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Israel's social protest movement started with a tent on Tel Aviv's Rothschild Boulevard and a few voices demanding affordable housing. In less than a month it has grown into a national phenomenon - and perhaps the most serious challenge yet to the government of Benjamin Netanyahu.

Last Saturday, more than 250,000 Israelis took to the street to call for social reform. Tent cities have sprung up across the country, drawing in an ever-expanding cast of protesters - from students to pensioners, and Holocaust survivors to taxi drivers.

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