SINGLE LIFE Singles in Israel The Israeli singles scene is centered around night life and the cafes SIMON GRIVER Special to The Jewish News NI ost Israelis are deeply prejudiced against sin- gles. Yet because of this belief that everybody should be married, the Israeli singles scene is vibrant as society in the Jewish State strives to encourage the unattached to find a suitable partner and build a family. Night life abounds, especially in Tel Aviv. There are discos, singles clubs, and bars but most popular of all are streetside cafes. Israel's warm climate makes for an outdoor lifestyle and on balmy summer evenings, the custom is simply to stroll aimlessly up and down a city's main thoroughfare, meeting friends and chatting over coffee. On weekends the beach is a popular rendezvous spot. Isrealis, like Jews the world over, are social and sociable creatures, naturally outgoing and gregarious, and this makes for a rich singles scene. Furthermore, there are 1.5 million tourists visiting the country each year, many of whom are singles looking for a Mediterranean vacation romance, and this adds variety to singles' potential. With army duty and economic dif- ficulties, Israel may not be the Garden of Eden, but singles have a wide range of options. In addition, most Israelis fancy themselves as matchmakers, and "blind dates" set up by well-meaning intermediaries are the rule rather than the exception. Barry Greenberg, a 36-year-old South African-born lawyer who came to Jerusalem eight years ago, estimates that he meets an average of two new women a week through the intervention of friends. "Neighbors, friends, family and clients?" he says, "all seem to have an endless list of eligible females. When I first came to Israel I resented what I saw as an interference in my private affairs. But I'm more laid back about it now. It's a comfortable way of meeting potential new partners and - -- 'Ainr" fn A, 4nm sometimes serious relationships have blossomed from the initial date?' This method of matchmaking is a particularly favorite pastime among Orthodox Jews who pressure their children to marry as young as possi- ble. Courting couples in the Orthodox community usually meet for drinks in busy hotels, where intimate conversa- tion can take place without com- promising the religious girl's reputa- tion and modesty. Indeed, the Orthodox Jewish at- titude to singles is distinctly in- tolerant. Unmarried people are in- complete, while the biblical com- mandment "to be fruitful and multip- ly," is seen as one of the basic tenents of Judaism. Secular, liberal Israelis are just as family oriented. Increasing the coun- try's Jewish birth rate is seen as an important part of Zionist ideology. With low rates of Jewish immigra- tion, government ministers are always asking Israelis for higher "in- ternal immigration, by producing larger families. Not surprisingly, considering these social pressures, Israeli singles are on the look out for marriage from their late teens. This is sometimes off- putting for American immigrants who are not always used to getting too serious too quickly. "I find it very difficult to relate to Israelis," explains Joel Lewin, a social worker from Los Angeles who has liv- ed in Tel Aviv for six years. "And the problem is much deeper than langauge, which is in itself quite a problem. My Hebrew is good, but it's difficult expressing emotions in another language in times of stress?' "Israeli women put men under pressure very quickly?' he claims. "Within a few days they want you to meet their parents and within a few weeks they're talking marriage. There is no sense of fun and romance, it's all practicalities. In general women from Sephardi backgrounds are more anxious to get married than Ashkenazim?' But Jody Morgan, a teacher from New York now living in Tel Aviv, disagrees that Israeli singles put their partners under pressure. "Of course pressure is a very subjective term;' she insists. "But Iraelis are very honest and straightforward. They don't play games with relation- ships. There is less teasing, deceiving and stringing people along. They say what they want and how they feel and you know where- you stand. To my mind that produces less pressure in relationships?' "I know Israeli men can be offput- tingly macho when you first meet them;' she continues, "but beneath the surface they are very sincere and old fashioned. I personally find their need for straightforward love and af- fection very romantic." Native Israelis do tend to marry young. As in most societies there are more singles among middle class groups with pressures to marry, the greatest among the religious and more tradition-minded Sephardim. Immigrants from the west form a large part of the singles scene and seem all the more exotic to Sabras. Some Israelis are quite brazen about their motives. "I'd like to spend some time in America?' says 21-year-old Yehudit Almozlino from Beersheba. "If I were to have an American boyfriend then obviously that would be very conve- nient. But I wouldn't marry just for American citizenship. You can't have a relationship without love and affec- tion." On the other hand, many relation- ships break up because Israelis are not prepared to leave their native country. And as Israel becomes more affluent, many western trends are beginning to appear in the local singles scene. Whereas ten years ago, an Israeli's social life would often revolve around visiting friends' apart- ments, there are now many more op- portunities to get out — to the theater, cinema or a concert or for a meal or just a drink. Tel Aviv is the capital of Israel's night life. Dizengoff Street buzzes un- til 2 a.m. Older singles complain that much of the singles traffic in the more public places is comprised of teenagers. However, the more in- itiated know the well-frequented haunts. Cafes liked "Shoftim" with a 30s "artsy" crowd in Ibn Gabriol Street and Hahof Ham'aaravi (Western Beach) at the southern end of Tel Aviv's promenade with a younger, more fashion-conscious clientele are currently the "in" places for singles. But next year — who knows? Thurs- day night is the big night out in Tel Aviv (the weekend consists of Friday and Saturday) and things get swing- ing after 10 p.m. Incidentally, Thurs- day night is Brazilian night at Hahof Ha'Maaravi. Other places to search out include Hatzuk in Tel Baruch for those who like to dance the night away. Tel Avivis tend to look down on Jerusalem as a city with no night life. It is certainly true that the holy city does not have the glamor and diver- sity of Tel Aviv's night life, but there