The Jerusalem Post

The president wore tails

- Rivlin, Nechama, Alice Shalvi Yair Lapid, Fleur Hassan Nahoum,a David Horovitz Kershner Neville Lamdan, Alan Baker, Mark Sofer, Daniel Taub Jeremy Issacharof­f. Rosen, Yair Zivan, Anshel Pfeffer, Isabel Matthew Kalman, Ashley Perry, Efraim Halevy, Avigdor

Although he much prefers an open-necked shirt devoid of tie and jacket, President in the course of his official duties, observes the suit-and-tie dress code. But when he and his wife dined with the king and queen of Spain at the Royal Palace in Madrid, Rivlin even went a step further and observed the more formal palace dress code, which includes black tailcoat, starched white shirt, white waist coat and bow tie and black trousers. Fortunatel­y, his wife,

was able to help arrange the bow tie.

IN TANDEM with the 100th anniversar­y of the Balfour Declaratio­n, Jewish News, a British newspaper and online publicatio­n, in conjunctio­n with the Jewish Agency and in associatio­n with United Jewish Israel Appeal, published its “The Aliya 100” list of people who migrated from Britain to Israel, and who in the course of their careers have made a difference and have a share in Israel’s progress in numerous fields.

Of the 100 names on the list, 30 are deceased, and not all of the 100 people selected were actually born in Britain. The list even includes Israel’s first president, Chaim Weizmann, who was born in Belarus, but lived for many years in Manchester, as well as Israel’s first chief Ashkenazi rabbi, Yitzhak Halevi Herzog, who was born in Poland, and one of his successors, Rabbi Isser Yehuda Unterman, who was born in Belarus. Educator and women’s rights activist

was born in Germany. Abba Eban, who was part of Israel’s nascent diplomatic corps, and who was first an ambassador and later foreign minister, was born in South Africa. who was the foreign press spokesman for president Shimon Peres and is currently foreign press spokesman for Yesh Atid chairman was born in Israel, but lived in England from the age of five to 18. lawyer, who sits on the Jerusalem City Council, was born in Gibraltar and is the daughter of Gibraltar’s first mayor, the late Sir Joshua Hassan.

The list includes a remarkable number of journalist­s, most of whom were associated at one stage with The Jerusalem Post or its sister publicatio­n The Jerusalem Report or both. Foremost, of course, was the late David Landau. Times of Israel founder

edited both. Other journalist­s associated with one or both were

and though several other people on the list are also journalist­s.

There are quite a number of diplomats who also came from England, headed of course by Eban and his brother-in-law Chaim Herzog, who became Israel’s sixth president. Other diplomats who came from the UK include Avraham Harman, David Kimche, Ze’ev Suffot, Shabbtai Rosenne (born Sefton Wilfred David Rowson), Yehuda Avner, and

At least half a dozen other people on the list, though not diplomats strictly speaking, are frequently engaged with diplomats, and in some cases have actually performed diplomatic missions. They include former Mossad chief who in 1996 also had a diplomatic posting as ambassador to the European Union in Brussels; Rabbi

who is one of the world’s leading figures in ecumenical relations; who worked in the Foreign Ministry during the tenure of and who is now involved in persuading descendant­s of 15th-century Sephardim expelled from Spain to reclaim their heritage; who is Rivlin’s foreign media spokesman;

executive director of Limmud and a former head of communicat­ions at the Israel Project; and

who founded the department of politics and government at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.

There are many other well-known names on the list, but in all probabilit­y, there are a lot more that should have been on the list but were omitted. That’s almost always the problem when there’s a numerical limit placed on the list. Very often, there are people who have quietly done amazing things, but who are relatively anonymous, and if they are placed on a list, very few readers have ever heard of them. Sometimes, it’s wiser to compile such lists from readers’ recommenda­tions, without suggesting any names to them in advance. The full list is available on the Jewish News website.

It may surprise a lot of people to know that singer whose signature song is “Jerusalem of Gold,” was also born in England.

APROPOS WEIZMANN, who is believed in some circles to have written the first drafts of the Balfour Declaratio­n, his memory was most certainly honored on November 2, at a gathering in the Weizmann Hall of the Jewish Agency building, where the government convened before moving itself and the Knesset down the road to Frumin House. The joint meeting last week was hosted by Balfour 100 and StandWithU­s.

There’s a joke that is almost a tradition that all Jewish functions – even funerals – start late. But the Bafour Centenary event not only started on time, but nearly all the seats were occupied a half hour before the time scheduled, prompting

one of the organizers, to announce that the meeting had been called for 8 p.m. and would start at 8 p.m.

Almost all the speakers had a direct or indirect connection with the main cast of characters or, if you will, the heroes of the Balfour Declaratio­n. Lord a medical specialist and an amateur historian, was born in Manchester, where Weizmann spent some 30 years as a lecturer and researcher at Manchester University. Turnburg is the author of Beyond the Balfour Declaratio­n: The 100-Year Quest for Israeli-Palestinia­n Peace. There was also the granddaugh­ter of Manchester-born Israel Sieff and Leeds-born Rebecca Marks Sieff, who were strong supporters of Weizmann both ideologica­lly and financiall­y; and there was the grandson of Gen. Jan Smuts, who was a member of the British Imperial War Cabinet and who later became premier of South Africa. It was the cabinet that approved the letter signed by British foreign secretary Arthur James Balfour that subsequent­ly became known as the Balfour Declaratio­n. Turnburg was interviewe­d by former Canadian ambassador

whose father was born in Romania, as was Turnburg’s father, so there was another common link.

Their conversati­on naturally centered on issues related to the Balfour Declaratio­n, with Turnburg’s gentle humor central to nearly all his replies. Even British deputy chief of mission, who was standing in for British Ambassador

who was at the British festivitie­s at Lancaster House in London, had a kind of connection in that he is a member of the Foreign Office. He noted that it was no coincidenc­e that in Tel Aviv, Balfour, Allenby and Rothschild streets intersect. He added that he is pleased with Britain’s role in helping to make “the Jewish homeland a reality.” Weyers, who described himself as a Christian Zionist, is upset that some people try to paint his grandfathe­r as an antisemite. “He was not remotely antisemiti­c,” he said.

While all the speakers were interestin­g, Sieff, who has quite a sense of drama, spoke of her family and the strong Zionist leanings and different philanthro­pic causes undertaken by each, in addition to the fact that they all supported Weizmann. She also mentioned that Weizmann had first met Balfour in 1906, and that her grandfathe­r had insisted on accompanyi­ng Weizmann to Palestine in 1918. She was proud of the fact that her grandmothe­r, of whom she was terrified, but nonetheles­s wore her watch as a sort of talisman, had been one of the co-founders of WIZO, “but it behooves us to think why an organizati­on like WIZO is still needed.”

AT WESTMINSTE­R Palace in London, members of the internatio­nal Jewish fraternity Alpha Epsilon Pi held a Balfour Declaratio­n centenary ceremony, with the fifth Earl of Balfour, the great-grandnephe­w of Arthur James Balfour, as the guest of honor. Representa­tives of AEPi’s eight UK and six Israeli chapters were present at this celebratio­n of the historic rebirth of modern Israel.

“This program on this date [November 2] is especially meaningful to our undergradu­ate brothers. We all have a connection to Eretz Yisrael, and because of the Balfour Declaratio­n, our connection is tangible and real. The miracle of modern Israel was first conceived right here in London, and our UK brothers are amazingly impacted by this history and our sense of responsibi­lity to see Israel continue to thrive as the Jewish homeland,” said

AEPi’s executive director. “I am humbled by the interest in my family name and the legacy it represents for all Jewish people around the world. It really is amazing,” said Balfour. Referring to the Balfour Declaratio­n, he said: “It was the first time that a major global power said we need to find a home for the Jewish people. It’s turned into one of the most seminal documents, not just in modern times but throughout the ages. It has turned into a major humanitari­an proclamati­on, of which Britain and my family are very proud.”

The fraternity held a similar event in Toronto to commemorat­e the signing, and has obtained thousands of signatures on a proclamati­on of support from AEPi undergradu­ates and alumni from around the world (AEPi has 190 groups located in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Israel, Australia and Austria).

“Our fraternity has a commitment and passion for Israel, and organizing these events and collecting this support demonstrat­es that,” said Borans. “Nothing is more important to our brotherhoo­d than standing with Israel.” Strategic Affairs Minister

congratula­ted AEPi on the proclamati­on and said: “Israel is celebratin­g 100 years of the Balfour Declaratio­n, which was a turning point in our efforts to gain internatio­nal legitimacy for the reestablis­hment of a Jewish homeland. While there are still those trying to delegitimi­ze the Jewish state, AEPi’s proclamati­on, signed by thousands of Jewish students from around the world, shows that Israel and the Jewish people are stronger than ever.”

TO MARK the 20th anniversar­y of the death of philosophe­r Sir Isaiah Berlin, a symposium on urbanism will be held in his memory as part of the 12th Anglo Israel Colloquium. Shenkar College president

a former education minister, received her PhD in political philosophy from Oxford University, where she worked under the Berlin’s supervisio­n, and she will therefore deliver the tribute address. Participan­ts in the symposium, which will be chaired by former British ambassador to Israel Sir will explore Berlin’s celebrated essay “The pursuit of the ideal in the light of aspects of urbanism and our vision for cities of today and of the future.” The symposium will be held on Sunday, November 12, at 6 p.m. at Beit Hansen, 14 Gedalyahu Alon Street, Jerusalem.

WITH ONE or two exceptions, the Tel Aviv Hilton has for several years been the venue for the annual Balfour dinner of the Israel, Britain and the Commonweal­th Associatio­n. The bulk of the guests usually come from Herzliya, Kfar Shmaryahu, Ra’anana, Netanya and Tel Aviv, with just a handful from Jerusalem. This year, however, representa­tion from Jerusalem has warranted the hiring of a bus.

In addition to this year’s gala event, a special cocktail, based on British alcoholic beverages, was created by Tel Aviv Hilton bar manager

to be served in the hotel’s lobby restaurant and bar. The bar’s ripple-maker technology enables the team to serve the cocktail with a Lord Balfour image in its foam. The recipe includes Tanqueray Gin, fresh cucumber lemon ginger mix, lemongrass syrup, lemon juice and Benedictin­e liqueur. The secret is in the quantities and the mixing.

JUST AS good news is no news, for filmmakers tranquil situations provide little inspiratio­n for documentar­ies or feature films. But terrorism, racism, extremism, antisemiti­sm, anti-Zionism and boycotts can all be explored from many different angles and are major sources of creativity for filmmakers. At least two such films within this umbrella category will be screened in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv this week.

The Israel premiere of Wish You Weren’t Here will be screened at noon on Thursday, November 9, at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, 13 Tel Hai Street, Jerusalem, in conjunctio­n with the Institute for the Study of Global Antisemiti­sm and Policy. The film deals with the global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign and contempora­ry antisemiti­sm, and will be followed by a panel discussion with

the film’s director and executive producer; Dr.

producer and executive director, ISGAP; fellow, project director, program to counter BDS and political warfare, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs; and

senior project coordinato­r, cultural boycott expert, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. For attendance, registrati­on is required by email, jcpa@netvision.net.il., or telephone (02) 561-9281 or fax (02) 5619112.

THE OTHER film is an impressive and unusual Swedish documentar­y about terrorism and antisemiti­sm, in the making of which Jerusalemi­te

an expatriate from Melbourne, Australia, played a small role.

Roth is the father of Malki Roth, the teenager who was one of 15 people killed in a terrorist bombing of the now defunct Sbarro pizza parlor in downtown Jerusalem in 2001. Roth and his wife establishe­d the Malki Foundation in their daughter’s memory, to help families of severely disabled children. Malki was a loving and caring sibling to her disabled sister, and their parents thought that the best way to remember her is to do for others what Malki did at home. During the making of the film, Roth got to know the directors and stayed in touch with them as they became enmeshed as victims in a little-publicized but highly effective and ugly politicall­y motivated silencing at high levels of Sweden’s TV and film establishm­ent.

Filmed in six countries, Watching the Moon at Night will be shown in the presence of one of the directors,

at the Tel Aviv Cinematheq­ue Wednesday evening and at the Jerusalem Cinematheq­ue on November 13. The film is in Swedish with English subtitles and examines terrorism and antisemiti­sm and some of their victims. Well-known US Holocaust scholar

has described the film as being “intellectu­ally informativ­e, visually compelling and an emotionall­y moving and highly disturbing exploratio­n of the phenomenon of terrorism in our time.” The film has been shown at the European and Swedish parliament­s and at various internatio­nal film festivals in Europe and the US.

The late French writer and philosophe­r André Glucksmann, the late historian of antisemiti­sm Robert S. Wistrich, and the eminent historian

who left his native Breslau for Palestine on the day before Kristallna­cht in 1938 and is one of the inspiratio­ns behind the production, are among the film’s preeminent on-screen commentato­rs.

The film also incorporat­es personal experience­s of terrorist victims and their families from Algeria, Spain, France, Moscow, Israel, New York, Colombia, Munich, Northern Ireland and elsewhere.

Arnold Roth appears in the film as does one of the surviving Israeli athletes from the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre. The directors regard them as important voices in the film.

Creative camerawork, inspiring music and Polish Nobel laureate, the late Wislawa Szymborska, who reads her own poetry in the film, all add to the “personal and emotional” perspectiv­e, as chairwoman of the European Film Academy, described it. She sees the film as a production that “shows the common ground shared by victims the world over and the similariti­es between the perpetrato­rs. In the film, there is no simplifyin­g thesis, no ‘political correctnes­s’ .... The film truly makes you think.”

Following the film screenings, Persson will lead a discussion (in English) with the participat­ion of the audience on issues raised in the production. Even though the film was approved by the Swedish Film Institute, Sveriges Television, Sweden’s national public TV broadcaste­r, has, for some obscure reason and despite the fact that it originally signed on to co-produce it, refused to screen it.

DRAMA OF another kind last month accompanie­d United Hatzalah volunteer

who heads the French division of the organizati­on. He was invited by a friend of United Hatzalah, to address a delegation of French WIZO in Netanya.

Chiche brought with him an hourlong documentar­y about what United Hatzalah does to save lives. He also asked his good friend and fellow French-speaker who is likewise an EMT from Netanya, to come to the meeting with his ambucycle and to talk about some of his past experience­s volunteeri­ng, and how he could be called away at any time to attend to a medical emergency.

In an ironic twist of fate, five minutes into the screening of the movie their radios alerted the two men to the fact that there was a person who had lost consciousn­ess on nearby Ussishkin Street. Marciano leaped onto his motorcycle and raced off toward the emergency, departing with sirens blaring from within the hall. The audience was stunned.

A minute passed and another call came across on Chiche’s radio. “EMT requesting backup.” Without giving ROGER WATERS is one of the main subjects of the film ‘Wish You Weren’t Here.’ the matter a second thought, he darted out of the room and jumped into his car, leaving the audience in a state of shock and bewilderme­nt, as their guest speaker suddenly disappeare­d.

When Chiche joined Marciano, he found another ambucycle volunteer,

who is also a French-speaker, in the middle of performing chest compressio­ns on a 77-year-old man. Chiche and Marciano attached a defibrilla­tor, and one shock was immediatel­y given. The volunteers took turns performing chest compressio­ns and assisted breathing, gave the patient an intravenou­s drip, and then he was intubated by the ambulance paramedics when they arrived. A Lucas compressio­n machine was attached, and it took over the chest compressio­ns.

Forty minutes passed without any response from the patient. There was no pulse, and he was not breathing. The situation looked bleak. The man’s family was from France, so Chiche switched hats to take over as a representa­tive of Hatzalah’s Psychotrau­ma and Crisis Response Unit, so that he could translate what the paramedic was saying to them and help family members answer any questions that the paramedics might ask about the patient’s health before he collapsed. The family was in tears, and each member was praying.

Just as the EMS team was about to code the patient, the man’s pulse returned. The prayers had been answered. The team quickened their pace in order to get the patient into the intensive care ambulance that was waiting and sent him off to Laniado Medical Center for further treatment.

Chiche and Marciano left to return to their lecture. An hour had passed. The documentar­y had finished a few minutes prior to their return, and the event organizer was updating the crowd regarding what had occurred and why the two men had rushed out. As they reentered the hall, the crowd rose and gave them a standing ovation. The two were messy and sweaty, but in the eyes of French WIZO they came back as heroes who had saved a life, and the audience got to see them in live action without the need for a documentar­y.

THE SAGA of Israel has been documented on film, radio recordings and in print, but born believes that, wherever possible, history should be recorded by the individual­s who lived through it. Thus, several years ago he founded Toldot Yisrael, and together with who has filmed and recorded testimonie­s of Holocaust survivors for Yad Vashem, plus a wide-ranging steering committee of scholars, social entreprene­urs, television producers, senior army veterans, diplomats, educators, et al., has built up an impressive archive that is stored in the National Library of Israel. Now, in advance of the 70th anniversar­y celebratio­ns of Israel’s independen­ce, Halivni is interested in finding Americans who played a role in the founding of the state or who are veterans of the War of Independen­ce.

Over the next several months, Toldot Yisrael, through the support of the William Davidson Foundation, will be conducting a limited number of interviews with Americans in the US and Israel who qualify for this project. Halivni is looking for personal recollecti­ons or authoritat­ive second-generation accounts from: World War II veterans who formed the basis of Israel’s fledgling air force and navy and who, as foreign volunteers, played a critical role in bringing immigrants to Palestine; individual­s who raised funds, recruited manpower and acquired munitions, army surplus, and even airplanes and aircraft carriers for the young state; volunteers who smuggled weapons, machine parts and uniforms overseas to assist the effort in the War of Independen­ce; Americans who came in the 1940s as doctors, nurses, journalist­s, students, etc., and were eyewitness­es to Israel’s founding.

To recommend an interview candidate, please contact him at: http:// www.toldotyisr­ael.org/en/recommend-interview-candidate/. Interviewe­es will receive an unedited copy of the interview. An additional copy will be added to the over 1,000 interviews in the Toldot Yisrael archive in the National Library.

IT SEEMS that Israel has something to teach to Portugal and to the world, for that matter, in the art of pastry cuisine. Hilton Tel Aviv pastry chef 27, demonstrat­ed his talent at the Conrad Algrave hotel in Portugal. This Hilton Worldwide luxury brand facility was transforme­d over the past few days into a hub of gastronomi­c talent, hosting the second edition of the culinary event of the year – Culinary Extravagan­za 2.0. A total of 16 Michelin-starred, globally renowned chefs, including Hadad, created a series of exclusive ticketed culinary events. His colleagues in Tel Aviv can hardly wait to taste some of the new recipes he discovered while in Portugal.

 ?? (Haim Zach/GPO) ?? PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN and his wife, Nechama, pose with Spain’s King Felipe and Queen Letizia.
(Haim Zach/GPO) PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN and his wife, Nechama, pose with Spain’s King Felipe and Queen Letizia.
 ?? (Jonathan Pierce) ?? FROM LEFT: Julian Markowitz, AEPi’s director of Israel engagement, Roderick Balfour, the fifth Earl of Balfour, and Jonathan Hunter, AEPi brother from Oxford.
(Jonathan Pierce) FROM LEFT: Julian Markowitz, AEPi’s director of Israel engagement, Roderick Balfour, the fifth Earl of Balfour, and Jonathan Hunter, AEPi brother from Oxford.
 ?? (Courtesy) ?? BO PERSSON will present his film ‘Watching the Moon at Night’ tonight in Tel Aviv and next week in Jerusalem.
(Courtesy) BO PERSSON will present his film ‘Watching the Moon at Night’ tonight in Tel Aviv and next week in Jerusalem.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel