The Jerusalem Post

From 1947 to 2018 – the miracles of November 29

- • By SAM GRUNDWERG

When supporters of Israel worldwide think about November 29, they think about miracles.

In the year 1897, Theodore Herzl convened the First Zionist Congress and proclaimed the right of the Jewish people to national rebirth in its own country.

This right was recognized in the Balfour Declaratio­n of 1917, and re-affirmed in the Mandate of the League of Nations which, in particular, gave internatio­nal sanction to the historic connection between the Jewish people and the land of Israel and to the right of the Jewish people to rebuild its national home.

November 29, 1947, marked one of the greatest milestones along the road to realizing the miracle of the modern Jewish state. On that day, the United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution calling for the establishm­ent of a Jewish state in Eretz Yisrael. This recognitio­n by the United Nations of the right of the Jewish people to establish their state is irrevocabl­e.

Subsequent events cemented this miracle, including how the nascent Jewish state proceeded to declare independen­ce, and then to defy the odds by overcoming formidable Arab armies in the War of Independen­ce. But the roots of miracle were planted at the UN on November 29.

I’ve dedicated both my career and personal life to appreciati­ng, advocating for, and preserving this miracle. Now, quite fittingly on the date of November 29, I’ve added an even more personal layer as to my part in the sacred responsibi­lity that we all share of securing this miracle.

On Thursday, I began my new role as world chairman of Keren Hayesod – UIA (United Israel Appeal). Born and raised in a religious Zionist environmen­t in Miami Beach, I’ve long savored the realizatio­n of a modern Jewish state and the Jewish people’s miracle of sovereignt­y in their ancestral homeland. But even as I advanced in my career working on behalf of the State of Israel, it would have been hard to imagine that I would find myself at the helm of an organizati­on that has the most direct connection possible to the state itself by serving as the fund-raising arm of the global Zionist movement.

Never would I have thought than an American Jew from Miami Beach would assume this position, whose selection process involves direct coordinati­on with the prime minister of Israel – the leader of a strong and thriving Jewish state, dedicated to protecting the Jewish people worldwide. Although my appointmen­t was announced about a month ago, I am still processing its full ramificati­ons. How did my personal and profession­al journey ever bring me to this point?

After fulfilling a lifelong dream and making aliyah alone at age 17 in 1990, I served as a combat soldier in the IDF armored corps, and later in the IDF reserves as a casualty officer. But my ensuing career was a back-andforth journey between Israel and the US, including jobs in finance and law (in addition to attending business school and law school at the University of Miami), as director general in Israel for the World Jewish Congress, and as consul general of Israel in Los Angeles to the Southwest United States – appointed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

IT WAS truly humbling to have earned the prime minister’s confidence for my immediate past role in Los Angeles, as well as for my new position with Keren Hayesod, together with the support of the internatio­nal Jewish leaders who comprise its board of trustees.

My time in Los Angeles was a high-level crash course in Israel-Diaspora ties and diplomacy, and in Israel’s crucial relationsh­ips with various demographi­c groups and communitie­s, from American Jews to Israeli-Americans to Hispanics to Hollywood. Indeed, representi­ng Israel in Los Angeles gave me the once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y to engage and meet one-on-one with celebritie­s like Conan O’Brien, Billy Crystal, Mayim Bialik, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and many others. In doing so, I had the privilege to build and fortify those relationsh­ips in an Israel-centric context enhancing our country’s diplomatic standing. I’ll never forget those exciting, action-packed years.

But now I’m moving on to a new, next-level challenge. And to understand that challenge, one really needs to understand what Keren Hayesod is and what it does. Admittedly, amid today’s “alphabet soup” of Jewish and Israeli nonprofits, it’s easy for true awareness about any organizati­on’s actual work and mission to get lost in the shuffle.

Founded in 1920, Keren Hayesod helped lay the foundation for the future Jewish state. With the help of donations from throughout the world, it brought tens of thousands of Jews fleeing Europe to the Land of Israel, helped absorb them, and started over 900 urban and rural settlement­s. It provided the newcomers with homes and jobs, and developed the economic, educationa­l and cultural framework of pre-state Israel. After Israel’s independen­ce, Keren Hayesod-UIA became one of the country’s national institutio­ns.

Today, in partnershi­p with the global Jewish community and friends of Israel in more than 45 countries, Keren Hayesod-UIA helps advance the national priorities of the state. The most important priorities are rescuing Jews from places where their lives are in peril, encouragin­g aliyah, and absorbing new immigrants. Further, scores of Keren Hayesod-UIA projects strengthen weak population­s in Israel, provide opportunit­ies for disadvanta­ged youths, and connect young Diaspora Jews to Israel and to Jewish life. Our newest projects are the renovation of Israel’s national heritage sites and the developmen­t of efficient alternativ­e energy.

As I reflect on these two improbable events occurring on November 29 – the UN’s approval of the partition plan, and the beginning of my time as Keren Hayesod’s world chairman – I keep coming back to the word “miracle.” The modern State of Israel has forged a highly unlikely path to existence and continued survival, and, personally, I’ve experience­d an unlikely journey to my current role. I am the grandson of Holocaust survivors and the great-grandson of those who were murdered in the Holocaust. Yet today, my own children are approachin­g the age of IDF service and will soon defend the Jewish state. A few days before Hanukkah, I can’t think of a greater miracle.

The writer is world chairman of Keren Hayesod – UIA (United Israel Appeal) and the former consul general of Israel in Los Angeles.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? PEOPLE CELEBRATE on November 29, 1947, in Jerusalem.
(Reuters) PEOPLE CELEBRATE on November 29, 1947, in Jerusalem.

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