I World Year In Review Tzvi Kahn OCTOBER 2004 Geneva — Col. Muammar Gadhafi's son meets Israeli diplo- mats. Romania — On the country's first Holocaust Remembrance Day, Romania's president admits that Romanian Jews suffered during the Holocaust. Jerusalem — The Knesset for- mally authorizes Israel's with- drawal from the Gaza Strip. points from the 19 percent who voted for Al Gore in 2000 — in defeating Sen. John Kerry, D- Mass., to retain the presidency. Jewish Rep. Martin Frost, R- Texas, loses his seat to another incumbent, Pete Sessions, R- Texas, in a new district, while Reps. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., and Allyson Schwartz, D-Pa., gain new seats. After the election, there are 11 Jews in the Senate and 26 in the House. Paris — Longtime Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat dies in a Paris hospital after spending sev- eral days on life support. Boston — The City Council of Somerville, Mass., considers a resolution to divest city holdings in Israel. The local Jewish com- munity and national Jewish organizations mobilize to defeat the initiative. Jerusalem — Israel passes a law restricting Shin Bet inter- rogators from using force against suspected terrorists. Jerusalem — An Israeli mili- tary court sentences Azziz Mustafa Salha, 23, to life in prison for his involvement in the murder of two Israeli reserve sol- diers in a Ramallah police sta- tion in October 2000. Footage of Salha holding up his blood- stained hands for the Palestinian mob gathered outside the police station was shown around the world. NOVEMBER 2004 Jerusalem — Israel offers a $10 million reward for informa- tion on the whereabouts of the airman Ron Arad, who has been missing since he was shot down in a 1986 battle in Lebanon. Jerusalem — About 20,000 protestors rally against the gov- ernment's plan to withdraw from the Gaza Strip. Washington — George Bush earns about 24 percent of the Jewish vote — up 5 percentage DECEMBER 2004 Jerusalem — Prime Minister Ariel Sharon fires four Cabinet ministers after they vote against Israel's 2005 budget. Washington — President Bush signs a bill touted by Jewish organizations that would provide federal funding for disabled stu- dents in religious schools. • New York — The FBI subpoe- nas four senior staffers at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee to appear before a Jewish Telegraphic Agency SEPTEMBER 2004 Chicago — MRIs are found to be more effective at detecting breast cancer caused by gene mutations than are mammogra- phies. Berlin — For the first time since 1968, the extreme right- wing National Democratic Party and the German People's Union qualify for representation in state parliaments. Jerusalem — Two Israelis are killed when a suicide bomber strikes near a bus stop. Gaza — Palestinian gunmen kill three Israeli soldiers. Washington — U.S. officials revoke the visa of a controversial Swiss Muslim who was to be a visiting scholar at the University of Notre Dame, in Indiana. Damascus, Syria — Hamas blames Israel for the assassina- tion of one of its top members. AUSCWtNITZ , SNIgk) Some of the roughly 7,000 people gathered for ceremonies marking the 60th anniversary of Auschwitz's liberation in Oswiecim, Poland, Jan. 27, 2005. grand jury. The subpoenas follow suspicions that a former Pentagon official passed a classi- fied draft policy statement on Iran to AIPAC, which allegedly then passed it on to Israel. Atlanta — A U.S. court rules in favor of an inmate who wants to wear a yarmulke and receive kosher food in jail. Chicago — A jury in a federal courthouse rules that three Islamic organizations — the Islamic Association for Palestine, the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development and the Quranic Literary Institute — and an individual named Muhammad Salah must pay a Jewish family $156 million in damages for the 1996 murder of its son in Israel. The defendants had provided financial support to Hamas, the group responsible for the murder. Southeast Asia — A tsunami claims more than 100,000 lives, Rabbi Barry Weinstein plays with a young evacuee from New Orleans in the yard of B'nai Israel Synagogue in Baton Rouge after Hurricane Katrina struck Aug. 29, 2005. September 29 2005 al