News

‘Even a high-tech person can’t use a sophisticated tool during a panic attack. We needed it to be simple and effective in just a few minutes.’ ...
Israel is helping farmers in many countries learn how to grow crops in increasingly hot and dry conditions.
Fruit rotting on trees or on the ground costs farmers some $30 billion in sales a year. Fruit picked even two weeks late loses 80 percent of its value. A major reason for wasted produce: A global ...
Developing African nations depend on Israeli technological, humanitarian, medical, ecological and agricultural advances in virtually every aspect of life.
The 480 caves of Beit Guvrin-Maresha, Israel’s newest UNESCO World Heritage Site, are very cool – in more ways than one.
One of Israel’s sources of pride is the enormous number of inventions and innovations that have taken root on its soil over 63 years — despite challenges of geography, size and diplomacy. The ...
The most significant places in the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth aren’t in Jerusalem, but in the picturesque Upper Galilee.
Works of 107 photographers depicting the Western Negev before and after the Hamas attacks create a unique introspective at Petach Tikva Museum of Art.
Cracking the mysteries of pomegranate seed oil Gabizon’s lab has researched and published studies on the mechanism of GranaGard. A paper in Nature explains that the liver converts punicic acid from ...
It’s not by chance that Israel ranks as one of the healthiest countries – we embrace the Mediterranean diet and grow the superfoods that fuel it.
From a toilet found inside an ancient temple to Roman public latrines and Ottoman-era outhouses, Israel is awash with fascinating old loos. Join us on World Toilet Day, for a look.
Rappelling into caves in the Israeli desert, archeologists unearth biblical scroll fragments, 6,000-year-old skeleton and the oldest basket in the world in mega-dig.