For the record, I'm neither an academic nor a scholar, and admittedly, I've never been to many of the places posted here. So if someone should find a mistake, or believe I omitted something, please feel free to email me and I'll correct it.

I can be contacted at dms2_@hotmail.com.

Sunday, April 7, 2019

ISRAEL

Image result for landscape of ISRAEL
courtesy Unsplash.com

Israel is a small country located in the Middle East. It is bounded on the north by Lebanon and Syria, on the east by Jordan, on the south by the Gulf of Aqaba, and on the west by the Sinai Peninsula and the Mediterranean. Israel declared its independence on May 14, 1948 (but Independence Day is celebrated each year according to the Jewish calendar (5th of Iyyar)). Since then, it has been probably the most hated country in the world, even more so today – more than Syria or Sudan or Islamic State. That’s not to say that everybody in the world hates Israel, but statistically, it is the most hated. Of course, anti-Semitism plays a major role in that. No other country on earth has been the recipient of so many lies and distortion of facts.

According to the CIA World Factbook, out of a list of 191 countries, Israel ranks 28th in terms of GDP and 4th in the Middle East after Qatar, the UAE, and Kuwait. Both Hebrew and Arabic are the 2 official languages. With a population of over 8 million, Israel is a little over 10,000 sq. mi. big or roughly the size of Maryland. (However, the anti-Semites will say that it is smaller. That makes them happy.) The capital and largest city is Jerusalem (all of it) even though not a single country in the world recognizes it as capital. For many years, no foreign embassies were represented there. Instead, they are in Tel Aviv which they consider Israel’s capital. But since President Trump moved the US Embassy there, a few other countries have followed suit, most notably Guatemala, the Czech Republic, and possibly Brazil. And Russia has recently recognized (western) Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. But Britain, on the other hand, still considers Tel Aviv as Israel’s capital and eastern Jerusalem as “occupied Palestinian territory”. Stay tuned. There are a few consulates in Jerusalem, but they try to avoid serving Israeli Jews as much as possible. Domestically, Israel is the only democracy in the Middle East. Not a perfect democracy by any means but still, better than its neighbors. Its government is a unicameral legislature, the Knesset.

Israel’s history is almost 4000 years old and is the ancestral Jewish homeland, I will concentrate here mainly on the leadership of the country. For any particulars about various areas of the country, I suggest you look under the various articles written on this blog.

PATRIARCHS
Abraham (Genesis Ch. 17) (b. Ur)
Isaac, son (Genesis 20:12) (b. Gerar)
Jacob, son (Genesis 25:30-33) (b. Beer Lahai Roi)

EGYPTIAN PERIOD
Joseph, son (Genesis 41:40-45:12)
Ephraim, son (Genesis 48:13-20)
Shutelah, son (Chronicles 7:20-21)
Bered, son
Tahat, son
Eladah, son
Tahat, son
Zabad, son
Shutelah, son

SINAI PERIOD
Moses (Exodus 3:10-18)

JUDGES
Joshua (Deut. 34:9) ruled from Gilgal
Otniel (Judges 3:9) ruled from Hebron
Ehud the Benjaminite (Judges 3:15) 
Shamgar (Judges 3:31)
Deborah (Judges 4:4) ruled from Mount Ephraim
Gideon (Judges 6:14) ruled from Ophrah
Abimelech (Judges 9:1-4) son, ruled from Shechem
Tola (Judges 10:1) ruled from Shamir
Yair (Judges 10:3) ruled from Gil’ad
Jephtah (Judges 11:5-11) ruled from Mitzpe
Ibzan (Judges 12:8) ruled from Bethlehem
Elon (Judges 12:11) 
Abdon (Judges 12:13) ruled from Piraton
Samson (Judges 13:25) ruled from Zorah
Eli (I Samuel 1:9) ruled from Shiloh
Samuel (I Samuel 7:3-6) ruled from Shiloh, he annointed:

HOUSE OF SAUL
Saul (I Samuel 10:1) (c. 1079–1007 BCE)
Ishbosheth, son (II Samuel 2:8–9)

HOUSE OF DAVID
David (II Samuel 5:3) c. 1004–970 BCE, ruled from Hebron, then Jerusalem
Solomon (I Kings 2:12) son 
Rehoboam (I Kings 11:43) son
THE DIVIDED KINGDOM - The southern Kingdom of Judah remained under the House of David, the northern Kingdom of Israel under various dynasties. The kings of the northern kingdom are in the indents.
Jeroboam, son of Nebat the Ephraimite, superintendent of public works under Solomon
Abijah (I Kings 14:31) c. 915–913 BCE, son of Rehoboam
Asa (I Kings 15:8) son
Nadab, son of Jeroboam, assassinated by:
Baasha, captain of the army
Elah, son, assassinated by:
Zimri, commander of his chariots, killed himself during a seige by:
Omri, commander of the army
Ahab, son, killed in battle
Jehoshaphat (I Kings 15:24) son of Asa
Ahaziah, son of Ahab
Yehoram,  son of Ahab
Yehoram ben Yehoshaphat (I Kings 22:50) son of Jehoshaphat
Ahaziah ben Yehoram (II Kings 8:24) son, nephew of Yehoram (Israel), assassinated
Jehu, an army commander
Athaliah (II Kings 11:3) mother of Ahaziah
Yehoash (II Kings 11:21) – son of Ahaziah,
Yehoahaz, son of Jehu
Yehoash of Israel, son
Amaziah (II Kings 14:1) son of Yehoash of Judah
Jeroboam II, son of Yehoash of Israel
Uzziah referred to as Azariah (II Kings 15:1) son of Amaziah
Zachariah, son of Jerboam II, assassinated by:
Shallum, captain of the army, assassinated by:
Menahem, captain of the army
Pekahiah, son, assassinated by:
Pekah, captain of the army, assassinated by Hoshea:
Yotam (II Kings 15:32) son of Uzziah
Ahaz (II Kings 16:1) son
Hoshea, captain of the army, ruled as the last king of Israel.

DESTRUCTION OF ISRAEL, JUDAH SURVIVES
Hezekiah (II Kings 18:1) son of Ahaz
Manasseh (II Kings 20:21) son
Amon (II Kings 21:18) son
Josiah (II Kings 21:26) son
Yehoahaz (II Kings 23:30) son of Josiah
Yakim (II Kings 23:34) brother 
Yachin (II Kings 24:6) son of Yakim
Zedekiah (II Kings 24:17) – uncle, son of Josiah,  
Gedaliah (II Kings 25:22–23) son of Ahikam advisor to King Josiah; 

HOUSE OF DAVID IN THE BABYLONIAN CAPTIVITY
Yachin (II Kings 25:27) son of Yakim, second rule, appointed in exile by the Babylonian king
Daniel of the House of David (Daniel 5:29-6:2) 
PERSIAN RULE,
HOUSE OF DAVID, return from exile, in conjunction with the High Priests of the House
of Aaron
Sheshbazzar, prince of the House of David (Ezra 1:8-11) 
Zerubbabel (Ezra 3:8) son of Shealtiel. 
Ezra, son of Seraiah, a descendant of the priest Aaron brother of Moses. (Ezra Ch. 7)  
Nehemiah son of Hachaliah (Book of Nehemiah) 
Hananiah (Nehemiah 7:2) brother

THE HIGH PRIEST of the House of Aaron
Joiada, son of Eliashib
Johanan, son of Joiada
Jaddua, son of Johanan, ca. 371-320 BC
GREEK RULE 332 BCE
Onias I, son of Jaddua, ca. 320-280 BC
EGYPTIAN RULE 301 BCE
Simon I, son of Onias, ca. 280-260 BC
Eleazar, brother, son of Onias, ca. 260-245 BC
Manasseh, uncle, son of Jaddua, ca. 245-240 BC
Onias II, nephew, son of Simon, ca. 240-218 BC
SYRIAN RULE 219 BCE
Simon II, son of Onias, 218-185 BC
EGYPTIAN RULE 217 BCE
SYRIAN RULE 198 BCE
Onias III, son of Simon, 185-175 BC, murdered 170 BC
Jason, brother 175-172 BC
Menelaus, uncle, son of Onias II 172-162 BC

HOUSE OF HASMON (MACCABBEES)
Mattityahu son of the priest Johanan of Modiin, descendant of Aaron through his grandson Pinhas
Judah, son – Alcimus succeeded Menelaeus as high priest.
Jonathan, brother – assumed the high priesthood.
Simon, brother – high priest, ethnarch and commander-in-chief. 
John Hyrcanus I, son – also succeeded as high priest.
Aristobulus, son – also high priest.
Alexander Jannaeus, brother – high priest and king.
Salome Alexandra, wife
ROMAN RULE 67 BCE
Hyrcanus II, son – succeeded Alexander as high priest beginning with the rule of Salome.
Aristobulus II, brother – succeeded as high priest. 
Hyrcanus II as high priest, restored
Antigonus, nephew, son of Aristobulus – also high priest

HOUSE OF HEROD
Herod the Great, son of Antipater the Edomite who was an official under Hyrcanus II
Herod Archelaus (4 BCE – 6 CE), son, Ethnarch of the Tetrarchy of Judea

SANHEDRIN NESIIM OF THE HOUSE OF DAVID, office said to have been created during the rule of Ezra; period of the Roman Procurators 
Hillel the Elder (b. Babylonia)
Shimon, son
Gamaliel I, son, whose rule extended into the reign of:

HOUSE OF HEROD resumed, Nasi in the indents
Agrippa I, grandson of Herod the Great (41–44)
Herod II, brother (b. Chalcis, Turkey) (44–48)
Agrippa II, nephew, son of Agrippa I (48–73). 
            Shimon ben Gamaliel I

SANHEDRIN NESIIM OF THE HOUSE OF DAVID
Johanan ben Zakkai moved Sanhedrin to Yavneh
Gamaliel II (80–115) son of Shimon ben Gamaliel I, held court in Yavneh, Usha, and Lod
Eleazar ben Azariah (115–120)
Akiva ruled from Usha
Interregnum (Bar Kokhba revolt) (132–135)
Judah bar Ilai c. 140 moved the Sanhedrin to Usha
Shimon ben Gamliel II, son of Gamliel II
Judah I haNasi (170-220) - son, ruled from Bet Shearim, then Sepphoris
Gamaliel III (220–230) son
Judah II (230–270) - son, ruled from Sepphoris, then Tiberias. 
Gamaliel IV (270–290) son
Judah III (290–320) son
Hillel II (320–365) son
Gamliel V (365–385) son
Judah IV (385–400) son 
BYZANTINE RULE 395
Gamaliel VI (400–425) son    

RULE OF THE SANHEDRIN ARCHIPHERECITES 425-520  
SANHEDRIN NESIIM OF THE HOUSE OF DAVID IN TIBERIAS 520-767
Mar Zutra III/II (b. Babylonia (Iraq), 520-547?), son of the exilarch Mar Zutra I 
Saadia (547?-574?) son
Guriya (574?-601?) son  
Mar Zutra (601?-628?) son
PERSIAN RULE 614-628
Nehemiah ben Hushiel (b. Perisa, 614-617) military commander in Persian army, appointed by the Persians to rule Jerusalem, then overthrown by Persians 3 years later
Benjamin of Tiberias succeeded Nehemiah, pro-Byzantine
BYZANTINE RULE 628
ARAB RULE 636

GEON YAACOV (HOUSE OF DAVID) from Tiberias
Yaakov (628?-655?) son of Mar Zutra
Shemaiah (655?-682?) his son
Haninai (682?-709?) his son; 
Megas 709?-736?, son
Misa 736?-763?, son
Nehemiah 763?-790?, son

KARAITE PATRIARCHY (HOUSE OF DAVID) from Jerusalem; rabbinic rulers in Tiberias in the indents
Anan ben David (b. Babylonia) 767-800 son of the Exilarch, ruled in Jerusalem, 
Abdimi 790?-817? Ruled in Tiberias
Saul 800-821?, Son of Anan, ruled in Jerusalem, 
Pinhas 817?-844? Ruled in Tiberias
Josiah 821?-842?, son
Moses (head of academy?, 842?-863?) son, ruled in Jerusalem, 
Chatzuv 844?-871? Ruled in Tiberias
meir I (head of the academy?, 863?-884) son, ruled in Jerusalem, 
Yehuda ben Alan 871?-898? Ruled in Tiberias
Ẓemaḥ, nasi and gaon 884-915. Son, ruled in Jerusalem, 
Musa 898?-915 son, ruled in Tiberias

GEON YAACOV (HOUSE OF DAVID) moved from Tiberias to Jerusalem
Aaron Ben Meir 915-932 descendant of the Nesiim of the ancient Sanhedrin, overthrew Karaite rule
isaac (son of aaron b. meir) 932-934
…ben meir (brother of aaron) 934-948
abraham b. aaron 948-955 brother, son of Aaron ben Meir
aaron 955-956
joseph ha-kohen b. ezron (ruled two years) 956-958
(ruled thirty years) 958-988
Samuel b. joseph ha-kohen 988-?
yose b. samuel
shemaiah
Josiah ben Aaron ben Abraham (member of the Great Synagogue, lived in ramle) 1015-1020
solomon b. joseph ha-kohen 1020-1025
Solomon b. Judah (b. Fez, Morocco) 1025-1051 son-in-law, ruled from Jerusalem 1025-1040, from Ramle 1040-1043, from Jerusalem 1043-1051
Daniel b. Azariah (b. Babylonia) 1051-1062 a descendant of one of the families of the exilarchate in Babylonia, nasi and gaon.
Elijah ben Solomon ben Joseph ha-Kohen 1062-1071 
SELJUK RULE 1077  

GEON YAACOV IN EXILE
Elijah ben Solomon Ben Joseph haKohen 1071-1083, from Tyre
Solomon haNasi appointed as “vice gaon” in Jerusalem
Abiathar, son of Elijah, from Tyre 1083-1091, from Tripoli 1091-1094, from Tyre 1094-1124, from Tripoli 1124-1129
Solomon, brother (1093-1127), fled to Hadrak  
CRUSADER RULE 1099
Maẓliaḥ b. Solomon (1127-1138) son, moved from Hadrak to Fostat and called himself rosh yeshivat ge'on Ya'akov. 
Avraham ben Matzhir (1127-1165) grandson of Abiathar, headed the academy when it moved from Hadrak to Damascus. 
Petrus Judaeus (1156) swore allegiance to the Crusader King Baldwin III in Jerusalem. Either Moses ha-Levi b. Nethanel or Samuel b. Hananiah ruled from Fostat after the death of Mazliah.
Nethanel (1160-1170) son of Moses ha-Levi b. Nethanel, held the title of Gaon in Fostat. 
Ezra (1165), son of Avraham ben Matzhir and ordained by the Gaon of Baghdad Samuel ben Ali. ruled from Damascus. 
Zadok (1170s) last Gaon who ruled from Damascus.
Sar Shalom (1170-1195) brother of Nethanel, ruled from fostat, last to hold title of Gaon and rosh yeshivat Ereẓ ha-Ẓevi. 

NAGID OF EGYPT/VICE NAGID OF PALESTINE (in indents)
Maimonides (the "Rambam", b. Spain) (1171/1195-1204) 
MUSLIM RULE 1187
Ovadiah ben Ulah
Avraham ben Moshe (1204-1237), son of Maimonides; 
Hillel ben Moshe 
CHRISTIAN RULE 1228
David ben Avraham (1237-1300), son of Avraham ben Moshe 
MUSLIM RULE 1240 
CHRISTIAN RULE 1243 
KHWARIZMIAN INVASION 1244 
MUSLIM RULE 1247 
MAMELUKE/CRUSADER RULE 1250  

NAGID/SHEIKH AL YAHUD (in indents)
Yehiel ben Yosef (b. France) headed the Midrash haGadol in Paris, and later relocated it (1257) to Acre from where he ruled over Israel.
MONGOL INVASION 1260
Nahmanides (the "Ramban", b. Spain) descendant of Rabbi Isaac ben Reuven; Chief Rabbi of Catalonia, came to Jerusalem (1267) and established his own synagogue from where he, and subsequent Chief Rabbis ruled Israel 
Solomon Petit (b. France) tosafist, ruled mostly from Acre
MAMELUKE RULE
Avraham ben David 1291-1313
Moshe ben Avraham 1300-1305
Yehoshua 1305-1355
Baruch Ashkenazi (b. Spain) 
Isaac Hatikvah (b. Spain) c. 1330
David ben Yehoshua son of Yehoshua (1355-1374)
Amram (1374-1384); 
Yoseph ben Eliezer Tov Elem? (b. Syria) Bible commentator
Shimon (1384-1422) 
Yoseph ben Ovadiah (1422-1430) 
Abd al Latif (1430-1442); 
Elijah of Ferrara (b. Italy) Italian physician, ruled from Jerusalem 1435
Yoseph ben Khalifah (1442-1465); 
Abraham Halevy (b. Spain) 
Shlomo ben Yoseph son of Yoseph ben Khalifah (1465-1482); 
Shalom Ashkenazi (b. Spain) 
Natan Sholal (1482-1504); 
Obadiah of Bertinoro (b. Italy) (1488-1490) Rabbi of Bertinoro and Castello, pupil of
Rabbi Joseph Colon.
Isaac ibn Haim (b. Spain) (1490-1495), took over leadership while Bertinoro was Chief
Rabbi of Hebron.
Obadiah of Bertinoro (1495-1500?) 
Isaac Sholal (b. Egypt) (1502-1516) nephew of Natan Sholal, nagid            
Jacob de Trijal (b. Spain) (1500-1509)
Judah Albotini (b. Turkey) (1509-1519) son of the scholar Rabbi Moses Albotini of Lisbon; formerly Haver of the Bet Din
OTTOMAN RULE 1516

SHEIKH AL YAHUD
Isaac Sholal (1519-1525)
Levi ben Habib (b. Spain) (1525-1545) son of Rabbi Jacob ibn Habib, head of the Sephardic Yeshiva in Salonika; succeeded his father as head of the Yeshiva
Jacob Berab (b. Spain) (1538) rival Sanhedrin, ruled from Safed
Joseph Caro (b. Spain) (1540-1575) ordained by Berab, ruled from Safed
Solomon Sirilio (b. Spain) (1545-1554) rabbinic commentator
David ibn Abi Zimra (b. Egypt) (1554-1567) son of wealthy businessman Solomon ibn Abi Zimra; Chief Rabbi of Egypt
Yoseph Sayach
Haim Vital (1577-1587) son of the Safed scribe Joseph Vital Calabrese; head of Lurianic Kabbalistic circle in Safed; in 1586 the Arabs confiscated the Ramban Synagogue. Therefore, it was decided that the Ben Zakkai Synagogue would take its place. Ever since, this is from where the Chief Rabbi would preside.        
Bezalel Ashkenazi (1587-1592) Chief Rabbi of Egypt
Gedaliah Cordovero (1592-1625) son of Kabbalist Rabbi Moses Cordovero
Shimon Cohen (1625-1640)
Jacob Zemah (b. Portugal) (1640-1646) kabbalist and physician
Israel Benjamin (1646-1649) son of the prominent Rabbi Azariah Zeevi
Baruch Benjamin (1649?-1658?) son
Jacob Hagiz (b. Morocco) (1658-1660) son of Samuel Hagiz, chief rabbi of Fez
Samuel Garmison (b. Greece) (1660-?) Chief Rabbi of Malta
Jonathan Galante son of Kabbalist Rabbi Moses Galante I, Av Bet Din of Safed

RISHON L’TZION
Moses ben Yonatan Galante (1665–1689) son of Jonathan Galante
Moses ben Habib (b. Greece) (1689–1695) descendant of Levi ben Habib
Moses Hayun (1695–1715)
Avraham ben David Yitzchaki (b. Greece) (1715–1728) Haver of Galante Bet Din
Benjamin Hacohen Ma'ali (b. Syria) (1728–1730)
Eliezer ben Jacob Nachum (b. Turkey) (1730–1745) Chief Rabbi of Adrianople
Nissim Chaim Moses Mizrachi (1745–1754)
Isaac Rapaport (1754–1755) Chief Rabbi of Smyrna
Israel Jacob Algazi (b. Turkey) (1755–1756) Head of Yeshivat Bet El
Raphael Samuel Meyuchas (1756–1771) Av Bet Din
Chaim Raphael Abraham Ben Asher (1771–1772) Av Bet Din
Raphael Bula (b. Greece) (1772-1773) member of Bet Din
Yom Tov Algazi (b. Turkey) (1772–1802) son of Israel Jacob Algazi
FRENCH INVASION 1799
Moses Joseph Mordechai Meyuchas (1802–1805) son of Raphael Meyuchas
Mordechai Halevi (1805-1806)
Jacob Moses Ayash al-Maghrebi (b. Morocco) (1806–1807)
Jacob Koral (1807–1813)
Raphael Joseph Hazzan (b. Turkey) (1813–1822) Chief Rabbi of Smyrna
Yom Tov Danon (b. Turkey) (1822–1824)
Solomon Moses Suzin (1824–1836) partly of Mustarabi descent;  
EGYPTIAN RULE 1831
Jonah Moses Navon (1836–1841) Haver  
OTTOMAN RULE 1840
Judah Raphael Navon (1841–1842)

HAHAM BASHI
Haim Avraham Gaggin (b. Turkey) 1842–1848
Isaac Kovo 1848–1854 Jerusalem emissary to Turkey
Haim Abulafia 1854–1860 Chief Rabbi of Damascus
Haim Hazzan (b. Turkey) 1860–1869 son of Raphael Joseph Hazzan
Avraham Ashkenazi (b. Greece) 1869–1880 Av Bet Din in the court of Benjamin Navon
Raphael Meir Panigel (b. Bulgaria) 1880–1893 Hebron emissary to Italy
Jacob Saul Elyashar 1893–1906 son-in-law
Jacob Meir 1906–1907 Av Bet Din in the court of Raphael Israel
Elijah Moses Panigel 1907–1908 nephew of Raphael Panigel
Nahman Batito (b. Algeria) 1908–1911
Moshe Franco 1911 (acting chief rabbi), 1913-1916 (official) Chief Rabbi of Rhodes
Nissim Danon 1916–1918 descendant of Yom Tov Danon
BRITISH RULE 1917
Haim Moshe Eliashar 1918-1921 son of Jacob Elyashar

Below is a list of the presidents/chairment of the VAAD LEUMI, the pre-independence Jewish parliament; the Chief Rabbinate continued after World War I and the establishment British Mandate, and still exists, occupied by an Ashkenazi and a Sephardic. 
Yaacov Thon (b. Ukraine) 1917–1920, Hapoel Hatzair, manager of the Palestine Office in Jaffa - head of a provisional council which preceded the actual formation of the Vaad Leumi in 1920.
David Yellin 1920–1929 Hebrew Language Professor, Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem, elected chairman in the first nationwide elections in 1920, elected again in 1925, resigned office in 1929 due to the Arab riots of that year.
Pinhas Rutenberg (b. Ukraine) 1929–1931 founder, Palestine Electric Co.
Yitzhak Ben Zvi (b. Ukraine) Mapai, MP - elected as chairman in the 1931 elections, held the office until independence in 1948. Elections postponed in the 30s due to the Arab riots and the onslaught of WWII. In 1939, Pinhas Rutenberg was, once again, appointed chairman of the Va'ad while Ben Zvi became President. He held that position until his death in 1942. In the 1944 elections, David Remez (b. Ukraine), was elected as chairman while ben Zvi continued with the title of President.

INDEPENDENCE – KNESSET 
David Ben-Gurion (b. Poland) 1948–1953 Chairman of the Jewish Agency, Mapai
Moshe Sharett (b. Ukraine) 1953–1955, Foreign Minister, Mapai
David Ben-Gurion 1955–1963 Defense Minister
Levi Eshkol (b. Ukraine) 1963–1969 Finance Minister, Mapai, Alignment
Golda Meir who came from Ukraine via the United States 1969–1974 Secretary General of the Labor Party
Yitzhak Rabin 1974–1977 leader of the Labor Party
Menachem Begin (b. Belarus) 1977–1983 Chairman of Likud
Yitzhak Shamir (b. Poland) 1983–1984 Foreign Minister, Likud
Shimon Peres (b. Poland) 1984–1986 Chairman of the Alignment Party
Yitzhak Shamir 1986–1992 Vice Premier, Likud
Yitzhak Rabin 1992–1995 Chairman of the Alignment Party
Shimon Peres 1995–1996 Vice Premier and Foreign Minister, Labor
Benjamin Netanyahu 1996–1999 Member, Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, Likud
Ehud Barak 1999–2001 Leader of the Labor Party, One Israel
Ariel Sharon 2001–2006 Leader of Likud, Kadimah
Ehud Olmert 2006–2009 Minister of Finance, Kadimah
Benjamin Netanyahu 2009–2021; Leader of Likud
Naftali Bennett 2021 - 2022; Leader of Yamina
Yair lapid 2022; Leader of Yesh Atid
Benjamin Netanyahu 2022 - present

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