Yosi mizrahi biography of michael
Mizrahi, Yossi-Yosef
Ben-Aliza and Michael was born on 5 November 1974 in Jerusalem, a boy in a happy and warm family, a young brother, a good brother and a graduate of Meir, and Yossi, who grew up in his hometown, , Continued his studies at the Ort Neviim School of Accounting, where he was a happy child and was always at the center of the events, he was the “nail of the evening” at every party, without which he had no taste. Yossi was a broad-bodied, tall and powerful man, and he also had a heart. He loved to give of himself to others and when he gave, he was from the bottom of his heart, and in his short life he had two very special periods: first, he had support and support for his mother, and Yossi supported his business and commercial sense, At the beginning of August 1993, Yossi enlisted in the IDF and was assigned to the air force. He was trained to serve on an air force fire team. Yossi was admired and accepted by his friends and commanders alike, and stood out in favor of carrying out the tasks assigned to him and his leadership. On September 17, 1995, Sergeant Yossi Mizrahi was killed in the course of his duty in a work accident. He was twenty-one years old when he fell. Survived by his parents, sister and brother. Yossi was laid to rest in the military cemetery on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem. His family commemorated the entry of a Torah library into a synagogue. “Yossi was a dear and beloved son, and will always remain like this.” Yossi was a great brother, loved and considered, and will always remain like this. In mind, he still supports us and guides us toward happiness and rest.
Mizrahi (surname)
Mizrahi (or Mizrachi) is a sephardic surname, given to Jews who got to the Iberian Peninsula from the east, or Jews who lived on the eastern side of the peninsula. Notable people with the surname include:
- Alon Mizrahi (born 1971), Israeli association football player
- Avi Mizrahi (born 1957), Israeli general
- Baruch Mizrahi, (1926-1948), Muslim convert to Judaism, Irgun fighter
- Elijah Mizrachi (c. 1455–1525), rabbi and author of the supercommentary on Rashi known as The Mizrachi
- Isaac Mizrahi (born 1961), American fashion designer
- Joseph Misrahi (1895–1975), Egyptian Olympic fencer
- Michael Mizrachi (born 1981), American professional poker player
- Moshe Mizrahi (politician) (1950-2022), Israeli politician
- Moshe Mizrahi (basketball) (born 1980), Israeli basketball player
- Moshé Mizrahi (1931–2018), Israeli film director
- Motti Mizrachi (born 1946), Israeli artist
- Offer Mizrahi (born 1967), Israeli association football player
- Rasela Mizrahi, Macedonian politician
- Robert Mizrachi (born 1978), American professional poker player
- Shimon Mizrahi (born 1939), Israeli basketball executive, Israel Prize recipient
- Sylvain Mizrahi (1951-2021), known professionally as Sylvain Sylvain, American rock guitarist
- Togo Mizrahi (1901-1986), Egyptian Film Pioneer
Fictional characters from Xenosaga
See also
Poetics of Identity: Mizrahi Poets between Here and There, Then and Now
Introduction
Background
Founding Fathers of Mizrahi Poetics
Mois Bennaroch - Between Here and There
Technology - Third Millennium Poetry
An Emergent We? Concluding Remarks
Introduction
Rihal Madrid
by Ronny Someck
ma nish-ar mib’itat haga’agu’im
shel rabbi yehuda halevi?
ulay kadur mitgalgel ‘al deshe novel
ben sha’ar hamizrah lesha’ar hama’arav
[What remains of the yearning kick
Of Rabbi Yehuda Halevi?
Perhaps a rolling ball on fading grass
Between the goalpost of the East and the goalpost of the West.]1
What remains of the past once people leave their homeland and make Aliyah - ascend to the Land of Israel? Ronny Someck takes the yearning of millennia - sung on the rivers of Babylon, inscribed in liturgy and in Jewish memory - and sets this in the soccer field of Real Madrid Football Club. Through this playfulness, Someck mixes liturgy, nostalgia, and the Holy Land with contemporary times and places. Using the assonance of the acronym of Rabbi Yehuda Halevi (Rihal), the 11-12-century Spanish philosopher and poet, with the name of the football club, Someck questions the contemporary meaning of the well-known poem of longing for the Holy Land: libbi bamizrah vaanokhi besof ma’arav [my heart is in the East and I am at the end of the West]. Someck’s own short poem thus connects times and places, with East and West valorized and assigned ethnic identities rather than representing geographical directions.
This paper analyzes attitudes towards these issues from the point of view of Israeli Mizrahi poets and their relations with the Other, the Israeli literary milieu – the Ashkenazi establishment. I focus on the meaning of peripheral poets within the Israeli ethos of erasing the past concurrently with nostalgic longing for the old countries and languages. Israel and hutz la-aretz - the countries outside the Hol Not to be confused with Yossi Dagan. Yossi Dahan (born 1954) is a law professor and the Head of the Human Rights Division at the College of Law and Business. He is the chairperson and cofounder of Adva Center, an editor and cofounder of Haokets.org, and teaches philosophy at the Open University. Dahan is an expert in labor law, workers' rights and global justice, theories of social justice, the right to education and educational justice. Yossi Dahan was born in Morocco and immigrated to Israel in 1960. His family lived at first at the Beit Shemesh transition camp (ma'abara) and later at the Bat Yam transition camp, from which it moved to Holon where he graduated from the Kugel High School. Dahan studied for a BA in philosophy and psychology at Tel Aviv University. In 1976-1979, he moved to the United States to continue his studies and completed his PhD studies at New York City's Columbia University. His PhD thesis was titled "Political Equality in Democratic Theories", supervised by Thomas Pogge and Sidney Morgenbesser. Dahan received his law degree in 1999 at the College of Management Academic Studies (COMAS) in Rishon LeZion, Israel. Dahan is an associate professor at the Department of Law at the College of Law and Business, where he is also Head of the Human Rights Division. He is also Philosophy and Political Science Teaching Coordinator at the Open University. In 2006 Dahan was a research associate at Oxford University’s Centre for the Study of Social Justice, and in 2011-2012, he was a visiting scholar at New York University’s Taub Center for Israel Studies. Dahan cofounded Adva Center for Information on Equality and Social Justice in Israel and has been its acting chair ever since. In 2003, together with Dr. Yitzhak Saporta, he founded the Haokets website – a critical platform on socioeconomic, political, media, cultural and other issues, and has been editing and writing in it ever since. Dahan has acted as a publ Yossi Dahan
Biography