In Jerusalem
The tram station is out of order.
The line that runs on the border between the ultra-Orthodox Jewish and Palestinian neighborhoods of Jerusalem was attacked on Saturday at the end of the Shabbat by young Haredi demonstrators who denounce the confinement.
On the spot, the police are omnipresent.
In uniform and in civilian clothes.
Adolescents little worn on the wearing of the sanitary mask, compulsory in Israel, challenge them in silence, from a distance, from a children's playground.
The outbreak of violence in ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods is leaving traces.
On the other side of the road, the Arabs fear attacks.
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In Jerusalem, Bnei Brak, a city on the outskirts of Tel Aviv, in Beit Shemesh, Ashdod, rioters clashed with police.
These confrontations testify to the tumultuous relations between a part of the Israeli population which does not recognize, in its dissident and marginal branches, the very existence of the Hebrew state and does not accept the sanitary instructions.
AT
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