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May 6, 2014 12:33 am
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State Archive and Google Team Up to Publish Photos of Israel’s Declaration of Independence for Yom Ha’atzmaut

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avatar by Aryeh Savir / Tazpit News Agency

David Ben-Gurion (Left) signing the Israeli Declaration of Independence, held by Moshe Sharet with Eliezer Kaplan looking on, at the Tel Aviv museum on Rothschild Blvd. on May 14, 1948. Photo: GPO.

In a joint initiative between the Israel State Archive, “Land Marks” – the project to strengthen national heritage infrastructures – and Google, Israel’s Declaration of Independence was photographed in a unique fashion and made accessible to the public online.

The high resolution, quality photographs may be enlarged so as to enable the viewer to focus on particular details, including the signatures of the signing members of the Jewish People’s Council, the stitching between the sheets of parchment, the wax seal, and the calligraphy in which it is written.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who visited Independence Hall in Tel Aviv on Thursday, was briefed on the initiative and said that the declaration, “sets as the cornerstone in the life of the state, the national Jewish identity of the State of Israel.”

Relating to the recent failure of peace talks, Netanyahu said: “To my great regret, as we have seen recently, there are those who do not recognize this natural right. They seek to undermine the historic, moral, and legal justification for the existence of the State of Israel as the nation-state of our people. The State of Israel will always preserve the full equality, in personal and civil rights, of all its citizens, Jewish and non-Jewish alike, in a Jewish and democratic country. And indeed, in Israel, individual and civil rights are assured for everyone, which sets us apart in the large expanse of the Middle East and even beyond.”

The original Declaration of Independence is kept in a climate-controlled safe at the Israel State Archive in Jerusalem and is not exhibited to the public.

The Declaration is considered one of the most important documents created by the State of Israel and is the first document that reflects Jewish sovereignty since the Hasmonean kingdom in 116 BCE.

The representatives of the various political factions in the pre-state community negotiated over every concept and formulation until they reached the agreed-upon document; the debate continued until close to the actual signing. The Declaration was read when independence was proclaimed on Friday, the 5th of the Hebrew month of Iyar, 5708 (corresponding to May 14th, 1948). Twenty-five members of the Jewish People’s Council signed the document; twelve additional members who were besieged in Jerusalem signed later. The original document is 117 by 29.7 centimeters, is made up of three sections, and bears a ribbon and a wax seal.

The declaration can be viewed here.

Israel’s first Prime Minister David Ben Gurion reading the Declaration of Independence can be seen here

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