Underground Prisoners Museum in Jerusalem April 23 2017
The OU and Yehuda and Avital take a trip downtown to the Museum
Old Acre Israel- The Underground Prisoners Museum
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
zahigo25@walla.com +972-54-6905522 tel
סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
Learning Hebrew at the underground prisoners museum
The Watchman Episode 145: Walking the Ancient Walls of Jerusalem
Host Erick Stakelbeck and Israeli guide Yoel Freiman are atop Jerusalem's Old City walls to relive 3,000 years of the ancient city's history.
LIVE Fridays 10:30PM ET on TBN // Sundays 12:30AM ET on FOX Business
Old Acre - The Underground Prisoners Museum
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
zahigo25@walla.com 972-54-6905522 tel
סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
Museum of the Underground Prisoners - The old city of Acre (Akko). Tour guide: Zahi Shaked
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
zahigo25@walla.com +972-54-6905522 tel
סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
Look Inside One Israel's most Highly Secured Prisons
Cameras are rarely allowed in the facility which houses dangerous inmates. Matthias Inbar brings us the story i24news is an international 24-hour news and current affairs television channel based in Jaffa Port.
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6 Minute Tour of Israel Museum
A Walk Through the Israel Museum.
Lucky Escape in Jerusalem A Man Gets hit by an Oncoming Van, and Survives
Car DashCam Video captured a lucky escape in Jerusalem
A man gets hit by an oncoming van, and survives
Via Dolorosa, Where Jesus walked to His crucifixion - Israel Holy Land Tour
The Via Dolorosa is also known as the Way of Sorrows or Way of the Cross. It is the name of a street in the Old City of Jerusalem, believed to be the path that Jesus walked on the way to His crucifixion. This is an interesting walk leading us past many churches and including the Arab Street. Recommended.
Jerusalem Underground
Jerusalem Underground, independent music
09.04.2014
City of Akko and Prison Museum
Day 4 Jerusalem Caiaphas' House Dungeon Complex
Jerusalem underground
Aish HaTorah visit Jerusalem Old City
Ancient Jewish Settlement Remains Found in Beersheba
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DAILY DOSE | An excavation at Israel's major city of Beersheba found artifacts from an ancient Jewish settlement dating back to the period of Roman occupation. Israeli archaeologist Shira Bloch discusses with host Jeff Smith.
Story:
The remains of an oil lamp depicting the Jewish lampstand used to symbolize the ‘eternal light’, the menorah, estimated to date back 2,000 years was discovered at an archaeological excavation site in Israel’s negev desert, the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) announced on Thursday.
'This is probably one of the earliest artistic depictions of a nine-branched menorah yet discovered,' the IAA archaeologist Dr. Daniel Varga said.
The IAA said that it was the first evidence discovered of a 2,000 year-old Jewish settlement, as the site appears to contain underground hidden passageways used by the Jewish rebels around the 1st century CE, leading up to the Bar-Kokhba Revolt in 135 CE.
'For the first time, the remains of a Jewish settlement of the Second Temple period have been discovered in Beer Sheva,' the Government Press Office (GPO) press release stated.
The sherd of a rare oil lamp depicts a menorah with nine branches, since seven-branched menorahs could only be found inside the ancient temple in Jerusalem, of which only the Western Wall remains.
The IAA said the site will be opened to public access on Monday, April 8th, between 15:00-17:00. There will be no entrance fee.
The pit beneath the House of Caiphas, Jerusalem, Israel
The pit where Jesus Christ was held after his arrest. House of Caiphas, Jerusalem, Israel
The Jerusalem Archaeological Park (Davidson Center) - The new findings of the Western Wall
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
zahigo25@walla.com 972-54-6905522 tel
סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
Archaeologists Uncover Roman Recreation Rooms in Israel
THE RUNDOWN | Archaeologists in Israel uncovered the remains of what is believed to have once been a recreation room for workers at a ceramics factory. Our Daniel Campos has the story.
‘Israel turned Gaza into a prison’ v ‘Intl community in no position to lecture Israel’ (GU)
Going Underground’s Afshin Rattansi speaks to Palestine's Chief Negotiator Saeb Erekat about Gaza, Israel and how the Israeli government can ever be made to abide by UN resolutions. Rattansi asks the co-chair of North West Friends of Israel, Raphi Bloom, about the difference between self-defense and war crimes.
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RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.
The Cry of Antonio Negri
THE CRY OF ANTONIO NEGRI
A Sound Installation for 4 Speakers
Presented at the Old Central Prison of Jerusalem - Underground Prisoners Museum during Heara 4 - Big Comment, December 2002
Duration: 14 min. Video Documentation: 30 sec.
In 1978 the former Italian Prime Minister, Aldo Moro, was kidnapped and assassinated. An immediate expansion of the liberties given to the Italian security services followed, including a right to detain a person in preventive arrest to a period of up to 11 years without a trial. The new regulations brought the arrest of over 5000 people in Italy.
On April 7th 1979 70 people were arrested, among them the radical Italian Philosopher Antonio Negri, who was allegedly accused of being a member of the Red Brigades and was attributed headlining the gang who kidnapped and murdered Moro. Despite his arrest he continued his philosophical investigation, dedicating himself to the study of Spinoza, Marx and Hegel.
On Christmas Eve 25th of December 1980, Negri found himself in the midst of a prison revolt in the Trani prison. The wardens response was cruel and brutal. Negri, along with every other inmate, was severely beaten, and his property destroyed. Among the possessions now lost, Negri kept the drafts he has made for his next book, over which he has labored for the past five years. Legend has it that upon returning to his cell, beaten, bruised, he has sounded a cry that has caused all the other prisoners to delve into silence for a whole day.
Seeing everything ruined like that, he told later It ruins something deep inside of you.
While he remained in prison he has persistently published five philosophy books, which have granted him acknowledgement all around the world.
In 83' he was brought to trial with the accusation, based on his publications, of being morally responsible for the violence which seared in Italy at the time of Moro's assassination. As a sign of protest Negri decided to run for the Italian parliament while still on trial, and on the elections held the same year succeeded in being elected, and was subsequently released from prison. During the time he spent outside the walls of the prison he has vigorously lectures against State Oppression. These subversive activities served as a cause for the parliament to vote in favor of lifting his diplomatic immunity, on a count of 300 against 293. Seeing the way things have turned, Negri has fled to France, where he has stayed in exile for 14 years. In his absence, he was indicted with all the charges of his accusation, and was sentenced to a punishment of 30 years in prison.
In 1997, after a long and brilliant career in France - side by side with the great French philosophers like Deleuze or Derrida, while never overcoming his yearnings for his homeland, Negri was resolved to make a courageous step and decided to return to his own country, where, at the age of 64, he was once more put behind bars.
Negri's sentence was supposed to last until 2005.
His struggle against the stupidity of corrupted state bodies, as well as his fight for freedom of thought and release from the tyranny of the state, has positioned Negri as a symbol for the struggle for freedom and an icon for the anti-globalization movement.
The cry he has voiced that night, in Christmas of 1980, has turned into a symbol in its own right The Cry of Antonio Negri and there are some who claim it is still heard wherever there are or were political prisoners and free thought is oppressed.
The work presented here tonight is based on this cry as it echoes between the walls of this very prison. The cry was recorded separately in each room and every cell in this compound, then later all the recordings were super-imposed on one another to be played (more or less) simultaneously.