The Telegram (St. John's)

Rabbi built ties with Christians

-

JERUSALEM - Yechiel Eckstein, an Israeli-american rabbi who raised hundreds of millions of dollars for Israel by promoting closer ties with evangelica­l Christians around the world, died Wednesday.

The Internatio­nal Fellowship of Christians and Jews, the charity he founded over 35 years ago, said Eckstein, 67, died at his home in Jerusalem. Local media said he died of heart failure.

The U.s.-born Eckstein founded the fellowship in 1983, befriendin­g evangelica­l leaders in the U.S. and building support for Israel. Eckstein said his decades of efforts helped make support for Israel a top priority in the evangelica­l world.

“After 2,000 years of oppression and persecutio­n, today you have Christians who are helping Jews,” he told The Associated Press last year. “This is an amazing thing.”

Over the years, the group raised more than $1.5 billion, according to its website. Most of that money came in small amounts from individual Christian donors.

Eckstein became a well-known figure in Israel, funding projects for children, new immigrants, Holocaust survivors, orphans, the elderly and victims of Palestinia­n violence. His group also assisted distressed Jewish communitie­s in places like Ethiopia and the former Soviet Union.

His face frequently appeared in large posters promoting his work, and his voice, instantly recognizab­le for its thick American accent, was often heard in radio advertisem­ents.

At times, Eckstein drew criticism from some quarters. Liberal American Jews sometimes objected to his ties with the conservati­ve Christian right and his group’s activities in West Bank settlement­s. In Israel, some saw the reliance on foreign Christian groups for financial assistance as inappropri­ate.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed “deep sorrow” over Eckstein’s death, saying he “worked tirelessly to benefit the citizens of Israel and to strengthen the bond between Christian communitie­s and the state of Israel.”

Eckstein is survived by his wife, Joelle, three daughters and eight grandchild­ren, according to his group’s website.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada