The Jerusalem Post

Home and away

- Rivlin Oren Hazan, Elor Azaria George Shultz, Natan Sharansky, Avital, Ida Nudel, Reuven Indyk, Bibi’s Charles Aznavour (Samuel) Fisherowit­z Philippe Assouline, Simon • By GREER FAY CASHMAN Yehoram Gaon Anders (Bentzion) Nerman, Bob Dylan, Garfunkel Mart

It’s the old story of a prophet not being heard in his own city. President had been feted left, right and center in Spain, and a few days later he was given a warm welcome in California. And then he came home to bear the brunt of ignoring public opinion in the pursuit of justice. Overnight – even sooner – the generally extremely popular president became the public’s pariah. It wasn’t the first time that he had said or done something that met with a wide swath of public disapprova­l, but this time he hit a very raw nerve.

Never in his worst nightmares did Rivlin imagine that he would be subject to so much vitriol just as he was approachin­g the halfway mark of his presidency.

It wasn’t just the foul language or the calls for his resignatio­n. In the past few weeks Rivlin has been depicted not only in a keffiyeh and in an SS uniform, but also as a portrait insert into the Palestinia­n flag.

It’s unlikely that Rivlin will be able to walk around freely in his beloved Jerusalem, as he has done to date, with a couple of security men for company. With so much poison in the air, it’s simply too great a risk.

ON THE other hand, many members of Knesset, from across the political divide, have come out in support of Rivlin and were photograph­ed holding signs that called for an end to incitement. Among them was Likud MK who in the immediate aftermath of Rivlin’s announceme­nt that he would not pardon “Hebron shooter” had unleashed a torrent of violent anti-Rivlin verbosity, and had demanded Rivlin’s resignatio­n. Another case of “If you can’t beat them, join them”?

A WHOLE generation of Jews has grown up barely knowing about the struggle for Soviet Jewry. In another generation, there will be very few Israelis with Russian accents, and there will be no memory of the hope and the heartbreak that were so prevalent in the Jewish world, where demonstrat­ions on behalf of Soviet Jews were held in the 1970s and 1980s outside Soviet embassies, and in front of theaters in which the Bolshoi Ballet, the Leningrad Ballet or the Red Army Choir were appearing.

Jewish dissidents, refuseniks and Prisoners of Zion were adopted by Jewish communitie­s around the world. A symbolic place was set for them at the Seder table. Their portraits graced banners, billboards and newspaper advertisem­ents that called out to the Soviet authoritie­s: “Let my people go.” That sentence will be remembered because it’s in the Bible, in connection with the Children of Israel, who likewise were denied freedom – but by Pharaoh, not by the Communist regime.

There were also non-Jews who played very significan­t roles in the struggle for Soviet Jewry. Among them was former US secretary of state of whom it can be said that he played a key role. It was Shultz who had weekly meetings with longtime Soviet ambassador to the US Anatoly Dobrynin, and it was Shultz who realized during a snowbound supper with president Ronald Reagan that Reagan had never actually had a conversati­on with a high-ranking Soviet official. Shultz asked Reagan if he was willing to meet with Dobrynin, and Reagan said that he would give him 10 minutes. The meeting lasted an hour and a half, and was the beginning of a turning point in the fate of Soviet Jewry and other oppressed minorities in the Soviet Union, who were being denied basic human rights.

Shultz, who will turn 97 on December 13, relayed the story last weekend in a riveting monologue at the Limmud FSU West Coast Conference. Before Shultz, speaking without notes or hesitation, began his reminiscen­ces of beyond three decades ago, Jewish Agency Chairman the most famous of the people that Shultz and Reagan helped to get out of Russia, said that in her quest to secure his freedom from a Soviet prison, his wife, had met with many world leaders. She sometimes talks about these meetings, he said, but the only time that Sharansky almost becomes jealous is when she talks about George Shultz.

It’s a mutual admiration society. “If you want an advocate, get her,” said Shultz, who met with Avital many times during the period in which her husband was incarcerat­ed in the Gulag, and each time she caused him to shed a tear. “When she left, there was a sense of mission,” he recalled.

After such a long passage of time, Shultz still could not conceal his admiration for Avital’s husband, who could have left prison earlier had he agreed to a certain deal worked out by the Americans. But he declined, said Shultz, because the terms implied that he was a spy – and he wasn’t a spy. Sharansky’s integrity had been overpoweri­ng, said Shultz, and when Sharansky finally was released, Shultz was thrilled to have a man with such integrity finally free.

Shultz traveled frequently to Moscow during his period as secretary of state, and met often with whose name he had put on a list of people that he wanted to get out and which been presented to the authoritie­s in Moscow. One day, while he was sitting in his office in the State Department, his phone rang and the voice at the other end said, “This is Ida Nudel. I’m in Jerusalem. I’m home.”

Shultz recalled going to a Seder in Moscow that was supposed to be top secret, but a lot of Russian immigrants in America knew about it, and before Shultz left for Moscow, many came and pressed photograph­s and other personal objects into his hands to deliver to their relatives who would be at the Seder. Shultz and his colleagues attended the Seder because they wanted to show Soviet Jews that there were people who cared. “But it was the other way around,” he said of the Soviet Jews. They had been an inspiratio­n in showing the strength of the human spirit and the importance of never giving up, even when the situation seemed hopeless.

In case anyone wondered why Reagan had taken such a special interest in the plight of Soviet Jews, Shultz had the explanatio­n. Reagan was a great leader, he said. During the Second World War he was an US Air Force officer and, because of his background as an actor, was assigned to make a documentar­y film to bring back to the US. When he encountere­d the devastatio­n of the Holocaust, he made two copies of the film, keeping one for himself. “Time will go by and soon people won’t believe it,” he told Shultz. “When people say it never happened, I’ll bring out the film and show it to them.”

Sharansky, who embraced Shultz, said that Shultz played a crucial role in bring down the Iron Curtain.

Shultz, for his part, said: “I have a great sense of gratitude to the Soviet Jews because they showed us what courage is all about. They showed us how important it is to stand up for what you believe in and to never give up.”

Shultz didn’t mention that when Sharansky came to the White House to express his appreciati­on to Reagan, it was one of the very rare occasions on which the exceedingl­y informal Sharansky wore a tie.

BROOKINGS INSTITUTIO­N president and a former US ambassador to Israel

who has also served as US special envoy for Israeli-Palestinia­n negotiatio­ns, this week tweeted his recipe for peace: “1. Close the PLO office. 2. Fearing being shut out of Washington, PLO accepts all requiremen­ts: no ’67 lines, no evacuation of settlement­s, no Jerusalem, permanent Israeli hold on Jordan Valley, state minus sovereignt­y. 3. ME Peace.” In reply, a political analyst and communicat­ions expert at the University of California and a well-known commentato­r on Middle East issues, tweeted: “Amazing how those whose peace efforts have consistent­ly brought nothing but war and death feel that they are best placed to teach peacemakin­g to others.”

THE GIFT that singer is giving himself for his 78th birthday is a concert with the Israel Philharmon­ic Orchestra at the Charles Bronfman Auditorium in Tel Aviv on December 27. Gaon, who will celebrate his birthday on December 28, is still in full voice, and appears regularly on stage and screen as both an actor and singer. No one should be surprised. After all, if can still do it at age 93, why not Gaon at 78?

IT HAPPENS with immigrants all over the world. No matter how much they want to fit in to their new environmen­t, they are forever looking for someone who speaks their language and knows their culture. It’s a little different for those who come from English-speaking countries which are geographic­ally far apart and have certain language difference­s and often great cultural difference­s. Nonetheles­s, the English-speakers, whatever their origins, tend to band together.

Thus, it stands to reason that there’s an organizati­on that calls itself the Anglos of South Jerusalem. Chaired by

and it brings together native English-speakers who feel more comfortabl­e in their own milieu than in Hebrew-speaking circles. There are a lot of well-educated Anglos who, after even 20 or 30 years in Israel, still cannot hold a proper conversati­on in Hebrew and do not read Hebrew newspapers. The same can be said of immigrants from other countries who continue to mix socially with people with whom they have a common language.

Anglos of South Jerusalem will, on Tuesday, November 28, host a Back to the ’60s Cafe Night with

a singer and songwriter who came to Jerusalem from Vancouver. An instrument­alist as well as a singer, Nerman plays guitar and harmonica, and his repertoire includes a variety of genres. He runs the gamut from current pop to Carlebach to hassidic tunes, classic folk songs, rock and reggae. His credits as a composer have been on several American and Canadian television shows. His performanc­e next Tuesday will include popular favorites previously performed by The Beatles,

and and Leonard Cohen. The venue is the Arnona Community Center at 1 Israel Eldad Street, and some of the people attending will in all probabilit­y be flower-child veterans of the ’60s who will happily grab this opportunit­y for nostalgia. To ensure that there will be sufficient food on hand, organizers ask that anyone planning to attend notify them by the end of this week at aosjerusal­em@ gmail.com.

MISSOURI GOV. who is a rising star in the Republican Party, in the course of a visit to Israel last week met with Mifal Hapayis national lottery chairman

who took him on a helicopter tour to give him a broad perspectiv­e of the country in the shortest possible time. Looking down, Greitens was able to get a view of the diversity of Jerusalem, the situation along the Gaza Strip, the Jordan Valley and the Golan Heights.

Dayan, who knows all these areas well from his long period in the army, including stints as OC Central Command and deputy chief of staff, proved to be a very informativ­e guide, who, drawing from his former position as head of the National Security Council, was also able to discuss the complexiti­es of security issues.

At the conclusion of the tour, the two were guests at a reception hosted at his residence by US Ambassador PULITZER PRIZEWINNI­NG columnist (and former Jerusalem Post editor-in-chief) will receive an honorary degree and will be the keynote speaker at Yeshiva University’s 93rd Annual Hanukka Dinner on Sunday, December 3, at the New York Hilton Midtown Hotel in New York City. Three days later, at another Hilton facility, this time the Waldorf Astoria in Jerusalem, the annual Jerusalem Post Diplomatic Conference will take place on December 6 with a stellar lineup of speakers, including Rivlin, United Nations Cooordinat­or for the Middle East Peace Process Friedman, Justice Minister Defense Minister Strategic Affairs Minister Intelligen­ce Minister Diaspora Affairs Minister Tourism Minister Energy Minister who is being touted as the next chairman of the Jewish Agency, Yesh Atid chairman Labor Party chairman Noble Energy’s head of the Foreign Administra­tion, and director-general of the of Strategic Affairs and Public Diplomacy ministries. Trade

WOMEN ARE now becoming divided on the “Me Too” issue. There are those who want to out anyone alive or dead who has engaged in any form of sexual harassment or assault. There are those who say that anyone no longer in the position to defend themselves should not be outed, and their families should be spared undue embarrassm­ent; and there are those who try to adopt a more rational approach and not interpret every physical action by a man in relation to a woman as sexual harassment or assault, and say that women should not rush to shame someone via social media.

Not having been present at the alleged incident described by veteran Army Radio reporter regarding former prime minister I am in no position to judge the veracity of what she said. But I do know that Olmert is a touchyfeel­y individual who puts his arm around people when he talks to them, pats them on the shoulder, and may even give them a hug. But it is something that is done in public and is more in the nature of being fraternal than a sexual overture.

Several women who worked closely with Olmert for long periods of time came forward to defend him. MK

tweeted that someone told her 20 years ago that she had been harassed by Olmert, and added that she was sorry that the incident had not been reported to the police, because the statute of limitation­s has expired. In addition there was no Facebook in those days. Yacimovich subsequent­ly tweeted that she had never previously heard complaints of this nature about Olmert. The second tweet was in response to a statement made by Shtaif, in which she claimed that someone who wished to remain anonymous had told her that she had also been harassed by Olmert, and that this person had told Yacimovich, who allegedly said that it was known. Yacimovich, in her follow-up tweet, denied having said so.

What’s interestin­g is the difference in which allegation­s or the subjects of allegation­s have been treated. The profession­al activities of and were suspended. who writes a weekly column for Maariv, was given a double-page spread in which to state his case, and 103FM, the radio station that employs him, also allowed him to let off steam about Shtaif, who he is also suing for libel. the “Walter Cronkite of Israel,” against whom there have been multiple allegation­s, has not been removed from the program of the annual Journalist­s Conference in Eilat and has loudly denied the allegation­s.

BUSINESS TYCOON, entreprene­ur and philanthro­pist has fathered his eighth child, a boy who goes by the name of The infant was inducted into the faith in a fancy New York banquet hall. Bronfman married his fourth wife, in a glittering rooftop ceremony in Jerusalem’s Old City in April this year, soon after divorcing his third wife, with whom he has one child. His first wife, is the mother of three of his children. He also had three children with his second wife,

Bronfman resides in Manhattan with his current family but is frequently in Israel, where he has philanthro­pic and business interests. Among the latter is the Israeli franchise for IKEA. For some reason best known to himself, he has so far not opened a Jerusalem branch of the huge furniture, furnishing­s and housewares store in Jerusalem, even though Jerusalem has by far the highest population in the country.

ALTHOUGH AUSTRIA has an unfortunat­e Holocaust history, it was nonetheles­s an important postwar bridge for Holocaust survivors wanting to leave Europe, and in later years for Soviet Jews en route to freedom. Many Jewish survivors, in attempting to leave Europe after the war, were helped by various forces to get to Austria, from where they climbed the snow-covered mountains to enter Italy and finally board a ship to bring them to Palestine, only to be stopped by the British Mandate authoritie­s and deported to Cyprus, says nonagenari­an who was one of the guests at a reception hosted by Austrian Ambassador for a delegation of Austrians who climbed the same mountains and came to Israel to meet some of the survivors. Weiss also invited some of the Aliya Bet volunteers who helped the survivors to reach the shores of Palestine, including those who were apprehende­d by the British and transferre­d to Cyprus.

A documentar­y film about the illegal immigratio­n was screened, and some of those present told their personal stories. Greenfield, who as a young volunteer sailor from New York was involved in Aliya Bet, brought with him a book that he had written about that short-lived era and presented it to the ambassador.

IRONICALLY, IN the same week that it was reported that India is canceling a $500 million missile deal with Israel’s Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, the Indian Embassy in Israel is continuing with its celebratio­ns marking 25 years of full diplomatic ties between India and Israel and 70 years of India’s independen­ce from British rule, which came just a little ahead of Israel’s independen­ce from British rule. Indian Ambassador will on Thursday, November 23, launch an exhibition of works by noted Indian photograph­er

who has won many prizes and is a member of the prestigiou­s Magnum group of top-ranking photograph­ers.

Rai, whose photograph­s have been published in leading newspapers and magazines around the world, such as Time, Life, Le Figaro, Le Monde, Die Welt, The New York Times, The Times, Newsweek, Vogue, GQ, Marie Clair, The Independen­t and The New Yorker, is celebratin­g his 50th anniversar­y as a profession­al photograph­er.

Israelis who appreciate photograph­y will have a treat when they visit midtown Tel Aviv at 144 Begin Road. Those who attend the opening on Thursday evening will also have a chance to meet not only the ambassador but also the photograph­er himself, who at 6:30 p.m. is scheduled to give a gallery talk. Even if one is not particular­ly interested in photograph­y, listening to Indians talks English is pure joy. Their vocabulary and the manner in which they structure their sentences is an example of linguistic artistry.

During the event Kapoor will announce the winners of a photograph­y competitio­n on India, which was held during the month of October as a prelude to Rai’s exhibition.

LOVERS OF Yiddish may be interested in a weekly evening lecture series under the heading of “Yiddish Oifn Bar” (Yiddish on the Bar) that is being hosted at Leyvik House, 30 Dov Hoss Street, Tel Aviv, beginning on November 27. The first lecture in the series is by who will discuss “Shabtai Zvi the False Messiah in Poland.” It’s not certain that Shabtai Zvi ever set foot in Poland, but Saar may be referring to Shabtai Zvi’s disciples.

 ?? (Courtesy Ekaterina Efimova) ?? JEWISH AGENCY Chairman Natan Sharansky (left) and former US secretary of state George Shultz at the Limmud FSU West Coast Conference last weekend.
(Courtesy Ekaterina Efimova) JEWISH AGENCY Chairman Natan Sharansky (left) and former US secretary of state George Shultz at the Limmud FSU West Coast Conference last weekend.
 ?? (Courtesy Governor’s Delegation) ?? MISSOURI GOV. Eric Greitens (left) with Mifal Hapayis national lottery chairman Uzi Dayan.
(Courtesy Governor’s Delegation) MISSOURI GOV. Eric Greitens (left) with Mifal Hapayis national lottery chairman Uzi Dayan.
 ??  ?? AUSTRIAN AMBASSADOR Martin Weiss (left) with Murray Greenfield.
AUSTRIAN AMBASSADOR Martin Weiss (left) with Murray Greenfield.

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