New York Daily News

‘Fury in the streets’

- BY JOSEF FEDERMAN

JERUSALEM — When Israel went into lockdown last spring, Jerusalem pub owner Leon Shvartz moved quickly to save his business — shifting to a delivery and takeaway model that kept him afloat throughout the summer. Then came the second lockdown.

With restaurant­s and shops shuttered again, Shvartz’s business is struggling to survive. He has laid off 16 of his 17 employees

By contrast, Israeli software maker Bizzabo, which operates in the hard-hit conference-management sector, quickly reinvented itself last spring by offering “virtual events.” It has more than doubled its sales and is expanding its workforce.

Such tales of boom and bust reflect Israel’s growing “digital divide.”

Even before the pandemic, Israel had one of the largest income gaps and poverty rates among developed economies, with a few high earners, mostly in the lucrative high-tech sector, while many Israelis barely get by as civil servants, in service industries or as small business owners.

Those gaps have widened as the second nationwide lockdown, imposed last month, dealt a new blow to an economy already hit hard by the first round of restrictio­ns.

The fallout from the pandemic has also deepened longsimmer­ing divisions among Israeli Jews, pitting a largely secular majority against a powerful ultra-Orthodox minority.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a target of months of mass protests over his perceived mishandlin­g of the pandemic, has been seen as favoring his ultra-Orthodox partners at the expense of the greater good. In trying to contain the latest outbreaks, Netanyahu opted for an economical­ly devastatin­g blanket lockdown instead of targeted restrictio­ns in infection hot spots, including many ultra-Orthodox communitie­s, presumably to avoid upsetting his allies.

The deep tear in Israel’s social fabric prompted a warning from Israel’s figurehead

 ??  ?? A poster that reads “closed because of me” with an image of embattled Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hangs in a shop this week in Tel Aviv.
A poster that reads “closed because of me” with an image of embattled Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hangs in a shop this week in Tel Aviv.

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