Israeli is world’s top blind golfer

CAESAREA, Israel — The ball explodes off Zohar Sharon’s club and flies into the distance. Sharon can’t see it, but he knows it’s a good one and he flashes a big smile. Two strokes later, he has a birdie. With the help of a demanding coach, determined caddie and dedicated dog, Sharon has earned an unlikely title — the world’s … Read More

Widows of Slain Israeli Athletes Back Spielberg’s ‘Munich’ Film

JERUSALEM (AP) — Steven Spielberg’s controversial new movie, “Munich,” about the 1972 Olympic massacre and its aftermath, got an unlikely endorsement Wednesday – the widows of two of the 11 slain Israeli athletes said the film neither dishonored their husbands’ memories nor tarnished their country’s image. “The movie respects the athletes,” said Ilana Romano, widow of weightlifter Yosef Romano. She … Read More

Netanyahu Wins Primary, Sharon Recovering

JERUSALEM, Israel (AP) — Doctors expect Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to recover fully from a mild stroke and leave the hospital Tuesday, but his illness raised questions about his long-term health and ability to lead Israel if he wins a third term next year. As the 77-year-old Sharon recovered, members of the hardline Likud Party, which he quit last month to … Read More

Political Reality Changes in Israeli Towns

YERUHAM, Israel (AP) — Israel’s latest political earthquake is playing out in places like this neglected desert town, founded for North African immigrants and until recently a stronghold of the hardline Likud Party. After Prime Minister Ariel Sharon bolted Likud and set up a more moderate party and the Moroccan-born Amir Peretz took over the dovish Labor Party, Likud loyalists are … Read More

Rice presides over allnight negotiations

JERUSALEM (AP) – Condoleezza Rice was up all night in her Jerusalem hotel. The U.S. secretary of state huddled with Israeli and Palestinian negotiators in her ninth floor suite, passing around a laptop computer, going through every word and comma on a proposed deal on Gaza border crossings. At 10:05, an agreement was clinched – a major achievement for the Bush administration … Read More

Bombing at Israeli Food Stand Kills Five

HADERA, Israel (AP) — A 20-year-old Palestinian blacksmith blew himself up at a falafel stand in an open-air market Wednesday, killing five Israelis and wounding more than 30 in the deadliest attack in the country in more than three months. The bombing stifled faint peace hopes following Israel’s pullout from the Gaza Strip. The blast also embarrassed Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, … Read More

CORRESPONDENT’S DIARY: Farewell, Gaza

KISSUFIM CROSSING, Gaza Strip (AP) _ The sun poked out from beyond the horizon, and Lt. Col. Tzvika Tzoran ordered his driver: “OK. Let’s move.” The jeep roared to life and led the last convoy of Israeli tanks and armored personnel carriers out of Gaza. Within moments, it was done: Thirty-eight years of Israeli rule in the Gaza Strip came … Read More

North Atlantic Right Whales face extinction, but hope remains eternal

In the Bay of Fundy, halfway between New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, 50 spectators aboard a sailboat peer silently into the distance. The noises of nature reverberate: the flap of eagle wings and the splash of porpoises cutting through the still water. But one distinctive groan echoed throughout the bay sounding like a cry for help from the most endangered … Read More

In final days, Jennings became member of Order of Canada

OTTAWA – A day after his 67th birthday, and eight days before he died, Peter Jennings found out he would be awarded the Order of Canada, the nation’s highest honour. The nomination process began long before Mr. Jennings’ dramatic on-air announcement on ABC-TV on April 5 that he had been diagnosed with lung cancer. The decision was made on June … Read More

Ottawa-raised newsman Peter Jennings dies at 67

OTTAWA _ He was one of the world’s most accomplished journalists; a name, and face, recognized the world over. But at heart, Peter Jennings always remained an Ottawa boy. Born in Toronto, but raised in Ottawa, the famous anchor of ABC World News Tonight with Peter Jennings returned to the national capital area nearly every year to vacation at his … Read More

Executions a sad reminder of home for Iranian author

OTTAWA – When Ghazal Omid first heard about the public hanging of two gay teenagers in Iran, she instinctively started to cry. “I was devastated. When I saw those pictures it was like someone putting a hand to my heart and pulling it,” said Ms. Omid, 35, a Vancouver-based author and human right advocate from Iran. “That’s what the government … Read More

The lost promise of Gaza

When Israeli troops start pulling out of the Gaza Strip on Aug. 15, they will leave behind 38 years of painful memories. Most non-settler Israelis who have been to Gaza were there as soldiers. To them, Gaza meant danger, often death. The pullout will mark a blessed exodus from a place to which no one wishes to return. Ironically, I … Read More

Spat between ambassadors gets nasty at Israeli Embassy

Ottawa’s diplomatic scene has witnessed its share of squabbles and small rivalries, but it’s hard to recall the last time an actual fistfight broke out at an embassy, as reportedly happened at the Israeli mission on O’Connor Street. What’s more, the alleged shoving match was between two Israeli representatives. The altercation was splashed across the front pages of two mass-circulation … Read More

Norman Levine, short story writer, dies at 81

Norman Levine, one of Canada’s top fiction writers and perhaps the greatest to come out of Ottawa, died on Tuesday in northern England, lonely and destitute like so many of the wonderful characters he created. For years, he had been suffering from heart troubles that caused him to black out and faint. On Monday, he suffered another collapse, and a … Read More

Middle East middlemen: Canada, forever the peacekeeper, never the peacemaker

CAMP ZIOUANI, Golan Heights – From inside a creaky, rusty United Nations observation tower, a majestic view of the Holy Land unfolds. To the north, the snow-capped peaks of Mount Hermon. To the east, the plains of Syria. To the west, the hills of the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights glimmer in the sunset. It’s early March and it is so quiet … Read More