I am sorry, you wrong.

DOS never had Hebrew support and the characters set was limited to
Extended ASCII (8 bit). Linux terminal is much more powerful and can
support wide range of characters and styles. As for printers, the main
reason you see them running on DOS operating system and using pinhead
printers is because only there they have good support for Hebrew
characters. Trust me, I know what I am talking about, I was
administrating the computers for such companies until few years ago.

As for Linux - Please never translate programs in visual order
characters, as this will cause everyone troubles when they will try more
advanced things, such as showing that text inside software which is
capable for showing unicode characters and has BiDi support. It is
possible that in case you have dpkg translated, for example, you will
see Hebrew text reversed inside  update-manager and synaptic. Since you
don't want to break GUI programs, you should not use visual order texts.

The previous decision in Debian have been decided by talent people. You
should not change this without first asking them for advice, even if you
own a distribution, since this will make bad experience for users.

You can, however, create a separate bugs for enabling BiDi support in
gnome-terminal and every other console/terminal application, but until
most of the application have stable BiDi support you should not place
dirty hacks such as reversing text.

-- 
Hebrew not displayed correctly in terminal
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/325324
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