Hasbara
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Hasbara
Summary
Hasbara is a political concept[1]. Hasbara ranks in the top 9% of political_concept entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (719 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Hasbara's instance of is recorded as political concept[3].
- Hasbara's instance of is recorded as public relations[4].
- Hasbara's instance of is recorded as public diplomacy[5].
- Hasbara's subclass of is recorded as propaganda[6].
- Hasbara's Commons category is recorded as Public diplomacy of Israel (Hasbara)[7].
- Hasbara's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/042s18[8].
- Hasbara's facet of is recorded as Public diplomacy of Israel[9].
- Hasbara's facet of is recorded as Israel lobby in the United States[10].
- Hasbara's used by is recorded as Israel[11].
- Hasbara's used by is recorded as IDF Spokesperson's Unit[12].
- Hasbara's used by is recorded as Prime Minister's Office[13].
- Hasbara's used by is recorded as Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Israel[14].
- Hasbara's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'he', 'text': 'הַסְבָּרָה'}[15].
- Hasbara's uses is recorded as mass communication[16].
- Hasbara's uses is recorded as social media[17].
- Hasbara's uses is recorded as Old media[18].
- Hasbara's uses is recorded as cultural diplomacy[19].
- Hasbara's significant person is recorded as Theodor Herzl[20].
- Hasbara's Quora topic ID is recorded as Hasbara[21].
- Hasbara's has goal is recorded as endorsement[22].
- Hasbara's has goal is recorded as legitimacy of the State of Israel[23].
- Hasbara's named by is recorded as Nahum Sokolow[24].
Why It Matters
Hasbara ranks in the top 9% of political_concept entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (719 views/month).[2] Hasbara has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] Hasbara is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]