Daniel Rona (Hebrew: ×“× ×™×?ל ×¨×•× ×”) is a Latter-day Saint (LDS) tour guide and theologian, well known in the LDS community for being the only officially licensed Israeli tour guide with LDS membership. He is also a theological researcher who promotes asserted links between LDS and Jewish traditions. Rona regards himself as both LDS and Jewish.
Daniel Rona was born in 1941 in Palestine to two German-Jewish refugee parents. As a young child, his parents divorced, and he moved with his father to New York, where the two of them became members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Later, they both moved to Salt Lake City, where young Daniel grew up. As a young adult, Rona served an LDS mission in Germany, where he visited his mother Kitty and his stepfather Zvi Tohar.
After the Six-Day War and the Yom Kippur war, Daniel Rona desired to make aliyah, and he, his wife Marilyn Minardi, and their children moved to Israel in 1974. At first, Daniel Rona was denied financial aid and recognition as a returning Jew because of his LDS affiliation, but he did not leave, and eventually this recognition was granted by the government and he became a citizen of Israel.
Seeing a growing demand for LDS tourism in Israel, Daniel Rona became a professional tour guide, organizing LDS tours of a religious nature in Israel and neighboring countries. He later founded the Ensign Foundation, a charitable non-profit organization for promoting multilateral education between Israel and other countries, as well as funding scientific research and archaeological digs.
Daniel Rona today lives in Jerusalem with his wife Marilyn and their five children. He manages the LDS tourism service Israel Revealed. It features tour packages to locations in the Holy Land and Meso-America.
Daniel also sells for Pre-Paid Legal Services, Inc., a multi-level marketing company.
Daniel Rona was born in 1941 in Palestine to two German-Jewish refugee parents. As a young child, his parents divorced, and he moved with his father to New York, where the two of them became members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Later, they both moved to Salt Lake City, where young Daniel grew up. As a young adult, Rona served an LDS mission in Germany, where he visited his mother Kitty and his stepfather Zvi Tohar.
After the Six-Day War and the Yom Kippur war, Daniel Rona desired to make aliyah, and he, his wife Marilyn Minardi, and their children moved to Israel in 1974. At first, Daniel Rona was denied financial aid and recognition as a returning Jew because of his LDS affiliation, but he did not leave, and eventually this recognition was granted by the government and he became a citizen of Israel.
Seeing a growing demand for LDS tourism in Israel, Daniel Rona became a professional tour guide, organizing LDS tours of a religious nature in Israel and neighboring countries. He later founded the Ensign Foundation, a charitable non-profit organization for promoting multilateral education between Israel and other countries, as well as funding scientific research and archaeological digs.
Daniel Rona today lives in Jerusalem with his wife Marilyn and their five children. He manages the LDS tourism service Israel Revealed. It features tour packages to locations in the Holy Land and Meso-America.
Daniel also sells for Pre-Paid Legal Services, Inc., a multi-level marketing company.
Mega Midlands is a yearly event for the LGBT community, with all profits going to local LGBT charities.
The 2007 event was held in Birmingham, UK and received much press in Midlands Zone, the regional free gay magazine due to the decision of the organisers to hold the event on Broad Street, the main straight entertainment area instead of in Birminghams gay village.
As well as a party the event included a pub crawl, back stage tour of the Hippodrome, trips to Cadburys World and the National Trust Back to backs. It was truely a chance for the LGBT community to come together away from the Gay scene.
Plans are now beginning for an event in 2008 in Nottingham, the plan being that the event will rotate between different cities within the Midlands area of the UK.
The 2007 event was held in Birmingham, UK and received much press in Midlands Zone, the regional free gay magazine due to the decision of the organisers to hold the event on Broad Street, the main straight entertainment area instead of in Birminghams gay village.
As well as a party the event included a pub crawl, back stage tour of the Hippodrome, trips to Cadburys World and the National Trust Back to backs. It was truely a chance for the LGBT community to come together away from the Gay scene.
Plans are now beginning for an event in 2008 in Nottingham, the plan being that the event will rotate between different cities within the Midlands area of the UK.
Three Wars is a novel by Jacy Norgaard. The story follows the adventures of Captain Jake Anderson and his friends Alex Smith Micheal Johnson
The novel was originally published by Lulu.
And the co-publisher is Norgaard Publishing.
Plot
JAKE ANDERSON HAD IT ALL A SPORTS CAREER A LIFE UNTIL HE WAS DRAFTED. He is staioned at a M*A*S*C Unit(Fictional) in the waning days of the Korean War. He has to stand Eleven Years of Boredom,Change and Sometimes Murder.
The novel was originally published by Lulu.
And the co-publisher is Norgaard Publishing.
Plot
JAKE ANDERSON HAD IT ALL A SPORTS CAREER A LIFE UNTIL HE WAS DRAFTED. He is staioned at a M*A*S*C Unit(Fictional) in the waning days of the Korean War. He has to stand Eleven Years of Boredom,Change and Sometimes Murder.
Sarah Kreager is a a caucasian American woman who was allegedly brutally attacked by a gang of nine African American teenagers on a bus in Baltimore, Maryland on December 7, 2007. Kreager boarded the bus with her boyfriend and the teens told her she could not sit down. When she took her seat, the teens began punching her, eventually dragging her off the bus. Kreager suffered broken facial bones, damaged eye muscles, and deep lacerations on her head, neck and back.[http://www.wtopnews.com/?nid598&sid1306247]. Police are investigating the event as a possible hate crime