The Jerusalem Post

Hanegbi: Aliya is Israel’s strongest weapon

Nine Anglo immigrants awarded Nefesh B’Nefesh prize

- • By JAMIE HALPER

At a ceremony honoring nine English-speaking immigrants to Israel who were awarded Nefesh B’Nefesh’s annual Bonei Zion Prize, Regional Cooperatio­n Minister Tzachi Hanegbi said aliya is Israel’s strongest weapon.

“You see in the headlines, media and newspapers [stories] about tension, but all these issues are not as important as this event, because this event, and aliya as a whole... this is the answer,” Hanegbi said at the ceremony at the Knesset on Monday. “This is the strongest answer that we can give to those who wish for our demise.”

The annual award, sponsored by Sylvan Adams, a recent immigrant himself, specifical­ly honors the achievemen­ts of English-speaking individual­s who have moved to Israel.

Prof. Benjamin W. Corn is a cancer doctor and cofounder and chairman of Life’s Door, an organizati­on working to integrate spirituali­ty into medical treatment. He said coming to Israel changed the trajectory of his career for the better.

“I’ve done a bunch of things here that I never would have done in the convention­al path I was traveling in Philadelph­ia before I made aliya,” he said. “It would’ve been fine, but the things we’ve done here, and the people we’ve touched have just been exponentia­lly multiplied.”

Beth Steinberg received the prize in the category of community and nonprofit for her work founding and directing Shutaf Inclusion Programs, an organizati­on dedicated to disability inclusion. She said the award is a tribute to the work that she and cofounder Miriam Avraham have done in a field that is only beginning to be understood.

“I accept this award for Shutaf, for myself and for Miriam – both of us olim – and for every Shutaf family, and everyone out there who dreams of a more accepting world,” Steinberg said.

Rabbi Chaim Brovender, a prominent Torah teacher and founder of the Academy for Torah Initiative­s and Directions in Jewish Education, said the award is significan­t because of its recognitio­n of teaching Torah, rather than a recognitio­n of personal accomplish­ment.

“The idea that they’re giving this prize to someone who is a teacher of Torah, I thought that that was a good thing,” Brovender said. “Teaching Torah is, compared to many other things in the world today, a sideline. It’s not like medicine or politics or research. It’s kind of a little off the beaten track, but I think that it’s very important for the Jewish people.”

In addition to Corn, Steinberg and Brovender, the award was presented to Prof. Gerald Steinberg for Israel advocacy; Yoram Raanan for culture, arts and sports; Profs. Alice Shalvi and Eliezer Jaffe for lifetime achievemen­t; and Capt. Libby Weiss and Scott Neiss for young leadership.

 ?? (Knesset) ?? RABBI CHAIM BROVENDER (second right) looks to receive his award, accompanie­d by Regional Cooperatio­n Minister Tzachi Hanegbi (center) and Nefesh B’Nefesh cofounders Rabbi Yehoshua Fass (left) and Tony Gelbart.
(Knesset) RABBI CHAIM BROVENDER (second right) looks to receive his award, accompanie­d by Regional Cooperatio­n Minister Tzachi Hanegbi (center) and Nefesh B’Nefesh cofounders Rabbi Yehoshua Fass (left) and Tony Gelbart.

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