r/Israel 1h ago

Ask The Sub Is it safe to say you’re from Israel in the US?

Upvotes

I made aliya from Russia a few years ago. Due to the recent raise in antisemitism in the world I usually say that I’m from Russia when I travel to western Europe or muslim countries just to be safe. Do such precautions make sense when traveling to the US as well?


r/Israel 2h ago

Politics Colombia to withdraw from ICJ case against Israel

Thumbnail
timesofisrael.com
182 Upvotes

r/Israel 3h ago

Travel & tourism✈️ What are good places to hike in Israel?

5 Upvotes

Hey, guys! My boyfriend and I are staying in Israel until September and we were wondering about some chill and nice places to hike. We are NOT professionals, but we still want to get some kind of adventure. We already planned to go to the Haifa Red Canyon, any other places we should visit?


r/Israel 3h ago

Politics Government changes environmental regulations so Ben Gvir can put crocodiles in Ketziot Prison

Thumbnail x.com
72 Upvotes

r/Israel 4h ago

Politics Perhaps, one of the most hard-hitting speeches by any U.S Politician (Marko Rubio) since Ronald Raegan was just delivered. Israel and the wider global effect are in play in his speech here (disregard the first 5 seconds)

10 Upvotes

r/Israel 7h ago

History📚 This day in history, July 17, 2002: Like in so many other days, we remember and mark yet another brutal Palestinian terror attack. Five were murdered and around 40 wounded when two Palestinian Islamic Jihad suicide bombers detonated explosives packed with nails on Neve Sha’anan Street in Tel Aviv

Post image
157 Upvotes

r/Israel 8h ago

The War - News ‘I’m not an Israeli agent’: Karim Khan accuser breaks silence - Sarah, a Malaysian Muslim ICC staffer, describes repeated alleged assaults by Karim Khan, says a U.N. probe supported her claims and denies acting on Israel’s behalf

Thumbnail
ynetnews.com
246 Upvotes

r/Israel 10h ago

General News Israel heads to election on October 27 after Knesset dissolves itself

Thumbnail
ynetnews.com
76 Upvotes

"The Knesset dissolved itself overnight between Thursday and Friday, setting Israel’s next election for October 27 after lawmakers approved an amendment to the Party Financing Law in its second and third readings."


r/Israel 14h ago

General News Israel to produce its own JDAM bombs en masse within two years

Thumbnail
jpost.com
271 Upvotes

r/Israel 17h ago

Self-Post Paying taxes in israel question

7 Upvotes

We made aliyah and live in israel but i travel to the US for work and make my full salary in the US. I file taxes in the US.
Do i still need to file taxes in israel?


r/Israel 18h ago

Culture🇮🇱 I am Ex-Muslim Bangladeshi. I believe your country has every right to thrive and prosper.

192 Upvotes

Hi,

I am 1.5 generation living in US and I Believe in self-determination for both side of the land. I believe Israel has every right to self-defense, and self-protect.

:)


r/Israel 21h ago

Music 🎶 יובל רפאל - יידלק האור

Thumbnail
youtu.be
13 Upvotes

r/Israel 21h ago

General News Knesset passes controversial media overhaul law in final legislative push

Thumbnail
timesofisrael.com
92 Upvotes

"The Knesset votes 53-48 to pass Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi’s sweeping media overhaul, in the final part of the coalition’s legislative blitz before the Knesset dissolves tomorrow ahead of the October 27 election.

The law will significantly expand government control over Israel’s broadcast media and news sector by overhauling media regulation, removing longstanding oversight mechanisms, minimum journalistic standards, obligations to invest in original Israeli productions and restrictions on cross-ownership, while giving the government greater influence over television ratings and state advertising allocation.

Critics argue the legislation is designed to dismantle existing safeguards and benefit broadcasters aligned with the current government.

The current version of the bill is the product of repeated revisions following resistance from coalition partners. Earlier proposals included a government-run streaming app allowing the public to watch television channels and sports broadcasts free of charge, but the provision was dropped after opposition from the ultra-Orthodox Shas and United Torah Judaism parties, which objected because the service would operate on Shabbat.

It also includes new provisions reportedly demanded by Noam MK Avi Maoz, restricting cable and satellite providers from broadcasting content involving violence, sexuality or religious conversion.

The legislation has drawn sharp criticism from the Knesset’s professional legal staff, Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara and opposition lawmakers, who argue that it would undermine press freedom and enable political interference in the media while decrying what they describe as a rushed legislative process that repeatedly bypassed normal parliamentary procedure.

They accuse the coalition of ignoring legal advice, introducing substantial last-minute changes and new provisions throughout the committee process, and giving lawmakers only hours to review revised versions of the legislation before voting.

The coalition is advancing the bill as one of a series of controversial measures it is seeking to enact before the Knesset dissolves, after securing the support of its ultra-Orthodox partners in exchange for passing legislation they had demanded, including a Basic Law declaring Torah study a foundational value of the state and a temporary law freezing the arrests of Haredi draft dodgers."


r/Israel 23h ago

Ask The Sub Charter flights for elections.

30 Upvotes

As it was mentioned in the recent post, there may be some charted flights offered to bring people to vote in the upcoming elections from abroad.

Does anyone have more information about those charters, who organizes them and how to sign up ( East coast/Eastern Canada)?

EDITED:
Thank you, user asinantenna:
https://www.aid-coalition.org/flyvote-heb


r/Israel 1d ago

Culture🇮🇱 לחבר שלי יש מישומה הרבה יותר אנימות בנטפליקס ממני אף על פי שאין לו VPN, מישהו יודע אם יש עכשיו קונצים בנטפליקס באזור?

6 Upvotes

לא סגור על האם להעלות את השאלה כאן אבל אני מניח שזה קשור להגבלות אזוריות


r/Israel 1d ago

Israeli Tech 🛰️ Looking for a career mentor in the Israeli tech industry

8 Upvotes

I’m a full-stack developer working at an Israeli tech company. I have several years of experience, but lately I’ve been feeling that I’m not developing professionally as much as I’d like.

My current workplace gives me quite a lot of free time, which I use to work on a side project with friends. I’m learning a lot from building it, especially around AI tools, product development and shipping an actual app.

At the same time, I feel like my current company is falling behind when it comes to AI and modern development practices. I’m considering moving to a stronger product company, possibly somewhere with a builder culture like monday.com, but I’m still trying to understand the right direction for my career.

I’m not necessarily looking for Reddit to decide whether I should leave my job. I’m mainly looking for an experienced person who could mentor me over time—someone familiar with the Israeli tech market who could help me think through questions such as:

  • What types of companies and roles I should target.
  • Whether to focus on frontend, full-stack or AI-related development.
  • What I should learn in my free time.
  • How and when to prepare for interviews.
  • How to balance career development with building a side project.

Ideally, I’m looking for an experienced senior engineer, engineering manager, director or CTO who understands Israeli product companies and would be open to a call every few weeks. I’m also open to paid mentorship.

Does anyone know where I could find someone like this? Are there Israeli communities, Slack or WhatsApp groups, mentorship platforms or meetups that you would recommend?

I’m posting anonymously because some of my colleagues follow me on LinkedIn.


r/Israel 1d ago

Ask The Sub Rent contract for Olim - does this sound abusive?

13 Upvotes

Hi! My mom and I made aliyah 9 days ago and we're about to sign our first rental contract in Haifa. Since we're new to Israel, we'd love to know if this looks like a standard lease or if there are any red flags. It's just so hard to know if we are being taken advantage of as olot.

Main terms:

- ₪3,300/month for 1 year

- ₪3,300 security deposit

- 12 post-dated rent checks

- 4 blank checks for arnona, water, gas and electricity

- Promissory note (shtar hov) and 2 guarantors

- 90 days' notice if we leave early, and we have to find a replacement tenant approved by the landlord

- Landlord can also terminate with 90 days' notice

- We have to repaint the apartment and repair nail holes before moving out

- Apartment is rented "as is"

Does this sound pretty standard in Israel, or would you try to negotiate any of these terms? Anything here that seems unusual or unfair?

Thanks!


r/Israel 1d ago

The War - News Abraham Accords strike again: Morocco just signed historic deal with Israel to secure Gaza | Analysis: First major Arab power commits troops to post-Hamas Gaza under Trump’s peace framework, shattering Islamist narratives and redefining Middle East security

Thumbnail
ynetnews.com
387 Upvotes

r/Israel 1d ago

Politics Transportation Ministry said discussing ways to thwart arrival of anti-Netanyahu voters ahead of Oct. election

Thumbnail
timesofisrael.com
131 Upvotes

"Senior officials in Likud Transportation Minister Miri Regev’s office are reportedly discussing ways to limit the number of flights coming into Ben Gurion Airport in the days leading up to the October 27 elections in order to thwart the arrival of voters for parties opposed to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The effort comes against the backdrop of several initiatives working to help fly Israelis in for the election. The initiatives are nonpartisan, but Regev’s associates believe that those seeking to take advantage of the opportunity are overwhelmingly opposed to Netanyahu and could number in the tens of thousands.

The politically motivated conversations have disturbed Transportation Ministry bureaucrats, a source closely familiar with the matter tells Haaretz.

Ideas discussed have included preventing charter flights from landing at Ben Gurion — or at least limited the number of them, two senior sources say.

Regev’s associates have also noted the continued presence of US military refueling planes at Ben Gurion Airport, which have taken parking spots away from other planes.

While Israel has managed to limit the number of planes to 20, they may well still be parked at Ben Gurion Airport in October, given that US President Donald Trump could decide to wait to authorize a major strike against Iran until after the November 3 midterms.

Parking spots are prioritized for Israeli airlines, followed by foreign airlines and only then charter flights, which are expected to be the main method of transportation used by those seeking to help Israelis fly back for the election. Those flights are not slated to be free, though.

The Transportation Ministry did not respond to Haaretz’s request for comment on the matter."


r/Israel 1d ago

General News Malaysian PM: Israeli nationals found in Malaysia will be deported immediately

Thumbnail
malaymail.com
276 Upvotes

r/Israel 1d ago

General News ‘Modern palace’ seeks billionaire: Inside Israel’s highest-priced, $210m mansion

Thumbnail
timesofisrael.com
47 Upvotes

r/Israel 1d ago

Politics Germany opposes EU trade embargo on West Bank settlements, freezes latest attack against Israel

Thumbnail
jpost.com
192 Upvotes

r/Israel 1d ago

General News Knesset approves law expanding gender segregation in academia

Thumbnail
timesofisrael.com
137 Upvotes

"The Knesset voted 52-43 early Thursday morning to pass a law to expand gender segregation in higher education by permitting universities and colleges to offer segregated master’s and doctoral degree programs subject to approval by the Council for Higher Education.

The law builds upon a 2021 High Court ruling that upheld the Council for Higher Education’s policy permitting limited and specific gender-segregated undergraduate programs aimed at integrating ultra-Orthodox students into higher education and, ultimately, the workforce.

The court stressed that the arrangement was specifically intended for the Haredi community and imposed safeguards, including limiting segregation to classrooms in mixed institutions and prohibiting discrimination against female lecturers.

The new legislation would extend that framework to master’s and doctoral programs and make it available to all students, not only the Haredi community, while a proposed amendment by Shas MK Yossi Taieb to expand segregation to additional areas of campuses was rejected.

Proponents frame the law as increasing educational opportunities for religious women, with the legislation’s sponsor Otzma Yehudit MK Limor Son Har-Melech arguing the legislation will “advance women from sectors that have not received the opportunities they deserve,” while committee chair and Religious Zionism Zvi Sukkot has said it would “expand freedom of choice.”

Opposition lawmakers and academic representatives, who campaigned intensely against the law’s passage, argue that it unnecessarily expands gender segregation beyond existing arrangements, prioritizing religious rights over the rights of female students and lecturers to equality, dignity and freedom of movement while harming academic freedom and the quality of teaching and research.

The law was among several pieces of legislation that Haredi parties demanded be passed in exchange for supporting key coalition bills before the Knesset dissolves on Friday ahead of elections in late October, with MKs earlier this week approving laws restoring the Chief Rabbinate’s exclusive control over kosher certification, banning the arrest and prosecution of ultra-Orthodox draft dodgers and declaring Torah study a foundational value."


r/Israel 1d ago

Culture🇮🇱 How much of a threat are conservative Jews to Israel?

0 Upvotes

non Israeli here, heard Benny Morris talking about the demographics problem that Israel faces.

something about the number of ultra conservative Jews increasing to the point the will be the majority and thus have voting power to make all the decisions.

at which point the liberal character of israeli will start to change. is this true? is it a real threat?


r/Israel 1d ago

Politics US House defeats amendment to end Israel aid, but nearly 50% of Democrats back measure

Thumbnail
timesofisrael.com
221 Upvotes