
10 great reasons you should visit Israel’s Gaza border towns
It may seem off the beaten track, but there’s a surprising range of fun family activities and fine dining experiences in this relatively unvisited area of Israel.

It may seem off the beaten track, but there’s a surprising range of fun family activities and fine dining experiences in this relatively unvisited area of Israel.

Cities, villages, organizations and private citizens open their doors for the people of the south in an attempt to ease their suffering.

Israel develops another high-tech solution against arson devices launched from Gaza that have already caused massive destruction.

Israeli innovators have developed two new technologies to fight the kite and balloon attacks that have destroyed thousands of acres in southern Israel.

‘From our experience in Ramallah, we think we have the potential to collaborate and make our neighbors successful,’ says CEO.

Our coverage of a Jewish-Israeli surfer and her Arab-Israeli counterparts brought a new wave of initiatives in cooperation with Surfers 4Peace.

‘There are no words to describe the excitement of triumphing in an impossible situation,’ says Rambam’s head of pediatric surgery.

A multi-ethnic team of surgeons with Save a Child’s Heart operated successfully on 10-month-old Fajar at an Israeli medical center.

Hula-hooping is the hottest new dance and fitness craze to hit Tel Aviv’s public squares and beaches, and even missiles didn’t stop the action.

Since the start of Operation Protective Edge, Soroka Medical Center in Beersheva has treated 1,116 casualties — 740 soldiers, 376 civilians.

Summer in Israel is all about camping – even with Code Red sirens.

Tzvika Bitan is traveling around the Gaza border offering hot showers to soldiers covered in weeks’ worth of sand, dust and sweat.

Israeli farmer living near Gaza prepares 35,000 free pita sandwiches each day for soldiers on the frontlines. A Haifa butcher supplies the meat.

The next anti-missile strategy from Rafael reportedly will take out missiles, mortars and even drones using high-energy laser.

‘My incentive was saving human lives,’ says Brig. Gen. Daniel Gold, who defied the defense establishment to forge ahead with Iron Dome in 2005.