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In Israel you can already walk without masks

Israel, with a large part of its population immunized, today took another step towards normality: citizens were able to remove their masks in the open air after a year of imposing its mandatory use to contain the virus, and schools resumed full-time face-to-face classes without division into small groups.

Without major restrictions, with an almost total reopening and an atmosphere reminiscent of pre-pandemic times, many Israelis took to the streets today without their masks on, optimistically feeling that they are still leaving the pandemic behind after a swift vaccination that led to a sustained decrease in morbidity.

Mandatory indoors

But the masks do not disappear completely: they are still mandatory indoors, and Health recommends using them also in large meetings or crowded outdoor areas.

Given this, perhaps also due to an already acquired custom, many still today walked through Jerusalem with the mask that covered their mouth and nose, or placed on their chin to quickly put it on if they had to enter a shop or get on the bus.

‘I left home without my mask on, but after a while I put it back on because I felt weird, as if I were naked,’ Tuval Wolf, a young Israeli who was walking down a pedestrian street in the Holy City, told EFE. stuffy mouth and nose.

For others like 23-year-old student Yoav Menuhin, going outside and ‘breathing without the filter of the mask’ was ‘liberating’ and even ‘exciting’, a symbol of ‘optimism’ that illustrates how the country continues successfully its return to a certain normality.

However, he considered that the population should be “cautious” and not forget to wear the mask indoors, since “it is not yet clear whether vaccines immunize” against new variants of the virus that could change the situation and increase morbidity.

Stay cautious

Israel diagnosed seven cases of the virus strain initially detected in India on Friday, of which little is known yet. The authorities are now investigating whether or not the mutation is resistant to the vaccine and the degree of contagion it could entail.

Above all, Health urges to comply with the new regulations rigorously and to maintain hygiene and social distance to avoid infections.

“The great challenge is to carry the mask in your pocket and put it on every time you arrive in a closed or crowded place,” said the national coordinator of the pandemic, Nachman Ash, who warned that the country has not yet achieved mass immunization despite your progress.

Israel has already vaccinated more than 5.3 million people with at least one dose of the vaccine and almost 5 million with both, which is more than half of its population of about 9 million.

The vaccination – one of the fastest in the world – greatly reduced infections, deaths and patients in serious condition. At this moment there are only about two hundred hospitalized in critical condition, and the active patients are just over 2,500.

Daily infections have also been reduced: yesterday only 85 new cases were detected, with a percentage of positives of 0.8%, a very low figure compared to the peak of more than 10,000 infections in 24 hours that the country registered at the end from January.

Even so, Ash warned that victory cannot yet be claimed: despite the large number of vaccinated and the 830,000 Israelis who overcame the virus, it is necessary to reach ‘75% of the population inoculated and / or recovered’ to achieve the desired immunization of flock.

Back to normal in schools

Another sector that sees recent progress is education. After having gradually returned to classrooms with restrictions, bubble groups and combining virtual and face-to-face lessons this February, some 2.5 million students today resumed classes full time and without having to be separated into ‘capsules’.

The measures are for both kindergarten children and primary and secondary school students, who from today will be able to go to class between five and six days a week, as was customary before the virus.

The limitations they had to move between classrooms are also lifted, but they must continue to ventilate rooms, maintain social distance and wear masks in class, the Ministry of Education specified today in a statement.

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