February 13, 2012
By JPost Editorial
Prostitution is violence against women. Everything should be done to diminish, if not completely eradicate, this horrible phenomenon, dubbed inappropriately “the world’s oldest profession,” as if its long history somehow gives it respectability.
The Ministerial Committee on Legislation took an important step toward achieving this goal Sunday when it unanimously passed a bill by MK Orit Zuaretz (Kadima), who chairs the Knesset Subcommittee on Trafficking in Women.
If ratified, Zuaretz’s bill would make it illegal to buy sexual services but not to sell them. The legislation’s eminently reasonable underlying assumption is that prostitutes – mostly women – are victims of an industry said to generate revenues of $2 billion a year in Israel, while those who solicit, pimp or facilitate sexual favors – primarily men – are the ones guilty of exploiting, raping and abusing those who are weaker and more vulnerable, and therefore, deserve to be singled out for punishment. [Read more...]


88-year-old Ilya Lieberman wanted the world to know that his wife Klavdia and her parents had risked their lives to save a Jewish mother and daughter during World War II. Ten years ago, he approached “Yad Vashem” to have them recognized as “Righteous Among the Nations”. Last week, Klavdia was honored posthumously at a ceremony in Ilya’s home in Bat Yam, featuring students from the Elon School in Holon. “The Righteous Among the Nations are disappearing, but I’ve come full circle. I did it for her,” says Ilya.
Newly-identified, little-known “Righteous Among the Nations” Klavdia Likholetova was honored at a unique student ceremony last week by students who came to say “thank you” for the miracle of life, in the upcoming season of miracles.
