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The main event during the term of the seventh Knesset was the Yom
Kippur War, whose domestic and international political ramifications
manifested themselves only during the term of the eighth Knesset.
Even before the war was over most of the African states broke off their diplomatic
relations with Israel. The War was preceded by peace initiatives on behalf of the
UN (the Jarring mission) and the US (the Rogers Plan), which inter alia led to the
breakup of the National Unity Government. The Geneva Peace Conference convened on
the eve of the elections to the eight Knesset.
At the beginning of 1970 amendment No. 2 was introduced into the Law of
Return, which defined a Jew for the purpose of the right of return as
anyone born to a Jewish mother or has converted, and is not a member of
another faith. In this period a wave of immigration from the Soviet Union
began, and there was a problem of housing for them. At the same time in
the Soviet Union Jews who identified with Israel were persecuted. The
most marked event in this sphere were the Leningrad Trials.
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The Knesset also dealt with the activities of the Jewish Defense League
in the US, its attacks on Soviet offices in the US, as well as the
League's activities in Israel, under rabbi Meir Kahane, and especially
the League's attempts to convince members of Israel's minority populations
- Arabs and Druze - to emigrate from the country.
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The 7th Knesset: The festive opening session, 17.11.1969.
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The case of Meir Lansky - one of the Jewish heads of the Mafia in the US, who sought
asylum in Israel - was also on the agenda. The Knesset dealt extensively with the
subject of economic gaps in the society, and the term poverty line was coined. The
Black Panthers started a series of violent demonstrations in Jerusalem. A sub-committee
in the Knesset Economics Committee dealt with the problem of traffic accidents, after
the number of fatalities in such accidents rose, towards the end of the 1960's, to
over 400 a year.
In this period the wave of airline hijackings continued, and among the
famous terrorist acts in the period were the attack at Lod airport and the
murder of the Israeli sportsmen in Munich. All parts of the House were united
in condemning the PLO, its declarations and activities.
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