Mike's Place
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Mike's Place is the shared name of two bars in Israel that are popular with expats, and before the rise of the second intifada, frequented by people of all religions and ethnicities, as well. The first branch was opened in downtown Jerusalem by Mike Viggoda, a retired photojournalist in 1993. In 1995, it was handed over to Assaf Ganzman, an Israeli blues musician, when Viggoda returned to Canada.
In 1999, the bar moved to Jerusalem's Russian Compound and in 2005 to Jaffa Road. In 2000, a second location was opened in Tel Aviv, next to the American Embassy. Both bars became popular places to hear live music.
At 12:45am on April 29, 2003, a suicide bomber approached Mike's Place in Tel Aviv and blew himself up at the entrance to the bar - killing Dominique Hass, 29, Ran Baron, 23, and Yanai Weiss, 46, and wounding over 50. One of the wounded was security guard Avi Tabib, who blocked the bomber, preventing him from entering the bar and causing further fatalities.
An International Solidarity Movement volunteer subsequently reported that the bombers had been among a group of 'alternative tourists' who were offered tea when they paid an unscheduled visit to an ISM office on the way to a memorial for Rachel Corrie. This has led to accusations that the ISM were complicit with the bombing.
Despite the events of that day, the bar reopened on Yom Haatzmaut, Israeli Independence Day.
A documentary about the Tel Aviv Mike's Place, the suicide attack at the bar, and the people affected by it, was made by American-Israeli filmmaker Joshua Faudem in 2004.