Mr. Elkayam is a product of several cultures. Having lived in four different continents (as described in his previous book: One Family, Our Cultures, Four Continents’ he became curious about world events and he never contented himself on just the local or national news. Mr. Elkayam is a graduate of the French Political Science Institute (Strasbourg), and of Towson State University. He was also educated at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and also attended the Sorbonne in France. Mr. Elkayam is also a Bible scholar and author on 3 books on the Bible. While residing in North Africa, The Middle East, Europe and Northern America Mr. Elkayam has followed events on at least ten (10) wars and each war carried its own descriptive vocabulary. For example, the war for Moroccan Independence in the mid of 1950’s taught us about the existence of the Istiqlal (a nationalistic group opposing the occupying French). The Six-Day War (1967) in the Middle East lasted exactly six days as its name calls for. The Gulf War and Deserts Storm remind us of The Battle on Iraq (1990 and 1991). Mr. Elkayam has been a resident of the US since the end of 1967. As such, he developed another way of looking at the rest of the world from an American perspective. Knowledge of facts and ideas took place in a gradual way and over dozens of years. It did not happen overnight. The author’s inspiration to write this project comes for the above mentioned sources and situations as well as from a daily dose of following up on current events heard on national news media (ABC, NBC, CBS, NPR, C-SPAN, FOX) and on conservative as well as liberal talk shows. The author’s political view remains neutral no matter the source or the affiliation of the news or the magazines. It only concentrates on facts and knowledge. Mr. Elkayam writes, ‘My goal has always been to acquire knowledge regardless of the source or the affiliation...’ Being a veteran of two armies (Israel and the US) gave Mr. Elkayam the opportunity to view the world from two different perspectives. Mr. Elkayam goes on saying that, ‘what is important and pertaining to this project is that, by reading, I follow up on the latest innovations and past historical highlights, none of which is unimportant for the reader.’