Daily Briefing Nov. 27: Changes to Law of Return & a missed moment for Diaspora Jews
Military correspondent Emanuel Fabian with updates on Jerusalem bombings and violence in Hebron; Diaspora and religion reporter Judah Ari Gross on Minister Nachman Shai’s regrets
Welcome to The Times of Israel’s Daily Briefing, your 15-minute audio update on what’s happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, from Sunday through Thursday.
Military correspondent Emanuel Fabian and Diaspora and religion reporter Judah Ari Gross join Amanda Borschel-Dan on today’s episode.
A second victim from Wednesday’s attack succumbed to his injuries on Saturday, Tadese Tashume Ben Ma’ada. The 50-year-old immigrated to Israel from Ethiopia 21 years ago and leaves behind a wife and six children. Fabian updates us on the status of the manhunt and how on Saturday, police shut a main entrance to Jerusalem after a suspected pipe bomb was found near the Chords Bridge.
On Friday, the IDF suspended two soldiers who physically assaulted and taunted left-wing activists in Hebron, which is the latest in a series of incidents involving the Givati infantry brigade in the flashpoint West Bank city. What exactly happened here?
Early last week, Chief Rabbi David Lau asked the incoming government to revoke the so-called “grandchild clause” of the Law of Return, which grants Israeli citizenship to anyone with at least one Jewish grandparent who does not practice another religion. What are the chances of this happening?
Diaspora Minister Nachman Shai spoke with Gross last week and voiced several regrets. What are his parting words?
Discussed articles include:
Second person dies of injuries days after Jerusalem bombing attack
In false alarm, entrance to Jerusalem briefly shut after suspected pipe bomb found
IDF suspends soldiers for beating and taunting left-wing activists in Hebron
Chief rabbi calls for government to change immigration law to keep non-Jews out
Diaspora minister: ‘Not implementing Western Wall compromise was a historic failure’
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