The Jerusalem Post

New York congregati­onal mission to visit Bahrain

- • BY DANIELLE ZIRI Jerusalem Post Correspond­ent

NEW YORK – The Hampton Synagogue’s Rabbi Marc Schneier will lead a congregati­onal mission to Bahrain in early 2018 after being invited by King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa.

The congregati­on, located in Westhampto­n Beach in New York State, will be the very first Jewish one to visit an Arab country in the Gulf. Dates and itinerarie­s of the visit are expected to be distribute­d to participan­ts in the coming weeks. The visit will also include a trip to Israel.

Schneier’s relationsh­ip with the king has developed over the years as the rabbi has been a trailblaze­r in the field of Muslim-Jewish relations. He spearheade­d the internatio­nal annual Weekend of Twinning of Mosques and Synagogues and was involved in many missions connecting Muslim and Jewish leaders. In 2010, Schneier was the keynote speaker at the Doha Conference for Interfaith Dialogue in Qatar. Today, he also serves as the president of the Foundation for Ethnic Understand­ing.

In 2011, he was the first rabbi to be hosted by Bahrain’s king at the royal palace in Manama.

“On my many visits to Bahrain to meet with Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa and the royal family, I was invited several times to bring my community to Bahrain for them to see and experience the kingdom’s dedication to its own indigenous Jewish community and interrelig­ious dialogue and cooperatio­n,” Schneier told The Jerusalem Post. “Since I began working with the king in 2011, he had made it clear his commitment to building relations with Israel. In fact, in our first meeting we agreed that Bahrain and Israel share a common threat – Iran. He believes that the great hope for maintainin­g a moderate Arab presence in the Middle East is a strong Israel.”

Schneier had also worked with King Hamad on getting the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council to formally label Hezbollah as a terrorist organizati­on, which it did in March 2016.

The purpose of the congregati­onal mission to Bahrain is to “set a paradigm for what we hope and pray for this time of year during the High Holy Days,” he told the Post.

“We pray for peace in the Middle East and cooperatio­n between Israel and its neighborin­g countries,” he said. “We are seeing changes in the Gulf and my hope is that this mission will inspire other congregati­ons and Jewish organizati­ons to recognize that as the children of Abraham, Muslims and Jews share a common faith and a common fate.”

Last week, leaders of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles revealed that during their meeting with him early this year Bahrain’s king denounced the Arab boycott of Israel and said his subjects are free to visit the Jewish state.

According to the delegation, the ruler also discussed plans to establish a museum of religious tolerance in Manama by 2018.

Bahrain has 1,423,000 inhabitant­s and a breakdown of their religious faiths indicate that 70% are Muslims, 14.5% are Christians, 10% Hindus and 2.5% Buddhists. The percentage of Jews is listed in different surveys as a fraction of 1%, but the actual number is even smaller, ranging between 36 to 40 actual residents.

Tom Tugend contribute­d to this report.

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