Levi Eshkol

No time to dance – a celebration of influential dancer Noa Eshkol

Fifty years after pausing her dance work for the Yom Kippur War, Noa Eshkol’s 100th birthday is marked with exhibits in Berlin and a performance in Tel Aviv, showcasing her enduring legacy.

 SCENE FROM ‘A Warrior & A Dreamer’ in celebration of Noa Eshkol.
 Levi Eshkol

How it really was: Israel’s first oil discovery

PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu exposes files that prove Iran’s nuclear program in a press conference in Tel Aviv, in 2018.

Bibi’s Eshkol moment on the Iran question

A dog stands on a table as its owner casts her ballot at a polling station in Tel Aviv March 17, 2015. Millions of Israelis voted on Tuesday in a tightly fought election, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu facing an uphill battle to defeat a strong campaign by the centre-left opposition to deny

A former MK, an IDF veteran and Levi Eshkol’s secretary express hope


Levi Eshkol: Broad shoulders, brave heart

Upon 50 years since his passing.

ESHKOL, IN his role as agriculture minister, visits the Sde Warburg cooperative village.

March 6, 2019: Remembering Levi Eshkol

Readers of 'The Jerusalem Post' have their say.

Letters

Israeli premiership’s finest hour: Levi Eshkol

Tragedy has seldom been more intense.

LEVI ESHKOL takes over the premiership from David Ben-Gurion in 1963

Levi Eshkol, Jeremy Corbyn and memory lane

As Eshkol’s house-turned-museum demonstrates: in good times and hard times, there’s no place like home.

Knesset exhibit: Levi Eshkol and wife, 1965

How it really was: Getting rid of myths – Was Israel ever socialist?

Two respected columnists have recently described Israel in its early years as “socialist.” They are totally wrong.

Then prime minister Levi Eshkol visits David Ben-Gurion at his home in Sde Boker to congratulate him on his 77th birthday in 1963

How it really was: The true test of leadership

Sadat, Rabin and Begin were motivated by a vision of the future in which war would no longer be an option.

The author, Avraham Avi-hai, with then prime minister Levi Eshkol in 1965.

Has it really been 40 years since Israel's political revolution?

Likud’s first electoral victory produced a new political hegemon and an epoch of social transition, national defiance and cultural revolt.

Menachem and Aliza Begin vote in the national election on May 17, 1977

Le jour où la guerre a fait irruption à Jérusalem

Souvenirs de cette journée si particulière qui a vu le début de la guerre des Six Jours

Moshé Dayan entouré  de Narkis et de Rehavam Zeevi à l’entrée  du Tombeau des patriarches à Hébron

A house with a legacy

Jerusalem’s newest museum is a must-see gem that tells the compelling story of Levi Eshkol and his contributions at a crucial point in our history.

The newly renovated Beit Levi Eshkol in the Rehavia neighborhood

Miriam Eshkol, wife of prime minister Levi Eshkol, dies at 87

Miriam Eshkol served in the Palmah, on convoys to the besieged Jerusalem, and in the War of Independence, in the artillery.

Levi Eshkol

Middle Israel: The seventh day

As it enters its 50th anniversary year, the Six Day War looms, for better and worse, as the most pivotal moment in the state’s history.

Jewish settler Refael Morris stands at an observation point overlooking the West Bank village of Duma, near Yishuv Hadaat, an unauthorized Jewish settler outpost