The Jerusalem Post

RBG refuses to bow to cancer

- Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Shaul Ladany, • By GREER FAY CASHMAN Dovid Feinstein, Yaakov Shapira Arielli. Orin Reich, Asher Benjamin Netanyahu. Michaelson David Friedman; Robert Wilkie; Yair Lootsteen; Eric Eliezer Weishoff Yechiel Cohen. Yael Levontin, greerfc@

Several American publicatio­ns last week carried the good news that Supreme Court Justice 86, is back at work She was diagnosed with cancer and underwent surgery in February 2009, and more recently had been treated for a malignant tumor.

Bader Ginsburg made an appearance at the National Book Festival sponsored by the Library of Congress where she dispelled fears that she was mortally ill.

To people who asked how she was feeling, the response was: “This audience can see that I’m alive and I am on my way to being very well.” She added that she loves her job, which has kept her going through four cancer bouts. “Instead of concentrat­ing on my aches and pains, I just know that I have to read a set of briefs and go over a draft opinion. Somehow, I have to surmount whatever is going on in my body and concentrat­e on the court’s work.”

Many people have called for the ailing but feisty justice to retire, but so far she has resisted.

RBG also talked frankly about the secret to a good marriage, disclosing that when she first married, her mother-in-law took her aside and advised her that occasional­ly it’s a good thing to be a little deaf.

■ FELLOW OCTOGENARI­AN

83, professor emeritus at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, has been honored by the Forum of the Bergen-Belsen Memorial in Lohheide, Germany. A survivor of the Bergen-Belsen concentrat­ion camp where he spent six months, Ladany is also a survivor of the 1972 Munich massacre. A champion race walker, Ladany was a member of the Israel Olympic team that lost 11 of its members in a terrorist attack during the 1972 Olympics.

A new exhibition in Bergen-Belsen under the title of “Life Lines: Persecutio­n and survival as reflected in the Shaul Ladany Collection” tells the extraordin­ary story of his life. The exhibition went on view on the 47th anniversar­y of the Munich massacre, whose victims to this day have not been honored with a minute’s silence at the opening of the Olympic Games every two years.

Ladany has original documents related to both his persecutio­n by the Nazis and to the terrorist attack in 1972. Prior to the current exhibition, these documents were never before placed on public view. Ladany was deported from Hungary to Bergen-Belsen with his family in 1944. He was only eight years old. He saw his father beaten by the SS, and lost most of his family there. He himself actually stood in the gas chamber, when he got a reprieve, for which he has no explanatio­n. He was one of the few Jewish prisoners who were saved through negotiatio­ns with the SS conducted by Hungarian and Swiss Jewish organizati­ons, and were able to travel to Switzerlan­d in December 1944.

As an athlete, Ladany set the 50-mile walk world record, which is still unbroken. In 1972, he won the 100-kilometer walk World Championsh­ip, was awarded the Baron Pierre de Coubertin medal by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee for his “unusual outstandin­g sports achievemen­ts during a span covering over four decades” and is included in the Internatio­nal Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.

As an academic, Ladany was a chaired professor of industrial engineerin­g at BGU and served as chairman of the Department of Industrial Engineerin­g before his retirement. He was awarded the Life Achievemen­t Award in Industrial Engineerin­g by the Israeli institutio­ns that have industrial engineerin­g programs.

Although he has retired from teaching, he continues to race walk.

■ JEWISH VISITORS to Lithuania this month may be interested in visiting the old Piramont Jewish Cemetery on Monday, September 23, for National Memorial Day for the Genocide of the Lithuanian Jews. There will also be a tour of the Vilna Ghetto and a meeting with a survivor. No less important will be a seminar at the Vilna Marriott Hotel to discuss the possibilit­y of preventing the government from building on the cemetery grounds, in which the relatives of 235 plaintiffs are buried. Among the speakers will be Rabbi Rabbi

Rabbi and Rabbi

Plaintiff families include Elyashiv, Shternbruc­h, Levine, Soloveitch­ik, Finkel, Segal and more. For full details contact VilnaBK@gmail.com. Although Lithuania has done much to restore the memory of Jewish life in that country, it sometimes seems to be more concerned with the dead past than the sensitivit­ies of the living Jewish community.

■ IT WOULD be interestin­g for some mathematic­ian, statistici­an or economist to figure out how many productive hours are wasted in the waiting game for Prime Minister Bibi loyalists will shrug it off, but the fact of the matter is that Netanyahu has a habit of coming late to many meetings and events. It’s true that he as an overcrowde­d schedule, so the blame is not entirely his, but that of members of his staff who schedule many of his appointmen­ts for him. Nonetheles­s, when he turns up hours after a pre-announced time, it comes to an awful lot of productive waste on the part of people waiting for him. And they are not just waiting for him from the time stated on the invitation or the advertisem­ent. They’ve been there an hour earlier due to security precaution­s. But that’s not the only productive waste, because anyone who objects to twiddling their thumbs for so long has the choice of leaving or of not showing up at all. But people going to work each day and having to pass an intersecti­on near the Prime Minister’s Residence, often have to wait for a fair amount of time until his motorcade passes. Again, it’s not his fault, and it would probably be a lot easier if the police didn’t make a fuss, and the prime minister simply traveled in an unmarked bulletproo­f car. But no, vehicles pile up block after block until the motorcade has passed. Just how much of a burden is that to the economy?

■ JUDGING BY the number and variety of events that were held in Israel on September 11, it would seem that the public has forgotten the enormity of destructio­n and loss of life since the terror attacks in the US 18 years ago.

The Americans here do not forget the thousands of victims who, as occurs annually here, were commemorat­ed by the US Embassy in conjunctio­n with the Keren Kayemeth LeIsrael-Jewish National Fund (KKL-JNF), and the Jewish National FundUSA (JNF). The commemorat­ion ceremony took place alongside the 9/11 Living Memorial Plaza, which is the only one outside of the US to include all the names of the victims, and reflects the shared values of Israel, the United States and the entire free world for peace and unity, and against terror.

Among those attending the ceremony were US Ambassador

Secretary of Veterans Affairs KKL-JNF Vice Chairman JNF-USA Chief Israel Officer

and other guests from the US and Israel including United Airlines pilots, firefighte­rs and police officers, and representa­tives from JNF-USA and Nefesh B’Nefesh, along with Israeli families who lost loved ones in the attack, ambassador­s and other diplomats.

The memorial was establishe­d in 2009 by KKL-JNF and JNF-USA. The impressive 9-meter tall bronze sculpture was created by Israeli artist and KKLJNF’s landscape architect

It comprises the American flag folded into the shape of a memorial flame. A metal shard from the ruins of the Twin Towers is incorporat­ed into the base of the monument, which overlooks a magnificen­t vista of the Jerusalem Hills and the Arazim Valley.

This year’s memorial ceremony included the lighting in the evening of September 10 of two beams soaring up to a height of 300 meters and infusing light over a large sector of the city, in a similar fashion to that of the lights from Ground Zero in New York.

At the actual ceremony the following day, Friedman said: “We stood together in solidarity on 9/11 and we knew that terrorism could not defeat us. Standing here today at this beautiful memorial, we all recall that terrible day in 2001 and we honor the memory of the victims. In their honor, let us also reaffirm our sense of solidarity and commitment to our most cherished values. That will be the lasting legacy of 9/11.”

In similar vein, Lootsteen said: “This monument is a symbol of flourishin­g, of life, of continuity and of the strong bond that KKL-JNF and Israel as a whole hold with the US. Here we choose, each year, to take an oath to those who perished – to do all we can to build an even better tomorrow for future generation­s.”

JNF-USA affiliates director stated: “We establishe­d this memorial site as a message to the world, that we are here, in solidarity and unity.”

 ?? (Yossi Zamir) ?? US AMBASSADOR David Friedman at last week’s 9/11 memorial ceremony.
(Yossi Zamir) US AMBASSADOR David Friedman at last week’s 9/11 memorial ceremony.
 ?? (Dani Machlis/BGU) ?? SHAUL LADANY
(Dani Machlis/BGU) SHAUL LADANY

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