Hannah Kim

Hannah Kim (Hebrew: חנה קים; born 27 October 1957) is an Israeli activist and investigative journalist.

Hannah Kim
Hannah Kim, 2017
Born (1957-10-27) 27 October 1957
Haifa, Israel
NationalityIsraeli
Alma materTel Aviv University
Occupation(s)Journalist, activist
AwardsSokolov Award

Biography

Hannah Kim was born in Haifa and graduated from Hugim High School[1] in Haifa. She served in the Israel Defense Forces during the years 1976–1978 in the National Communication Battalion. She holds a BA in Hebrew and general literature, history of the Jewish people, history of the Land of Israel, general history, and film and art history at the Tel Aviv University.

Journalism and literary career

In 1978, she began working as a journalist for Al HaMishmar, first as a correspondent for Tel Aviv and later as a political writer.

Following the death of Simeon Joshua in Kfar Shalem, Tel Aviv, who was shot by a policeman after he barricaded himself on the roof of his house following the construction crime which the deceased had committed, she published a series of investigative reports on building violations, which were committed by Avraham Shapira, Leon Recanati, Rami Ungar, and Rehavam Ze'evi, Chairman of Eretz Israel Museum. Following the recent investigation, Ze'evi was banned from entering the museum, and the journalists' association condemned it.

She published children's stories in Mishmar LeYeledim, edited by Shlomo Nitzan. One of the children's stories she wrote (I saw Elijah the prophet) was dramatized and broadcast in Kol Yisrael.

She revealed new documents from the Israeli Foreign Ministry archives. shedding light on the missed opportunity for peace between Israel and Egypt, two years before the Suez Crisis.

In 1986, she began working for the newspaper Ha'ir. In this year, for the first time, she published the peace initiative of Foreign Minister Moshe Sharett, about two years before the Suez Crisis, which sent an emissary on his behalf to President Gamal Abdel Nasser to reach a peace agreement with Egypt.

She revealed the scope of trade between Israel and South Africa, and her article was quoted in The Washington Post. She published discoveries about the economic ties between Israel and the Soviet Union, which included steel imports, despite the severing of relations between the two countries.

She wrote about a weapons deal between Israel and Iran, a year before the Iran–Contra affair, in which the chairman of the Israel Aerospace Industries Mordechai Hod, and the Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani's contacts in Iran were involved.

She investigated trade relations between Israel and the Arab countries, in which transactions were exposed between Israel and Libya, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain and Morocco.

She held an interview with Dominica's Prime Minister, Eugenia Charles about the United States invasion of Grenada.

In November 1989, she wrote and edited The Hammer,[2][3][4] a monthly magazine for social affairs. She was active in the homeless movement which was established that year, in which its activity tents were established throughout the country, mainly in the neighborhoods.

About a year later, she began working for Hadashot, until it was closed in 1993. At Hadashot, she founded the weekly supplement "Pressure", which she edited, for social and economic affairs.[4] In the supplement, investigations were published about homeless children in Israel, malnutrition in neighborhoods and development towns, manifestations of racism against Ethiopian immigrants[5] and poverty in the ultra Orthodox and the Arab sectors. For her work, she won a citation from the Sokolov Award.[6]

In Hadashot, she wrote that Shimon Sheves, the director general of the Israeli Prime Minister's office, was appointed by Oren Shachor from the rank of a corporal to a captain,[7] as well as a first comprehensive investigation of Benjamin Netanyahu, in which Bibi's millionaires' club was first published, with the names of its donors. She published an interview with the millionaire Gabi Tamman,[8] who said: "Bibi is my race horse".[9][10]

In 1994, she began working for Haaretz and published a political-social-economic column. She published weekly articles on the articles' page, and focused on the rule of law, the independence of the judicial system, and the preservation of the integrity of senior government officials,[11] as well as the connection between capital and governing.[12][13][14]

In Haaretz, she published revelations about the wars of the Shin Bet (the Israeli Security Agency) on Congo's soil, involving the head of the Shin Bet Head Office and some senior Shin Bet officials, who built the ruling army in front of the opposing army. She made the initial publication of the increased pensions of Arthur Israelovitz and Giora Eini, senior members of the Histadrut, and the increased pension of Shimon Sheves, as well as the first computer kits in the "Computer for Every Child" project, intended for needy children, were given to the two children of the Prime Minister Netanyahu. She published the first article on the opinion page of Haaretz in favor of a general strike. In 2004, she left Haaretz.

Prior to the elections to the nineteenth Knesset, she published on her Facebook page a series of notes and documents written by Netanyahu.

Awards and recognition

She was awarded the Quality Knight Award of the year 1999 for Communication and Journalism. The reasons for the award were:

"In her journalistic work, Mrs. Hanna Kim discovered the required qualities of a professional, honest, warrior and ethical journalist. A meticulous collection of material from the field, cross-referencing, verification of the material and the presentation to the reader in the clearest and the most fluent manner, characterize her work throughout her professional career. In the course of her work, she covered various areas of Israeli social and political life: the exposure of concealed arms deals, and wrongs which caused to weak sectors of society such as immigrants, minorities and foreign workers. Particularly worthy of mention of her journalistic achievements in the expression and treatment of politics and the rule of law. In these areas, she demonstrated determination, courage and helped the readers understand the Israeli reality in its essence, despite the illusions of the politicians".

  • 1993 – Citation from the Sokolov Award Committee for the "Pressure" supplement in Hadashot and writing on social issues.
  • 1999 – Knight of Quality Government Award from the Movement for Quality Government.[4]

Social activism

Hannah Kim in a black dress and her back to the camera, is demonstrating with Israeli disabled and elderly near the Knesset, 16 July 2018

In 2009 she founded, together with a group of parents, the Harim School in Giv'at Ada for students from the autistic spectrum. She is a member of the Audit Committee of the Association for Legal guardian which was established by parents and public figures to look after the future of helpless autistic people.

She was one of the leaders of the protest against the government corruption and for equality before the law. She organized and led the demonstrations in Petah Tikva, near the home of Attorney General, Avichai Mandelblit,[15][16] and then the mass demonstrations which were begun in Tel Aviv.[17][18] She opened the first demonstration in Tel Aviv with a speech which called on the Israelis to find a leader who would be a beacon, one masterpiece, and abandon their leaders accused of corruption. At that demonstration, Prof. Uzi Arad joined, and was introduced by Kim as a partner of moving the protest from Petah Tikva to Tel Aviv, as they had talked six months prior to the move.

As a mother of two children with autism, she took part in the struggle of Disabled Israelis for a minimum wage, and blocked vehicle traffic in Tel Aviv near Azrieli Center and in Jerusalem near the Knesset.

Kim was a member of the Me Too movement, and wrote in her Facebook page about two men who sexually harassed her.[19] On 17 October 2018 Kim told Keren Neubach that she was harassed by Haim Ramon and by Dan Margalit.[20][21][22]

See also

References

  1. "Hugim High School". Facebook. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
  2. פרסיקו, אורן (18 December 2003). "The Hammers". Globes (in Hebrew). Retrieved 25 August 2018.
  3. Hannah Kim (28 August 2016). "He was a man, which should not be met in a dark alley". Mekomit (A home of an activist journalism) (in Hebrew). Retrieved 24 September 2018. He annoyed me when I edited the newspaper "The Hammer" because he wanted to annex it as the Labor Party's home page. We fought a lot, but when I wrote in Hadashot that he was the heir and that he would lead the Labor Party, I tasted a bit of the contempt which he got.
  4. Hannah Kim on Facebook. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
  5. "The Ethiopian side of the immigration". Hanoch Bartov, Maariv (in Hebrew). 19 June 1990. Retrieved 22 September 2018. Young Ethiopian soldiers of Israel Defense Forces spend their holidays at the central bus station, because they do not have home nor bed, as Hannah Kim told in Hadashot.
  6. Sokolov Award (2017). "Sokolov Award winners so far" (PDF). Tel Aviv-Yafo Municipality (in Hebrew). Hannah Kim appears in תשנ"ג – 1993. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  7. Guy Leshem (10 November 2006). "Shimon Sheves: I am devoid of any flaw; As far as the law is concerned, I can even be prime minister". TheMarker (in Hebrew). Retrieved 22 September 2018. In 1992, the journalist Hannah Kim revealed in Hadashot that when Sheves served as an adviser to the Defense Minister Rabin, he organized a rapid advancement in the ranks with Shahak, who was the head of the Military Intelligence, and the chief intelligence officer Oren Shahor.
  8. Diana Bachur-Nir (5 December 2013). "Gabi Tamman: I'm a monkey, my wife is a crocodile". Calcalist (in Hebrew). Retrieved 25 August 2018.
  9. Shuki Sadeh (10 June 2016). "Benjamin Netanyahu's Billionaires Club". TheMarker (in Hebrew). Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  10. Shuki Sadeh (18 June 2016). "Benjamin Netanyahu's Billionaires Club". Haaretz. Retrieved 24 September 2018. In November 1991, Hadashot journalist Hanna Kim revealed Netanyahu's connections with American benefactors, among them Ron Lauder, Sam Domb, Morad Zamir (an Israeli businessman living in New York who has been close to Netanyahu for years) and the businessman Gabi Taman, brother of the billionaire Leon Taman. A few months later, in May 1992, Taman told Hadashot: "Bibi is without a doubt one of my best race horses, and I'm betting on him".
  11. Hannah Kim (6 May 1997). "The Incubator of Arik Sharon". National Library of Israel (in Yiddish). Retrieved 25 September 2018.
  12. Aharon Barak (2 December 1996). "A civil request: Hannah Kim versus Eyal Arad, for transferring the hearing of the claim from the Magistrate's Court in Jerusalem to the Tel Aviv-Jaffa Magistrate's Court". Takdin (in Hebrew). Arad was a Israel's leading political strategist in 1994. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  13. Telem Yahav (2 April 2015). "Eyal Arad: Netanyahu offered me a job with foreign funding in 1994". Ynetnews. Retrieved 22 September 2018.
  14. Dr. Israel Bar-Nir (16 July 2016). "Democratology – The Israeli democracy in a pure and simple manner – Democracy and Army in Israel". The Mideast Forum (in Hebrew). Retrieved 24 September 2018. The day after Ehud Barak's victory in the elections for the prime minister in 1999, journalist Hannah Kim wrote in Haaretz (June 1, 1999) that Barak was a man who could walk between the drops without getting wet.
  15. Tal Schneider (13 January 2018). "The protests of 2017 proved that the democracy was not dead". Globes (in Hebrew). Retrieved 24 September 2018. Petah Tikva is not only the mother of the colonies but also the mother of the demonstrations. During a whole year, Sigalit Kessler, Mani Naftali, Hannah Kim, Oren Simon, Mira Strick, Simcha Latman, Abie Benjamin, Miri Nir, Dudu Palmeri, Avi Assayes, Uri Brightman and many other citizens were not far from the home of the Attorney General [...] "Hannah Kim is in charge of the order of the speakers and I trust her".
  16. Capital – Government (10 July 2017). "Demonstration no. 33 in Petah Tikva – Hana Kim" (in Hebrew). Retrieved 22 September 2018 via YouTube.
  17. Tal Schneider (3 December 2017). "Rothschild's Protest – The next generation". Globes (in Hebrew). Retrieved 22 August 2018.
  18. Dror Feuer (10 December 2017). "A big miracle happened here?". Globes (in Hebrew). Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  19. Sefi Krupsky (30 September 2018). "Stop being silent". Davar1 ("In the first place") (in Hebrew). Retrieved 1 October 2018. He took me in his car from the Knesset to my place. A quarter hour from the destination, he kissed me against my will. After five minutes he dropped me from the car, claiming he did not live in Tel Aviv. Another senior reporter opened his pants when we were in a room and pushed me, but was bothered by another colleague who came in.
  20. Revital Hovel (17 October 2018). "Five Women Accuse Prominent Israeli Journalist Dan Margalit of Sexual Harassment". Haaretz. Retrieved 17 October 2018.
  21. Amy Spiro (17 October 2018). "Multiple women accuse veteran israeli reporter of sexual assault". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 17 October 2018.
  22. Seder Yom (17 October 2018). "The journalist who claimed to have been harassed by Haim Ramon and by Dan Margalit: "I can not die without telling."". Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation (in Hebrew). Retrieved 17 October 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.