The Jerusalem Post

Combating fake news

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN

It’s headlined “Fake News,” but in actual fact it’s not. It’s an attempt to find an antidote to fake news. Long before the digital era, when far fewer members of the public had the ability to disseminat­e private opinions as though they were reporting genuine news, there were nonetheles­s reports based on speculatio­n and presented as facts.

With the advent of social media, there was literally an explosion of fake news. There were mischief makers who wanted to frighten or titillate people into believing a plethora of untrue stories. There were people who wanted to change political or economic realities by spreading false tales about politician­s, business executives and economists. And then there were those who believed almost everything they read, and forwarded the fake news to all their Facebook friends.

Now, as part of Innovation Week in Tel Aviv, TechCrunch and Cyabra, a technology start-up with an integrated security solution to protect digital assets against misinforma­tion attacks by monitoring social networks 24/7 and warning clients as soon as negative activities are recognized, are hosting a “Fake News” gathering at the Council for a Beautiful Israel on Tuesday, June 5, at 3 p.m.

Cyabra founder and CEO will speak on the new solution to fake news; Dr. a recognized internatio­nal expert on psychologi­cal warfare, will speak on that subject and discuss how it is used in the business world; and a former deputy chief of the Mossad, will speak on struggles between countries in the new world, without a single bullet being fired.

Yaniv Levyatan, Ram Ben Barak,

THOUGH INITIALLY released in English last September in tandem with the first anniversar­y of his death, the Hebrew edition of No room for small dreams, the autobiogra­phy of Israel’s ninth president, Shimon Peres, was launched this week by the Friends of the Peres Center for Peace and Innovation.

The event, at which the keynote speaker was former IDF chief of staff

for whom Peres had great admiration and affection, was held at the Dan Tel Aviv Hotel, an appropriat­e venue, given that Peres spent a lot of time there when visiting Tel Aviv during his presidency, but also because of its proximity to the former Labor Party headquarte­rs. In the days when Labor Party luminaries included Golda Meir, Abba Eban, Yitzhak Rabin, Peres and other personalit­ies whose names were household words, the hotel served as a meeting place for members of the party’s

Gantz, Don Brahmy Benny

leadership and visiting dignitarie­s from abroad.

Like so many things in Israel, the event did not go exactly according to plan, given the situation in the Gaza Strip, which became the focal point of Gantz’s address and of any conversati­on before and after. Considerin­g Peres’s record in Israel’s defense establishm­ent, it was quite natural to shift the focus from the man to the situation.

Gantz expressed full confidence in the political and defense establishm­ent as well as the residents of the South. “We are all aware that we live in a complicate­d reality,” he said, but he was nonetheles­s convinced that Israel has the ability to unflinchin­gly withstand adversity and to overcome. He had every confidence in the army’s strength and strategy, and declared that the army, the political administra­tion and the residents of the South were deserving of every accolade.

the youngest of the three offspring of Shimon and Sonia Peres, who is today chairman of the Peres Center; his sister, Dr. and his brother, Dr. were all present.

Chemi Peres, a former pilot in the Israel Air Force, voiced a message of warm embrace to all the residents of the South and to all the soldiers engaged in the defense of Israel’s borders. He also announced that the book, which was completed shortly before his father died, is being translated into numerous languages for the purpose of making it available to world leaders and to youth in the languages they know best.

While negotiatin­g for translatio­ns of the book, the Peres Center is also busy with its many coexistenc­e activities, as well as with the renovation­s to the building which will culminate with the opening in October of the Peres Center for Innovation.

While the Peres Center for Peace, which is headquarte­red in Jaffa, has been operating for more than two decades, though not always at its present location, the addition to its name was inaugurate­d in July 2016 with the participat­ion of President and Prime Minister

Peres was a tireless advocate for innovation and research to find new solutions to old problems.

Chemi Peres, Tsvia Walden; Yoni Peres, Reuven Rivlin Netanyahu. Benjamin

ALL THE world loves a wedding. Her friends and colleagues at The Jerusalem Post were naturally delighted for special supplement­s editor and former news editor when she announced that she would marry fellow journalist

whose byline has also appeared in the Post from time to time. Everyone at the paper was thrilled for her, but the most longstandi­ng veterans even more so, because she is a second-generation Post writer.

Her mother, in the days when she was

covered the police beat for the Post and managed to get crime stories of a nature that eluded both her predecesso­rs and her successors as well as her rivals in other publicatio­ns. Now a Mideast security analyst, she heads the Israel bureau of the Washington-based internatio­nal weekly Defense News. She is also executive editor and host of Strictly Security on i24 News. The groom’s mother,

who came from London for the occasion, is a former president of the League of Jewish Women, having followed her own mother into the organizati­on. She is currently an active member of WIZO and was previously involved with the Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael-Jewish National Fund. She also served on the Citizens Advice Bureau for more than 20 years.

Officiatin­g rabbi at the ceremony, conducted at Jaffa Port, was Rabbi

who in his address to the young couple spoke not only of Jewish values but also introduced a little of Aristotle.

The ambience was very ecumenical. A muezzin could be heard in the background, as Rosen was conducting the wedding service, and the skyline included a church and a mosque. The romantic bridal canopy, decorated with pastel-hued flowers, had the added touch of a tallit (prayer shawl) spread across the top. It was almost but not quite like being in Jerusalem, where the newlyweds live.

Contrary to the general practice, there was no color coordinati­on in the wedding party. Other than identical bouquets, all the women wore what suited them best. The bodice of the bridal gown was intricatel­y embroidere­d with seed pearls and diamantes. The mother of the bride wore a classicall­y cut gown in a deep shade of turquoise with coffee lace insets in the side seams and a cowl drape over jeweled coffee lace in the back.

The mother of the groom wore a chiffon ensemble in a delicate shade of airplane gray with a white patterned print.

Other than relatives of the bride and groom, including a large representa­tion of the Amouyal family, the bulk of the guests were members of the fourth estate. Whereas

Noa Amouyal, David Brummer, Amouyal, Rosen, Barbara Opall-Rome, Barbara Marilyn Brummer, David

in bygone days, all the guests dressed up for a wedding, weddings today are come-as-you-please affairs, so the fashion statements ran the gamut from evening couture to beachwear.

a lifelong friend of the groom, brought along the talisman that had been so precious to him, a teddy bear that the groom received from his grandmothe­r when he was two years old.

Paul Stern,

ANOTHER WEDDING, taking place just ahead of Gay Pride Week in Tel Aviv, is that of and

who are members of the religious LGBT community. There’s nothing unusual these days about two men getting married to each other – not even two religious men, but in this case, it’s another proof that upbringing has nothing to do with sexual orientatio­n.

Cohen happens to be a grandson of the late Sephardi chief rabbi and Shas mentor Ovadia Yosef, and spent several years of his youth with his grandfathe­r. Like many religious gays, he tried to suppress his true feelings and married a woman, with whom he had two children, but the marriage didn’t work, and they divorced, after which he came out of the closet.

Landsman is fortunate in having a loving and understand­ing family, which has accepted him for what he is, and has also accepted Cohen. Most of Landsman’s relatives will be at the wedding, but very few of Cohen’s.

Gay Pride Week, which this year is taking place during Israel’s 70th anniversar­y celebratio­ns, will also mark the 10th anniversar­y of the founding of the Gay Center in Tel Aviv, and the 20th anniversar­y of the first gay pride parade. Tel Aviv is known as the gay capital of the Middle East, and during last year’s Gay Pride Week attracted thousands of visitors from abroad. Even more are expected this year, regardless of BDS and regional unrest.

Ovadia Cohen Landsman, Amichai

WHILE NETANYAHU is in France next week talking to President Emmanuel Macron, members of the Consistoir­e, the institutio­n set up by Napoleon’s imperial decree in 1808 for the purpose of overseeing Jewish religious life in France, will be in Israel. The Consistoir­e delegation is scheduled to meet with Rivlin on Monday.

greerfc@gmail.com

 ?? (Steve Linde) ?? NOA AMOUYAL and David Brummer, flanked by their mothers and Rabbi David Rosen.
(Steve Linde) NOA AMOUYAL and David Brummer, flanked by their mothers and Rabbi David Rosen.
 ?? (Rafi Deloya) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu, Shimon Peres and President Reuven Rivlin at the July 2016 ceremony inaugurati­ng the Peres Center for Peace and Innovation.
(Rafi Deloya) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu, Shimon Peres and President Reuven Rivlin at the July 2016 ceremony inaugurati­ng the Peres Center for Peace and Innovation.
 ?? (Rafi Deloya) ?? BENNY GANTZ (left) with Chemi Peres.
(Rafi Deloya) BENNY GANTZ (left) with Chemi Peres.

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