The Jerusalem Post

It’s all in the timing

- (Avi Hayoun) • By GREER FAY CASHMAN (Avi Hayoun) (Aviv Hofi)

Robert

SEVERAL YEARS ago, Prof.

of Tel Aviv University wrote a best-selling book, But He Was Good to His Mother, which, in an interestin­g and humorous manner, tells the story of some of America’s leading Jewish gangsters. Among those mentioned in the book are Louis Lepke Buchalter, Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel, Arthur “Dutch” Schultz, Meyer “The Little Man” Lansky, Charlie “King” Solomon, Max “Boo Boo” Hoff and Abner “Longy” Zwillman. The book was so popular that it had to be reprinted several times.

The title comes from an oft-repeated remark of Rockaway’s mother, who, when anything was said of Jews who had become notorious, responded: “But he was good to his mother.” It wasn’t a far-fetched comment. Many of the gangsters were very protective of their families, and didn’t let them know how they made their livings.

On Sunday night of this week, Rockaway based an entertaini­ng and even thrilling talk on what was written in his book, in an address to the Friends of Beit Hatfutsot – The Museum of the Jewish People. Among those who attended were

who chairs the museum’s board of directors, and is president of the Nadav Foundation establishe­d by her father,

who was also present; Science and Technology Minister Ofir Akunis; chairman of the Beit Hatfutsot Board of Governors attorneys and publicist

and former career diplomat whose own semi-autobiogra­phical book, which takes its title, I have been to Paris and also Rome, from the refrain of a popular song “Shalom lach Eretz Nehederet” sung by in which the conclusion is “but there’s no place like the Land of Israel.” Pazner originally wrote the book in French and launched the Hebrew edition last month.

The evening at Beit Hatfutsot was enhanced by celebrity attorney Amir, who gave a rundown on organized crime in Israel and the difference between American Jewish gangsters of old and Israeli gangsters of today, who are no less vicious, but whose families can’t help knowing what they do.

The American Jewish gangsters were products of poor immigrant families, grew up on New York’s Lower East Side, spiced their conversati­ons with Yiddish, threw in their lot with the Sicilian Mafia, kept Shabbat at home, and outside were unashamedl­y hit men who killed each other as well as non-Jewish gangsters who got in their way. But they were also philanthro­pic and gave generously to Jewish causes in America and abroad, and were particular­ly generous when it came to the fulfillmen­t of the Zionist ideal, which was boosted by a considerab­le amount of tainted money.

Both Rockaway and Amir gave their services free of charge. Tickets for the event were NIS 200 each, with proceeds dedicated to bringing children, youth, families from peripheral communitie­s and soldiers to the museum to learn more about the history of the Jewish people.

Just as a corollary to the revelation­s at the Beit Hatfutsot event, last month Millicent Rosen, one of the two daughters of Bugsy Siegel, died at age 86 in Las Vegas. Her family wanted to bury her in the family mausoleum in New York, but because it was far less expensive to have her cremated than to fly a coffin to New York, they chose the more cost-effective means of transferri­ng her remains to the city of her birth. Chabad

Rockaway Nevzlin, Nevzlin, Eitan Ben-Eliahu; Avital Harlin Zion Amir; Gil Samsonov; Avi Pazner, Irina Leonid Yehoram Gaon, Mendy Harlig,

Rabbi who was called to Rosen’s bedside at the hospice where she lay dying, persuaded the family not to cremate her, but to lay her to rest in Las Vegas, the glamorous city which owed its existence to her father’s vision.

APROPOS PAZNER’s book, on his Facebook page he has included where or when he would be interviewe­d about it. On the day prior to the Rockaway lecture, Pazner and his wife, were in Jerusalem to present the book to President

who will also be among the speakers at the Jerusalem Post Diplomatic Conference.

Rivlin,

TOGETHER WITH the Associatio­n for the Elderly in Arad and the Department of Welfare of the Arad Municipali­ty, the Internatio­nal Fellowship of Christians and Jews organized a fashion parade at the “Sounds of the Desert” senior citizens club in Arad last week, in which the models parading garments from Irene Boutique Fashion were seven female Holocaust survivors. Four were from the former Soviet Union. All seven are among the 19,000 Holocaust survivors the IFCJ says it supports.

One of the models, who is also a fashion designer, was born in 1937 in Ukraine and fled with her parents and three brothers to Russia. Her eldest brother was conscripte­d into the Red Army, and returned after the war severely disabled. Her mother was a seamstress who, during the war, sewed clothes for the family, using scraps of fabric. Rodich didn’t get what she calls her first real dress till she was 15. It was so perfect that she didn’t dare wear it. She has worn her own designs all her life, and her big dream, not yet realized, is to have a show in which all the clothes and accessorie­s are her designs.

VICTORIAN PREMIER arrived in Israel to open a Victorian Government Trade and Investment Office, the first of its kind establishe­d in Israel by any Australian state government. The purpose is to help to boost new investment and exchange opportunit­ies between the State of Victoria and Israel. He has been accompanie­d to Israel by members of the Victorian government and influentia­l Australian businesspe­ople.

He was previously in Israel in December 2013, when he was opposition leader, and reached the conclusion that there is much more to Israel than geopolitic­al issues.

Victoria has Australia’s fastest-growing, most diverse economy and highest annual population growth. The focus of the premier’s visit is to strengthen relations between Victoria and Israel at all levels.

He has been accompanie­d to various meetings by Australian Ambassador

and chairman of the Israel, Australia Chamber of Commerce

Cannan

HOW TOTALLY appropriat­e it is for the Porter Foundation to sponsor the National Library’s event “When Balfour meets Allenby” that will be held on Sunday, December 10, at the Givat Ram campus of the Hebrew University. London-born Dame

who, with her late husband, Sir Leslie Porter, establishe­d the Porter Foundation in 1970, supports many causes in Israel and the UK and, aside from living in Israel for most of the year, has a symbolic attachment to the country, in that her birthday is on November 29. The event will include an address by Prof.

who is always a delight. This is one of many events celebratin­g the 100th anniversar­y of Gen. Edmund Allenby’s arrival in Jerusalem. This is the third of a series of related centenary events in the space of a month and a half. The first was the 100th anniversar­y of the Battle of Beersheba on October 31, followed by that of the Balfour Declaratio­n on November 2 and that of Allenby’s arrival in Jerusalem on December 11.

Just as there were several before and after functions commemorat­ing the first two centennial­s, there are events before and after the Allenby centennial, and this is one of them, though it is unfortunat­e that an event on the same subject will be held on the same date at more or less the same

Porter, Marty, Shlomo Avineri, Reuven Elizabeth Rodich, Daniel Andrews Chris Ido Nehushtan. Shirley

time at the Ben-Zvi Institute. A little coordinati­on would not have gone astray.

Descendant­s of Australian and New Zealand soldiers came to Israel to commemorat­e the Battle of Beersheba, the current Lord came to Israel a few months back for a conference that was largely based on the Balfour Declaratio­n, and members of the family will be here next week for the Tower of David’s keynote commemorat­ion of Allenby dismountin­g his horse at the Jaffa Gate and entering the Old City of Jerusalem on foot.

Balfour Allenby

POLITICAL HOSTILITIE­S and religious and secular disputes were temporaril­y placed on the back burner last week when Deputy Education Minister a seventh-generation Jerusalemi­te, celebrated the marriage of his son to Among the numerous guests gathered at a Bnei Brak banquet hall were heads of Lithuanian and hassidic dynasties, heads of local municipali­ties, members of Knesset and relatives and friends of the families of the bride and groom. There have been a lot of weddings in the Porush family. Meir Porush is the father of 12 children. The Sadigura rebbe, Rabbi officiated, and the young couple received a special blessing from Rabbi leading authority on Halacha. Seen among the guest were Knesset Speaker Education Minister Jerusalem Mayor who happily joined in the lively dancing, opposition leader Zionist Union MKs former education Jerusalem City former coalition chairman Beit Shemesh Mayor Public Security Minister and Deputy Defense Minister But the secular, traditiona­l and Modern Orthodox guests were vastly outnumbere­d by those wearing shtreimels and black kapotas.

Esty Grossberge­r. Tzvi Yisrael Moshe Friedman, Chaim Kanievsky,a Yuli Edelstein, Naftali Bennett, Nir Barkat, Herzog, Nachman Shai, Gideon Sa’ar, Moshe Lion, Eli Yishai, David Bitan, Abutbul, Erdan Ben-Dahan.

and minister Council member Shas leader

Meir Porush, Shloimy Isaac Amir Peretz Moshe Gilad Eli

IT’S ALWAYS a source of pride to any country when one of its citizens gains internatio­nal recognitio­n and is awarded a prestigiou­s prize by another country. In the case of Prof. of the Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Dental Medicine, who has been named the 2017 Paul Herren laureate of the University of Bern, not only Israel will share in the kudos but also England, where Becker was born and raised, and where one of his sons works as an actor.

Becker is a clinical associate professor emeritus in the department of orthodonti­cs and former director of its Center for the Treatment of Craniofaci­al Disorders and Special Needs Children.

A world-renowned expert in orthodonti­cs, he authored Orthodonti­c Treatment of Impacted Teeth, now in its third edition, and has co-authored 11 other textbooks. He has published approximat­ely 150 articles in leading internatio­nal orthodonti­c journals. He has been the recipient of other high-profile awards, and has been the speaker at many orthodonti­c congresses around the world. He is due to receive his award on Thursday, December 7, and to deliver an address.

A MORE historic award will be made on Wednesday, December 6, at the Hebrew University’s Mount Scopus campus, where an honorary doctorate will be conferred on

I, the ecumenical patriarch of Constantin­ople. In May 2014, Bartholome­w came to Jerusalem to meet with Pope Each of the religious leaders met separately with then-president Shimon Peres to talk about the role of religion in promoting peace and the importance of reconcilia­tion between followers of different faiths.

Both the pope and Bartholome­w have been extremely active in promoting interfaith dialogue among Jews, Christians and Muslims and among different streams of Christiani­ty. Both have traveled widely to spread the message of Christian reconcilia­tion, interfaith tolerance and coexistenc­e, protection of the environmen­t and a world united in peace, justice, solidarity and love. The two were in Jerusalem at the same time to celebrate the 50th anniversar­y of the 1964 meeting in the Holy City between two prelates, Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagora­s and Pope Paul VI. The two embraced, prayed together and set the tone for a new dialogue between the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic churches. Over time this dialogue expanded to include Jews and Muslims.

Attending Wednesday afternoon’s event will be a wide array of religious leaders, ambassador­s and other dignitarie­s. Following the conferring of the doctorate, Bartholome­w will deliver an address in English. For the diplomatic community, it works out very well, as they will hear a variety of political addresses in the morning and early afternoon, and a spiritual address that will also contain elements of human rights as twilight falls on Jerusalem in the late afternoon.

Bartholome­w Francis. Adrian Becker Neshama Carlebach

FANS OF will be pleased to know that she announced her engagement last week. No, she’s not engaged to singer-guitarist a product of the Reform movement, whom

Josh Nelson,

she met after her first marriage, to restaurate­ur the father of her sons, and crumbled in 2012. Carlebach and Nelson became an item profession­ally and privately, but the relationsh­ip petered out several months ago, and she’s now engaged to Rabbi Menachem Creditor, who has three children of his own. “After a life journey filled with twists and turns, I have finally found my true companion and soul mate. I am so, so very blessed,” writes Carlebach, who is now 43 but looks much younger.

The couple, who have known each other for 10 years, plan to marry in New York next summer. They met when she performed for the Netivot Shalom Congregati­on in Berkeley, California, where Creditor serves as spiritual leader, and struck up a friendship. For a long time, it was nothing more than that, as each of them was married when they were first introduced to each other.

A new Carlebach anthology about the singer’s late father, Shlomo Carlebach, was recently published under the title of What do we know? Edited by staunch Carlebach disciples Rabbi and

the launch last month at the Yakar Center in Jerusalem was attended by many people who were brought to religious observance by Shlomo Carlebach.

Steven Katchen, Rafael Micah, Joseph Schonwald Reuven Goldfarb,

AT THE end of November, Hadassah Internatio­nal Israel held a fund-raiser at the Interconti­nental David Tel Aviv hotel, with proceeds earmarked for the establishm­ent of a rehabilita­tion center for wounded soldiers and victims of terrorism at Hadassah-University Medical Center, on Jerusalem’s Mount Scopus. The event was promoted as “A new step for major rehab.”

Guests included senior past and present officers of Israel’s defense establishm­ent, including the IDF, Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) and Mossad, along with wellknown businesspe­ople who contribute­d generously to the cause and wounded soldiers who had recovered from their wounds and were back in the swing of things, but who could testify to what a long and arduous process recovery can be. Constructi­on of the new rehabilita­tion center will begin in 2018.

Among those present were former Knesset speaker who chairs Hadassah Internatio­nal Israel, former chiefs of staff and former Shin Bet head MK and business leaders

Moshe Ya’alon, Yaakov Peri Rami Levy, Harel Wiesel, Avraham Koznicki Natan Barak. Dan Halutz

and

Fu Xiaotian,

CHINESE TELEVISION star

who hosts an interview program Talk with World Leaders, has produced a book by the same name in which Israeli and Iranian personalit­ies find themselves as neighbors between the covers. Fu’s media career is based on encouragin­g internatio­nal cooperatio­n and dialogue. She is also a popular lecturer and consultant with a huge on-screen and off-screen following. Her television shows are watched by some 200 million people. She interviews in English and Chinese.

Among her interviewe­es was Edelstein, whose transcribe­d interview in the book appears directly after that with Iranian Foreign Minister There’s not too much chance of the two of them getting that close outside of the book.

Dalia Itzik, Mohammad Javad Zarif.

IN PREVIOUS Grapevine columns, it has been stated that journalist­s work in a vacuum, not really knowing who their readers are, until they write something with which some of their readers vehemently disagree, and readers express such disagreeme­nt in a letter to the editor; or until the journalist makes a mistake, and readers rush to point out the error.

Mea culpa. In last Wednesday’s Grapevine, in an item on the launch of a book that grew out of a diary written by Yitzhak Navon in 1961, there was a reference to the launch two-and-a-half years ago of his autobiogra­phy. Even though he was very ill at the time, his wife arranged to bring him in a wheelchair from Shaare Zedek Medical Center to the venue of the launch, where he derived great pleasure from the many plaudits. However, instead of using the word “plaudits,” the word employed was “platitudes,” and several readers were quick to email the correction. One should always be grateful for being corrected when the correction is correct, because it is yet another learning experience.

POLISH PRIME Minister Communicat­ions Minister Zionist Union MK who heads the Israel-Poland parliament­ary friendship society, and former MK Rabbi

last week attended an event in Torun, Poland, honoring righteous Poles who risked their lives and often lost them in the effort to save Jews from the Nazis. For Bar – who is the grandson of a Holocaust survivor, the late Jakub Kotowski – the event held special significan­ce, and Lipman said afterward that it was one of the most meaningful diplomatic experience­s that he had ever had.

This emotional gathering of Israelis and Poles was facilitate­d by From the Depths, an organizati­on founded and headed by internatio­nal public relations executive and strategic planning consultant

who is determined to maintain the relevance of the lesson of the Holocaust for both Jews and non-Jews. Daniels relocated from London to Israel and from Israel to Warsaw, where he has forged strong relationsh­ips with politician­s and other people of influence.

Bar was particular­ly moved at a Friday night dinner at Daniels’s home, where Bar recited kiddush in the presence of Jewish and non-Jewish guests, including parliament­arians. Another moving experience was a meeting with Polish Secretary of State the daughter of Gen. Wladyslaw Anders, the head of the Polish Forces that were set up in the Soviet Union in 1940-41. Among the many Jews who served in Anders’s army was a young man by the name of Menachem Begin, who went on to become prime minister of Israel.

Daniels, Miri Shafir Navon Beata Szydlo, Ayoub Kara, Hilik Bar, Anna Maria Anders, Dov Lipman greerfc@gmail.com Jonny

 ??  ?? MOSHE YA’ALON with Yaakov Peri.
MOSHE YA’ALON with Yaakov Peri.
 ??  ?? ZION AMIR (left), Ofir Akunis (center) and Avi Pazner.
ZION AMIR (left), Ofir Akunis (center) and Avi Pazner.
 ??  ?? DALIA ITZIK with Rami Levy.
DALIA ITZIK with Rami Levy.
 ?? (Courtesy Knesset Speaker’s Office) ?? FU XIAOTIAN with Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein.
(Courtesy Knesset Speaker’s Office) FU XIAOTIAN with Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein.
 ?? (Dudu Grispan) ?? ELIZABETH RODICH, a child Holocaust survivor, models at a special fashion show in Arad.
(Dudu Grispan) ELIZABETH RODICH, a child Holocaust survivor, models at a special fashion show in Arad.

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