing Yachad party supports
Ariel Sharon.
January
12: One Israeli civilian is killed and three IDF soldiers
are wounded when a bomb is detonated as a military vehicle patrols
the route near Morag in the southern Gaza Strip. Two terrorists
are killed by IDF forces. The area is booby-trapped with explosive
devices in addition to the bomb.
January
12: United
Torah Judaism splits into Agudat Yisrael and Degel Hatorah,
reverting back to their original separate parties. The latter
initiated the split at the instruction of its religious authority,
Rabbi Yosef Elyashiv.
January
12: Some 8,000 ultra-Orthodox Jews rally in Tel Aviv.
They launch a petition signed by more than 300,000 people who
have pledged not to shop at stores open on Shabbat.
January
13: A terrorist attack at the Karni terminal crossing
in the Gaza Strip kills six Israelis and wounds five more. Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon suspends the contacts with the Palestinian
Authority.
January
17: Palestinians continue to fire Qassam rockets at
Sderot, with two rockets landing in open spaces outside the
city. Another rocket lands at a local kibbutz.
January
17: The executive committee of the Palestine Liberation
Organization, headed by Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud
Abbas (Abu Mazen), calls on all Palestinian organizations to
cease attacks against Israel. Abu Mazen also steps up talks
between Fatah and the Islamist organizations in the Gaza Strip,
in an effort to agree on a cease-fire with Israel.
January
18: AN ISA officer is killed, an IDF officer seriously
wounded, and four IDF soldiers and three members of the ISA
are lightly wounded in a suicide attack at the Gush Katif junction
in the Gaza Strip. While search procedures are carried out,
the suicide bomber detonates himself.
January
18: The Israeli Aircraft Industries inaugurate a new
business jet, the G150.
January
23: Mahmoud
Abbas secures a 30-day cease-fire from Hamas and Islamic
Jihad.
January
27: Attorney General Menachem Mazuz decides that all
land managed by the Israel Lands Administration, including land
owned by the Jewish National Fund, will be marketed without
discrimination or limits including to non-Jews.
January
28: Israeli and Palestinians meet in Davos,
Switzerland, to discuss the future of the region.
January
29: Israeli satirist Ephraim
Kishon dies, aged 80.
January
30/31: 150,000 - 200,000 opponents of the disengagement
plan take part in a demonstration held in the government complex
between the Prime Minister's Office and the Knesset in Jerusalem.
January
31: Attorney General Menachem Mazuz announces that
the government's decision made in June 2004 to confiscate
East Jerusalem property owned by Palestinians was made without
his knowledge or consent.
January
31: Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz and Mohammed Dahlan
- considered one of PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas' closest advisers
- meet
in Herzliya.
February
1: German President Horst Koehler arrives on a two
day state visit to mark 40 years of German-Israeli diplomatic
ties. He addresses
the Knesset in Hebrew and German.
February
1: The Rafah crossing, the main gateway in and out
of the Gaza Strip for Palestinian travelers, is reopened after
Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz agrees to a Palestinian Authority
request to reopen the border crossing between Gaza and Egypt.
February
1: Attorney General Menachem Mazuz announces that he
is annulling a government decision to apply the absentee property
law to thousands of dunams in East Jerusalem.
February
6: US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice visits Israel. She emphasizes the "dramatic opportunity"
of the historic decision of the planned withdrawal from the
Gaza Strip and the northern West Bank.
February
8: Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon, Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas, Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak and Jordanian King
Abdullah II meet in Sharm
el-Sheikh, Egypt, at a Mideast summit expected to mark a
formal end to more than four years of hostilities between Israel
and the Palestinians.
February
10: Ariel Sharon and Mahmoud Abbas agree
to coordinate the Gaza pullout.
February
10 - 12: Violent clashes between Druze and Christians
in the mixed village of Maghar are sparked by a rumor spread
by a 16-year-old Druze boy that Christian youths had placed
pictures of Druze girls on the internet. Dozens of Christian
businesses are burned to the ground and many Christian families
flee the village.
February
13: Hamas announces it is committed to the terms of
the cease-fire agreed upon with the Palestinian Authority Chairman
Mahmoud Abbas and those announced at the Sharm el-Sheikh summit.
Israel agrees to transfer security control of the West Bank
city of Jericho to the Palestinian Authority.
February
13 - 18: The 22nd International Book
Fair takes place in Jerusalem.
February
14: In an interview with the New York Times, Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas says the war will be over "when
the Israelis declare that they will comply with the agreement
I made in Sharm el Sheik, and today our comrades in Hamas and
Jihad said they are committed to the truce, the cooling down
of the whole situation, and I believe we will start a new era."
February
14: Former Lebanese prime minister Rafik
Hariri is killed with 16 others in a massive bomb explosion
in Beirut. 137 are wounded.
February
15: Dudu
Geva, illustrator and cartoonist, dies of heart failure
aged 54.
February
15: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and some ministers
receive threats
by opponents of the government's plan to remove settlers from
the Gaza Strip and the northern West Bank.
February
16: Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz announces his decision
against granting chief of staff Moshe
Ya'alon an expected one-year extension to his three-year
term, which expires days before the scheduled initial implementation
of the disengagement in July.
February
16: The Knesset passes the enabling legislation for
the disengagement plan by a large majority of 59-40, with five
abstentions.
February
17: Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz orders an end to the
punitive practice of house
demolitions.
February
18: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's son Omri
is charged with fraud and other crimes in the same case.
February
20: Jordan returns its ambassador to Tel Aviv after
four-year absence.
February
20: The cabinet votes 17-5 in favor of evacuating settlements
in the Gaza Strip and northern West Bank. In a separate move,
the cabinet votes 20-1 with one abstention, to approve the route
of the separation fence south of Jerusalem. The government decision
enables Sharon to sign evacuation orders for all the Jewish
residents of the Gaza Strip and the residents of four settlements
in the northern West Bank. The evacuation of about 9,000 settlers
will begin in July and take two months. Ministers Netanyahu
and Sharansky vote against the disengagement plan.
February
22: Israel frees
500 Palestinian prisoners, but 7,500 remain in Israeli jails.
February
24: Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz names Major General
Dan
Halutz as the next chief of staff, the first ever to advance
from the ranks of the air force.
February
24: NATO
Secretary General Jaap
de Hoop Scheffer visits
Israel.
February
24: A new Palestinian cabinet is approved.
February
25: A suicide bomber blows himself up in front of a
nightclub at the beach in Tel Aviv, killing 5 and wounding 50.
The Damascus-based leadership of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad
claims responsibility for the attack. In a videotape made prior
to the suicide bombing, bomber Abdullah Badran declares that
the attack is intended to do harm to the Palestinian Authority,
which he says serves the interests of the United States.
February
25: The Israeli newspaper Yediot Ahronoth reports that
Israel plans to build more than 6,000
new homes in Jewish settlements in the West Bank.
February
25: The Adva Center publishes a report
about the consequences of Israel's occupation policy. The report
says that military spending, the cost of Jewish settlements
to colonize Palestinian land, and the collapse of tourism and
other enterprises because of the two intifada, have severely
undermined the economy and greatly increased poverty.
February
28: Israel claims that the orders for the suicide bombing
in Tel Aviv came from the Islamic Jihad headquarters in Syria.
March
1: The Meeting
on Supporting the Palestinian Authority takes place in London.
Israel does not participate.
March
3: Peter
Malkin, the Mossad agent who nabbed top Nazi Adolf Eichmann
on a Buenos Aires street in 1960, dies in New York. (More
on Malkin.)
March
5: Twenty-four employees, past and present, of Bank
Hapoalim's Hayarkon Street branch in Tel Aviv are arrested in
what officials call the biggest money-laundering case in the
history of the state, thought to involve hundreds of millions
of dollars in the past year.
March
8: Former chief state prosecutor Talia Sasson submits
her report on the funding of unauthorized West Bank outposts
to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
March
8: An Israeli Arab from a village in the western Galilee
is arrested on suspicion of planning a terror attack at the
Knesset building.
March
8: Israeli women live longer, study more, earn less
than men (more).
March
9: Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz and PA Chairman Mahmoud
Abbas meet
at the Erez crossing in Gaza.
March
9: Palestinian militant factions agree to cease all
attacks within the Israel's pre-1967 borders.
March
10: Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz meets with Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak in Sharm el-Sheikh for talks on Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations and implementation of the disengagement from Gaza.
March
10: Law enforcement officials will not open an inquiry
or criminal investigation against Shas spiritual leader Rabbi
Ovadia Yosef, following statements he made about Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon in his weekly sermon.
March
10: The Jasser Palace Hotel-Bethlehem Intercontinental,
located a few hundred meters south of Rachel's Tomb that was
forced to close shortly after it opened in 2000 is getting ready
to welcome tourists again.
March
12: Hamas says it will run candidates in July's elections
for the Palestinian legislature. The move ends a 10-year boycott
of elections.
March
13: The government votes 18-1 to approve the recommendations
in attorney Talia Sasson's report
on the illegal outposts and set up a ministerial committee to
deliver a detailed proposal for action within 90 days.
March
13: A group of anti-disengagement protesters block
the Ayalon's northbound lanes between Hashiva and Kibbutz Galuyot
junctions with burning tires. Demonstrators take to the other
side of the highway as well, causing further traffic snarls.
March
16: Police arrest six settlers in the southern Gaza
Strip who riot and try to block the Gush Katif junction to Palestinian
traffic.
March
16: The new museum in Yad VaShem is inaugurated.
Dignitaries from 40 countries attend the ceremonies.
March
16: The Knesset passes the enabling
legislation for the disengagement plan by a large majority of
59-40, with five abstentions.
March
16: Students at Tel Aviv University protest against
cuts to the higher education budget.
March
16: Oscar Abu Razek
is appointed director general of the Interior Ministry. He is
the most senior civil servant within the Arab sector.
March
16: Israel begins preparations to finally hand over
security control in Jericho to the Palestinian Authority, moving
one of the checkpoints near the city further north to allow
Palestinian traffic access to Ramallah.
March
16: Lawyer Khaled Mahamid opens the first Arab institute
for Holocaust research and teaching.
March
17: Some 40 yeshiva students from a West Bank settlement
attack a group of eight Palestinian laborers, wounding at least
three of them. Settlers also attack Palestinians in Hebron.
March
17: Egyptian Ambassador Assem Ibrahim arrives in Tel
Aviv more than four years after Cairo recalled its most senior
representative in Israel.
March
17: The IDF Southern Command issues a military order
prohibiting Israeli citizens who do not reside in the Gaza Strip
settlements from relocating to that area.
March
18: Conductor Gary
Bertini dies, aged 77.
March
20: About 10,000 people attend a rally in support of
disengagement at Dizengoff Square in Tel Aviv.
March
20: The Defense Ministry completes an extensive aerial
photography operation detailing the location and expansion of
each settlement and outpost in the West Bank.
March
21: Marine biologists and maritime police spend the
day attempting to help return to the open sea a pod of dolphins
that entered the Haifa harbor by mistake.
March
21: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon calls on the cabinet
to increase government funding for medication and medical procedures
by NIS 150 million, nearly doubling the current NIS 200 million
allocation.
March
22: Disengagement protestors burn tires and block the
Coastal Road at the Poleg junction near Netanya for about half
an hour, prompting huge northbound traffic jams.
March
23: Libyan leader Muammar
Gadhafi grabs the spotlight at an Arab summit, calling Israelis
and Palestinians idiots for seeking separate states and saying
the UN Security Council was a terrorist organization.
March
23:
Thousands of Students from universities from all over the country
demonstrate at Haifa University during which 15 students and
are arrested for attempting to block a nearby road.
March
28: The 11th Arthur Rubinstein International Piano
Master Competition
opens in Tel Aviv.
March
28: The Knesset plenum rejects
the bill on the disengagement referendum by a vote of 72 to
39.
March
28: Jose Mourinho, world-famous soccer player, visits
Israel in a peace
mission.
March
28: Israeli businessman Arnon Milchan will donate USD
100 million to advance the project of a university in the Galilee.
This is the largest amount of money ever donated by a private
individual in Israel.
March
29: The Knesset approves the state budget by a 58-36
margin, with one abstention, averting the government’s
fall and clearing the final hurdle before the disengagement
plan’s implementation.
March
29: The human rights organization Btselem publishes
its report
about the Gaza Strip.
March
29: The government plans to build another 3,500 housing
units in the area known as E-1, between Jerusalem and Ma'aleh
Adumim, and thus obstruct the territorial contiguity needed
for a Palestinian state, something Sharon has already agreed
on.
March
31: The High Court rules that those who study for conversion
in Israel and undergo conversion abroad will be recognized as
Jews by the Law of Return. Orthodox leaders condemn the ruling.
March
31: A survey finds that about 80 percent of Israelis
watch television every day; more than half own two or more television
sets.
April
3: The graves of former prime minister Yitzhak Rabin
and his wife Lea in the national cemetery on Mount Herzl in
Jerusalem are defaced. Vandals erase their names from the tombstones
and spray painting the words "murderous dog" on Yitzhak
Rabin's grave.
April
5: The Jewish proportion of Israel's population is
expected
to drop by some 10 percent by 2025 to about 70 percent of the
total population, the Central Bureau of Statistics announces.
April
5: 70 mayors from 32 countries visit Israel for the
23rd Jerusalem Conference of Mayors.
April
5: During his third visit in the region, Hollywood
actor Richard Gere meets Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. He also
holds talks with Palestinian leader Abu Mazen and Minister Ehud
Olmert.
April
6: The Peace
Index for March shows that the disengagement plan - which,
as in the past, enjoys majority support and is given high chances
of implementation - is not the end of the story, but only a
first step toward a larger evacuation of Jewish settlements
in the West Bank in the framework of the permanent agreement
with the Palestinians.
April
8: Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz says that Israel
should consider not demolishing the evacuated buildings in the
Gaza Strip, with the exception of synagogues (due to fears of
their potential desecration) since it would be more costly and
time consuming. This contrasts with the original plan by the
Prime Minister to demolish all buildings which are vacated after
the disengagement plan.
April
9: The train
between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv is back on track.
April
10: Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip fire dozens
of rounds of mortar shells, in what they say is further retaliation
for the killing of three Palestinian youths by Israel Defense
Forces soldiers the day before.
April
11: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon arrives in the US.
He meets President George Bush at his ranch in Texas. Bush opposes
the construction of any new settlements in the West Bank. He
confirms his support for Sharon's plan to withdraw settlers
and forces from the Gaza Strip.
April
11: Leading international Soccer coach Jose Mourinho
agrees to serve as a special envoy for the Peres Center for
Peace and assist in establishing and financing two soccer schools
for Israeli and Palestinian children.
April
11: Sderot Mayor Eli Moyal and Nablus Mayor Hussein
al-Araj meet in Jerusalem and declare they woill attempt to
advance a Hudna (cease-fire) between Israelis and Palestinians.
April
12: Israel Prize laureate Ehud
Manor dies at the age of 64.
April
19: Former Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi Israel Meir Lau is
elected Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv.
April
24: Former president Ezer
Weizmann dies, aged 81.
April
27: Russian President Vladimir
Putin arrives in Israel for an unprecedented state visit
by a Russian - or Soviet - head of state.
April
28: Israeli director Dani Menkin’s "39
Pounds of Love" is awarded the best documentary prize
at the Palm Beach International Film Festival .
May
1: Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrives
in his first-ever visit to the country, which is being viewed
by Israel as a return to "business as usual" between
the two countries. Major arms deals between the two allies are
among the issues on the agenda.
May
1: Stanley Fischer, one of the world's leading economists
and former deputy chairman of the Citigroup banking and insurance
corporation, is sworn in as governor of the Bank of Israel by
President Moshe Katsav. Fischer, an American citizen, officially
becomes an Israeli citizen, when he receives his national identification
card at the Interior Ministry in Jerusalem. He will serve as
central bank governor for the next five years, having been chosen
for the post by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Finance Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu four months ago.
May
2: Minister of Diaspora and Jerusalem Affairs, Natan
Sharansky, submits his resignation. In his letter to Sharon,
Sharansky notes he opposed the disengagement plan from the outset
based on the belief that "every concession in the peace
process on the part of Israel must be conditioned on democratic
reforms on the Palestinian side."
May
3: Police Commission Moshe Karadi hands over to the
Yad Vashem Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority
the sheet of fingerprints taken from Adolph Eichmann during
his interrogation in Israel in 1960-61.
May
5: The Israeli public learns that a few days before
her death last June, songwriter, poet and Israel Prize laureate
Naomi Shemer confessed to a friend that she had based the melody
to her renowned song from 1967, "Jerusalem
of Gold", on a Basque lullaby.
May
5: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon participates in the
"March of the Living" at the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination
camp in Poland, to mark Holocaust Remembrance Day.
May
5: Four Israeli-Arabs, including three Knesset members,
express their sympathies for victims of the Nazi Holocaust during
Israel’s national Holocaust Remembrance Day and say Jews
and Arabs must learn to combat prejudice that still exists between
them today.
May
9: The beginning of the evacuation of settlements is
officially pushed back from July 20 to August 15, so as to not
coincide with the Jewish holidays of the Three Weeks and Tisha
B'Av.
May
12: Israel celebrates the 57th Independence Day.the
country’s population is estimated to stand at about 6.9
million residents, according to Central Bureau of Statistics
figures. About
5,260,000 Jews currently live in Israel, comprising 76 percent
of the total population, alongside about 1,350,000 Arabs, who
comprise approximately 20 percent of the population.
May
16: A protest by opponents of the disengagement from
the Gaza Strip is held throughout the country, with the protesters
blocking major traffic arteries throughout Israel. The protest
is sponsored by "HaBayit HaLeumi", and is hailed by
them as a success, with over 400 protestors arrested, half of
them juveniles.
May
19: Actor and photographer Leonard
Nimoy visits Israel.
May
20: Batya
Gur, one of Israel's most perceptive writers and critics,
dies aged 57.
May
21: Israeli actress Hanna Laslo receives the best actress
award at the Cannes Film Festival for her role in the latest
film of Israeli director Amos Gitai, "Free Zone."
May
22: American First Lady Laura Bush tours the Middle
East to promote democracy and the status of women.
May
23: Khaled Mahameed, an Israeli Arab in Nazareth opens
the first Holocaust
Museum, geared to an Arab audience.
May
24: The Tel Aviv district committee for planning and
construction approves the proposed subway route in Tel Aviv,
overriding a previous plan that called for a street-level train.
May
26: About 1,000 Gush Katif families have signaled their
readiness to leave Gaza and accept a Government-organized mass
relocation package.
May
26: The Israel Defense Forces plan to call up close
to 8,000 reservists for the implementation of the disengagement
plan, from mid-August until approximately mid-September.
May
26: British Lecturers overturn their decision to boycott
Haifa and Bar-Ilan universities.
May
26: Organizations representing Holocaust survivors
reject Bank Leumi's offer to pay NIS 35 million immediately,
as an advance on funds which belonged to Jews who perished during
WWII, a reversal of the bank's former policy.
May
26: In a joint press conference with PA Chairman Mahmoud
Abbas, US President George
Bush states his expectations vis-a-vis the Roadmap: "Any
final status agreement must be reached between the two parties,
and changes to the 1949 Armistice lines must be mutually agreed
to. A viable two-state solution must ensure contiguity of the
West Bank, and a state of scattered territories will not work.
There must also be meaningful linkages between the West Bank
and Gaza. This is the position of the United States today, it
will be the position of the United States at the time of final
status negotiations."
May
27: A young Palestinian man who allegedly plans to
launch a suicide bomb attack inside Israel is arrested by the
Israel Defense Forces in the Nablus area.
May
27: Dozens of Nitzan residents and members of the Green
Course environmental group hold a rally to protest the constructing
of facilities in Nitzanim that will host evacuated Gaza settlers
after the pullout.
May
29: The "Trojan Horse Affair" shocks the
Israeli business world. Leading private investigators planted
“Trojan Horse” spy software in the computers of
high-profile Israeli companies in a bid to sell privileged information
to competitors.
May
30: Sephardi Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar decides to recognize
the members of India's Bnei Menashe community as descendants
of the ancient Israelites. Amar also decides to dispatch a team
of rabbinical judges to India to convert the community members
to Orthodox Jews. Such a conversion will enable their immigration
to Israel under the Law of Return, without requiring the Interior
Ministry's authorization.
May
30: President Moshe Katsav arrives in Germany to mark
40 years of diplomatic relations during a three-day visit in
which he is to address the German parliament.
May
30: 15 families start living in the "Hof Dekalim"
hotel in Gaza which has been turned into a stronghold known
as Maoz Hayam by a pro-Kahane anti-pullout group.
May
31: Israeli TV Channel 2 starts broadcasting "Yoman
Masa" - "Diary of a Journey" ("Land of the
Settlers") filmed by Channel 1 news anchor man Chaim
Yavin.
June:
Orange and blue (or blue-white) ribbons are seen everywhere
in Israel. On the orange side are Jewish settlers and their
supporters. On the blue side are the peace activists.
June
1: Egyptian officials prevent author Ali Salem from
traveling to Israel to receive an honorary doctorate from Ben
Gurion University in Beer Sheva.
June
1: Dan
Halutz takes over as new Chief of Staff of the Israel Defense
Forces.
June
2: Israel releases 400 Palestinian prisoners.
June
3: The staff at the Israeli embassy in Uzbekistan and
their families are instructed to leave the country owing to
heightened security concerns.
June
4: Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas postpones
the elections which should have taken place in the middle of
July.
June
6: Two Jews are injured during violent clashes on the
Temple Mount. Israeli police officers face down hundreds of
stone-throwing Palestinians outside the Al-Aqsa Mosque, as Jews
visit the site on the anniversary of the capture of the Old
City and East Jerusalem during the 1967 war.
June
7: Thieves steal Israel's first-ever Olympic gold medal,
won by windsurfer Gal Fridman in the 2004 Summer Olympics, during
a break-in at his family home in Karkur.
June
7: Heads of the teachers organizations and representatives
of the education and finance ministries are to meet at the National
Labor Court in Jerusalem, where they will be asked to report
progress in their negotiations.
June
7: Qassam rockets are fired at Sderot.
June
8: A synagogue is opened at Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial
Museum in Jerusalem as part of the new museum to give relatives
of Holocaust victims a place to say Kaddish, the prayer of remembrance
for the deceased.
June
9: An expanded panel of the High Court upholds the
government's plan to withdraw from Gaza and parts of the West
Bank, removing a major legal obstacle to the pullout. The 11-judge
panel headed by Chief Justice Aharon Barak also determines that
"Judea and Samaria [West Bank] and the Gaza area are lands
seized during warfare, and are not part of Israel."
June
9: The first ever Rehovot Conference opens, to examine
Israel's science policy. However, there is not a single woman
among the 30 dignitaries invited to the inauguration.
June
11: The Defense Ministry delivers the first two "luxury
trailers" for Gaza Strip evacuees to a site near the Negev
community of Nitzan. Hundreds more of these wider-than-usual
mobile homes are set to arrive over the coming weeks and form
the basis for a new neighborhood that will be built to house
some of the evacuees.
June
11: Windsurfer Gal Fridman receives his stolen Olympic
gold medal back, after it was found the day before.
June
12: America imposes sanctions on Israel because of
selling weapons to China.
June
14: Israeli researchers have germinated a sapling date
palm from 2,000-year-old seeds, saying their research could
lead to the discovery of new medicines that will benefit future
generations, one of the scientists leading the project say.
The palm plant, nicknamed Methusaleh after the biblical figure
said to have lived for 969 years, is now about 30 centimeters
tall.
June
14:
Bobby, a two-and-a-half-year-old female penguin, has a new boyfriend.
Over the last 18 months the keepers at The Tisch Family Zoological
Gardens in Jerusalem (the Biblical Zoo) noticed that one of
the male penguins, number 513, was courting her and trying to
impress her. A few months ago, it appears she was finally wooed
and the couple now is "going out."
June
14: Prime Minister Ariel Sharon suffers a defeat during
a debate on corruption in the government. Knesset Speaker Ruven
Rivlin calls for early elections.
June
15: Israel and Egypt agree upon the deployment of Egyptian
troops along the border of the Gaza Strip.
June
16: The Education Ministry fires
2,500 teachers.
June
18: U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urges
Israel and the Palestinians to coordinate the planned Israeli
pullout from Gaza, calling such cooperation "absolutely
critical." She praises the disengagement from Gaza as a
"historic step."
June
18: Anti-disengagement activists staying at Gaza hotel
attack Palestinians bathing in sea; three Palestinians are beaten
while a is fourth shot; terror groups respond with mortar fire.
June
19: The government informs notifies the construction
of 700 apartments in the West Bank, 300 will be in Maaleh Adumim
and 400 in Beitar Illit.
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