The Jerusalem Post

TA-Miami link is not only El Al

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN Gimenez, Carlos Yaron Klein, Robert Rockaway Zion Amir Avigdor Liberman Reuven Rivlin Elor Azaria, (Courtesy World Bnei Akiva) Drahi Federmann, Asher Cohen. Patrick Michael Idan Segev, Lina Naftali Bennett; Alan Hoffman; Yehiel Was

Rfirefight­er who is currently mayor of MiamiDade County, arrived in Israel last week as the special guest of Atarim CEO who manages Tel Aviv Port.

In the course of the visit, the two men signed a cooperatio­n agreement based on the fact that both the Tel Aviv Municipali­ty and the Dade County Municipali­ty see eye to eye on the importance of the seashore and its environs as strategic infrastruc­tural assets for economic developmen­t, tourism and community events. Both sides are eager to exchange mutually beneficial know-how and informatio­n on beachside management. The agreement calls for the exchange of community delegation­s in order to strengthen relations between the two cities and profession­al expertise.

It wasn’t all business and no pleasure. In addition to the signing ceremony, Klein took Gimenez, a Cuban American, on a tour of the port and of Tel Aviv-Jaffa, and of course made sure that he sampled some of the excellent local cuisine. etired

NO JEWISH subject is taboo at Beit Hatfutsot, the Museum of the Jewish People. Thus, it should not come as a surprise that an upcoming lecture evening on December 3 is devoted to “Jewish Gangsters.” Of course, there are some wellknown characters in this category in Israel, but it is more likely that Prof.

of Tel Aviv University, who authored But He Was Good to His Mother will talk about the Diaspora variety of Jewish gangsters, whereas renowned defense attorney is more likely to deal with the domestic variety, though unfortunat­ely, due the discretion under which lawyers operate, he will not be able to discuss some of his clients, though he may possibly give them a superficia­l mention.

EVEN BEFORE Defense Minister wrote to President requesting that he commute the sentence of the soldier who shot a wounded Palestinia­n terrorist who had already been neutralize­d, Rivlin received a letter from Azaria’s mother begging him to restore the light in her home by showing compassion for her son. In her letter she stated that her whole family was suffering depression. She also wrote that since he was a little boy, her son’s greatest wish had been to serve the state.

Rivlin who returned from Spain on Wednesday evening, did not have much time to deal with the issue last week, as he prepared to fly to California on Saturday night to address the annual meeting this week of the General Assembly of Jewish Federation­s of North America.

In Spain, one of the key issues in his meetings was the resurgence of antisemiti­sm in Europe, but in America he will be hard pressed in his bid to mend fences with Diaspora Jewry, whose Conservati­ve EDUCATION MINISTER Naftali Bennett speaks at the inaugurati­on of a pre-military program at Migdal Oz last month. and Reform movements are still angry at being religiousl­y disenfranc­hised in matters pertaining to their services at the Western Wall. Rivlin, who is campaignin­g for national unity or at least reconcilia­tion on the home front, wants to ensure that Diaspora Jewry will not feel alienated from Israel, but that will be a tough battle. Rivlin has offered words of appeasemen­t to Conservati­ve and Reform leaders, but until they are given a place at the Western Wall, the president’s oft-repeated statement that “we are one family” will hold little water.

INTERNATIO­NAL COMMUNICAT­IONS tycoon

last week inaugurate­d the Drahi Brain Computatio­n & Communicat­ion Laboratory at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences. Drahi was joined at the dedication ceremony by

chairman of the Hebrew University’s board of governors, and HU president Prof.

Drahi is the founder and controllin­g shareholde­r of the multinatio­nal telecommun­ications and media group Altice. and Patrick Drahi’s substantia­l donation to the university will help advance the research of HU’s Prof. one of the world’s leading researcher­s of computatio­nal neuroscien­ce, informatio­n processing and neurobiolo­gy.

THOUGH REPORTED in August as being under way, the first pre-military coed course for religious men and women was officially inaugurate­d at the end of last month at Kibbutz Migdal Oz. Participan­ts in the course are high school students from Israel and abroad.

The inaugurati­on ceremony was attended by Education Minister Jewish Agency CEO and director-general Rabbi

head of the Center for Spiritual Services in the Diaspora in the World Zionist Organizati­on; head of the Gush Etzion Regional Council

chairwoman of the World Bnei Akiva movement; and the movement’s director.

The initial group of students in the course numbers 50, with 28 coming mainly from Australia and South Africa, plus 22 native Israelis. The official name of the program is the Internatio­nal Mechina, a cooperativ­e venture between the World Bnei Akiva movement and the Kol Ami project run by the Jewish Agency. The director of the program is Rabbi

At the conclusion of the course, some of the foreign students intend to make aliya, while others will return to their home countries and join in the activities of the World Bnei Akiva movement in what would be perceived in Israel as civilian national service, with the difference that it is a service to Diaspora Jewish communitie­s.

Speaking at the inaugurati­on ceremony, Bennett stressed the importance of learning from Diaspora Jewry how to strengthen the internal dialogue between different streams of Judaism. Abecassis said the program is a symbol and an example of the ability to bring together in one place the different streams of the nation, including those spread around the world, and yet to nonetheles­s preserve the uniqueness of each community, thereby “creating a new colorful quilt of people, where the common denominato­r is the study of Torah, love of the land and a connection to the people and Jewish nation.” He is confident that the course will produce some great men and women.

WORLD BNEI Akiva also held a special event in honor of the 100th anniversar­y of the Balfour Declaratio­n, to which a total of 100 Bnei Akiva immigrant donors were invited for dinner at the Jerusalem home of Canadian Jewish community leaders and executive members of internatio­nal Jewish organizati­ons Sarena and

Among the guests of honor was former national security adviser and chairman of the National Security Council Brig.Gen. who was also one of the speakers.

Like speakers at other events related to the Balfour Declaratio­n and what preceded it, Amidror referred to the important but not widely known role of Aaron Aaronsohn, one of the founders of the Nili intelligen­ce organizati­on, whose operation was critical to the success of British forces that came to do away with Ottoman rule. Due to its activities, it can be said that Nili contribute­d to the issuing of the Balfour Declaratio­n, said Amidror, who noted the unique connection that existed between his own family and Rivka Aaronsohn, the younger sister, whom he used to visit as a child.

Later, Amidror said that it was always clear that Nili was significan­t as the first intelligen­ce agency of the Jewish people in the Land of Israel. But until this day, he added, it is still not clear as to how the British Empire regarded the organizati­on. Amidror, relying on research by his colleague former Mossad chief said that documents from British espionage agency MI6 explicitly mention Nili as an organizati­on that contribute­d to the intelligen­ce capabiliti­es of the British Mandate and to Britain’s capability to conquer Palestine from the Ottoman rulers.

The research also indicates that when the Balfour Declaratio­n was worded, a draft of the text was sent to Aaronsohn so that he could say what he thought of it. “Such a gesture surely testifies to good relations and relations of honor between British intelligen­ce and Nili in general, and Aaron Aaronsohn in particular,” said Amidror.

The Nili organizati­on was a highly important source of intelligen­ce for the State of Israel, and later became a significan­t tool for the establishm­ent of the Jewish state. Amidror continued: “It is important to understand, our military, as strong as it may be, serves a small country with relatively few resources, but the intelligen­ce apparatus this country has is among the best around. Good intelligen­ce enables us to choose and focus on the most important and significan­t points for the country’s resilience and thus to utilize the limited resources the military has in the best possible way.”

INTERNATIO­NALLY RECOGNIZED expert on antisemiti­sm Dr. who is a child Holocaust survivor and who is in a position to compare the resurgence of antisemiti­sm in Europe with what he experience­d in his youth, will on Monday, November 13, at 10 a.m. give a lecture on Israeli-European relations in an increasing­ly chaotic reality. The essential difference between antisemiti­sm then and now is the existence of the State of Israel and the ability of Jews to defend themselves. But this does not necessaril­y curb physical and verbal attacks against Jews.

The lecture will take place at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, 13 Tel Hai Street. Gerstenfel­d founded and directed the center’s post-Holocaust and antisemiti­sm program.

 ?? (Kfir Sivan) ?? FROM LEFT: Assaf Zamir, deputy mayor of Tel Aviv, Yaron Klein, CEO of Atarim, Carlos Gimenez, mayor of Miami-Dade County, and Eitan Schwartz, CEO of Tel Aviv Global.
(Kfir Sivan) FROM LEFT: Assaf Zamir, deputy mayor of Tel Aviv, Yaron Klein, CEO of Atarim, Carlos Gimenez, mayor of Miami-Dade County, and Eitan Schwartz, CEO of Tel Aviv Global.
 ?? (Courtesy World Bnei Akiva) ?? YAAKOV AMIDROR speaks at an event commemorat­ing the 100th anniversar­y of the Balfour Declaratio­n.
(Courtesy World Bnei Akiva) YAAKOV AMIDROR speaks at an event commemorat­ing the 100th anniversar­y of the Balfour Declaratio­n.
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