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In page LGBTQ rights in Israel:

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In the 1980s, the Tel Aviv weekly newspaper HaIr began to publish a chronicle about an Israeli gay man, known at the time as Moshe, who would later reveal himself to be Gal Uchovsky.[1] The second major shift in how Israeli media dealt with LGBTQ issues came in 1991, when the Histadrut Labor Federation began to include, in its official publication, a section on LGBTQ social and political topics. This was followed by gradually more supportive press coverage on the Israeli LGBTQ community and its human rights objectives.[2] Today, the two Israeli daily newspapers have openly gay editors and/or writers, and several LGBTQ publications have come and gone.[citation needed]