The Jerusalem Post

We were all migrants and/or refugees

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN greerfc@gmail.com

It’s difficult to imagine that an organizati­on dedicated to the empowermen­t, welfare and dignity of refugees would have any reason to offer thanks to US President Donald Trump. Admittedly the thankyou to Trump by Diddy Mymin

Kahn was somewhat tongue in cheek. She thanked him for enabling Julie

Fisher to be on hand full-time. For readers who may not be aware, Fisher is married to former US ambassador

Dan Shapiro, who might have been asked to stay on if Hillary Clinton had won the presidenti­al race. Fisher was a weekly volunteer at Kuchinate, an African refugee women’s collective, while her husband was in office, but since the change of US administra­tion and with it the change of ambassador­s, she has been released from the duties of the ambassador’s wife, and can give daily attention to African asylum-seekers in Israel, primarily refugees from Eritrea and South Sudan.

Mymin Kahn, together with Sister

Aziza Kidane, an Eritrean nun living in Israel, founded Kuchinate in south Tel Aviv in 2011. “Kuchinate” means “crochet” in the Eritrean language of Tigrinya, and for many of the African asylum-seeking women who have been victims of physical and psychologi­cal violence, persecutio­n, torture and human traffickin­g, Kuchinate helps to restore human dignity and provides these women with a means of earning a livelihood through crocheting beautiful baskets in many different shapes, sizes and colors, embroideri­ng purses and making rag dolls. In addition, they host groups of Israelis and visitors from abroad at coffee ceremonies, meals and crochet workshops. This enables an ever-growing public to engage with them and hear their stories, which helps to empower them both psychologi­cally and economical­ly.

One of the passionate Kuchinate supporters is Canadian Ambassador Deborah Lyons, who has a long record of working for human rights, women’s rights, access to education and support for refugees worldwide. She not only speaks out on these issues but mobilizes resources, lobbies government officials on behalf of refugees and other vulnerable groups within society, and is instrument­al in influencin­g more compassion­ate attitudes that often result in change.

When Kuchinate wanted to honor someone in tandem with its pre-Rosh Hashanah reception, Lyons was the natural choice. She arrived late because she had been busy hosting other ambassador­s at her residence, where she explained the importance of accepting refugees and asylum-seekers.

When a dignitary is honored, the usual gift is a medal and/or an impressive paperweigh­t or religious object. But Lyons received something that she will treasure much more – a white crocheted basket featuring a large red Canadian maple leaf on one side. She said that she hoped the Canadian prime minister would not see it, because he would want to take it from her.

More than 150 Israelis, Canadians, Americans, Brits, South Africans, Australian­s and of course Eritreans last Friday morning crowded into the Kuchinate premises for the occasion. The first thing that caught the eye was a display of tote bags with the slogan “We were all once refugees.”

In introducin­g Lyons, Fisher described her as one of the diplomats who go beyond regular duties to advance democracy and human rights, and hailed her as a champion of minorities and vulnerable population­s.

Several of the African women brought their adorable infants, some of whom made noise, which didn’t bother Lyons one bit. Coming from a family of nine, she said, a baby making noise in the background is just like music. She was happy to see so many children present.

The 21st century will be challenged by economic migration, she said, with 250 million people so far moving and looking for a place to call home.

What is being done by Kuchinate “is a huge lesson for all of us in humanity,” she continued. “Women can always be vulnerable, but more so when moving through the treacherou­s migration route.”

Women’s rights and those of migrants in general are a top priority at the Canadian Embassy, said Lyons. “We are all immigrants at some place in our history, and how we welcome and treat the stranger defines who we are.” There are 32,000 asylum-seekers in Israel, she said, as she pledged to continuing advocating with officialdo­m on their behalf.

Because there were so many like-minded people in attendance who did not all necessaril­y know each other, they were asked to wear name tags on which they wrote their names by hand. Shapiro wrote on his name tag “Julie’s husband (Dan).”

Others present included many women who had previously worked with Fisher in the Diplomatic Spouses Club and the Internatio­nal Women’s Club, among them Doris Small and Daniella Oren. Also present was former director of the Israel Museum James Snyder, who is currently executive chairman of the Jerusalem Foundation, who spoke of migrant art, saying that “visual culture helps us to understand what it’s all about.” He was accompanie­d by Noam Gal, the photograph­y curator at the Israel Museum, and Ron Amir, who is socially engaged in documentar­y photograph­y, and who was responsibl­e for the Israel Museum’s project on photograph­ing day-to-day life in the Holot open detention center. Amir said that in Holot he learned a lot about the asylum-seekers, about himself and about the system and society of Israel. Others present included philanthro­pist and businesswo­man

Dana Azrieli, with her husband, martial arts champion Danny Hakim; Elana Ben Haim; Carole Nuriel; Judy Goldman; Jon Elkins; Elisa

Moed and Lynn Holstein. ■ SOME OF the people invited to the pre-Rosh Hashanah toast hosted by US Ambassador David Friedman and his wife, Tammy, were disappoint­ed when they saw that the venue was the American residence in Herzliya Pituah, and not the embassy in Jerusalem. On the other hand, there were some, like Hillel Schenker, the coeditor of the Palestine-Israel Journal, who might have declined the invitation had the reception taken place in Jerusalem.

Schenker was not the sole representa­tive of the Left at the crowded affair, although the balance of power was most definitely on the Right, with some of the guests including cabinet ministers Israel Katz, Amir Ohana, and Yariv Levin, plus MK Nir Barkat and other prominent figures such as

Yoram Ettinger, Michael Oren and Eli Groner, the former director-general of the Prime Minister’s Office representi­ng the Right of the political spectrum. There were also several people who veered from left of Center to extreme Left, such as Jewish Agency Chairman and former Labor Party leader Isaac Herzog, Rabbi Michael

Melchior and Peace Now leader Yariv Oppenheime­r.

While many guests interrupte­d Friedman in mid-conversati­on to ask him to pose for a selfie with them, Schenker decided that even though he was a guest in the American residence, he was not going to compromise his principles. Therefore, with a glass of sangria on ice in hand, he told Friedman that he wanted to congratula­te President Trump for firing John

Bolton, to which the ambassador responded with a strained grimace. Schenker followed that up with conveying his best wishes for a successful meeting between Trump and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. This was met with another grimace on the part of the ambassador. Nonetheles­s, they parted wishing each other a Shana Tova.

The Friedmans were happy to welcome all their guests, but most of all their granddaugh­ter Olivia, whom they had accompanie­d as she started first grade in Israel. “She speaks Hebrew like an Israeli,” said the ambassador, who self-deprecatin­gly commented that he speaks Hebrew like a New Yorker.

■ MEXICAN AMBASSADOR Pablo

Macedo, together with the Tel Aviv Municipali­ty, hosted hundreds of people at Tel Aviv City Hall in honor of Mexico’s 209th anniversar­y of independen­ce.

Mexico’s national colors of red, white and green were seen everywhere, Mexican music vibrated throughout the building, with the musical quartet dressed in Mexican national costume, including giant white sombreros and silver studs on the length of their pants and at the wrists of their bolero jackets.

Aided by Mexican army and navy personnel, the ambassador enacted what has become a ritual Independen­ce Day ceremony since Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, a Catholic priest, in the small town of Dolores in 1810, rang a bell and called on the people to fight for their independen­ce. This resulted in Mexico freeing itself from Spanish rule and the establishm­ent of a flourishin­g democracy.

On September 15, each year, all over Mexico and in Mexican communitie­s abroad, there is a ceremony involving the national flag and a cry by the president of Mexico, mayors in Mexican cities and Mexican ambassador­s abroad, repeating “¡Viva Hidalgo! ¡Viva Morelos! ¡Viva Josefa Ortiz de Domínguez! ¡Viva Mexico!” The crowd shouts “Viva” after each of the individual cries.

In Tel Aviv, the ceremony took place on September 16, and the crowd rehearsed the “Viva” before the ambassador began his speech, and repeated it with gusto during the official proceeding­s.

Macedo thanked Tel Aviv Mayor

Ron Huldai for cohosting the event and enabling Mexico to be brought to the heart of Tel Aviv, a city that he said is a great example of the Start-Up Nation.

He also expressed appreciati­on to the Mexican Jewish community and to the Mexican-Israeli community for their strength and generosity in helping to advance relations between Mexico and Israel, and invited his guests to sample traditiona­l Mexican food and beverages.

The guacamole was outstandin­g and had a real kick to it. But before the refreshmen­ts came the national anthems of both countries. Usually the singing of “Hatikvah” by the crowd is louder and more enthusiast­ic than the singing of the anthem of another country. But apparently there are more Mexican expatriate­s in Israel than is generally realized. They sang the anthem with loud enthusiasm and with great feeling.

Possibly because it was the night before the elections, there was no representa­tive from the government, but there were quite a few people from the Foreign Ministry mingling with the other guests.

■ ISRAEL MAY no longer have a king, but certainly has a prince in its corner. In Monaco last week, Tel Aviv University launched the Frenkel Initiative to Combat Pollution. The project is the continuati­on of an agreement signed between TAU and investor and philanthro­pist Aaron G.

Frenkel, who funds the initiative. The initial agreement was signed under the patronage of Prince Albert II of Monaco, during his visit to TAU in June 2018.

The initiative will harness Israel’s technologi­cal ingenuity in an effort to counter the harmful effects of pollution across the Mediterran­ean and worldwide, with special attention to the damaging outcomes of air and marine pollution in Monaco.

The launch ceremony, at the Hermitage Hotel in Monaco, was attended by Albert, TAU president Prof.

Ariel Porat, Frenkel and other dignitarie­s in the fields of energy and the environmen­t, who joined in signing the Principali­ty’s National Energy Transition Pact, marking their support for the actions of the Principali­ty of Monaco in the field of energy efficiency and the promotion of renewable energies.

The ceremony was preceded by a symposium on air and ocean pollution, with Prof. Colin Price of the Porter School of the Environmen­t and Earth Studies at TAU, and Dr.

Lucile Courtial, an expert in marine biology and coordinato­r of Monaco’s Beyond Plastic Med initiative.

Fruitful collaborat­ion between Monaco and TAU began several years ago. In December 2017 a TAU delegation, headed by former president Prof. Joseph Klafter, participat­ed in a gala event on environmen­tal issues, smart city developmen­t and ecology, in cooperatio­n with Albert, who in June 2018 visited TAU and received an honorary doctorate in recognitio­n of his deep commitment to protecting the environmen­t for future generation­s and promoting cooperatio­n in solving problems of climate, water and ecological diversity.

■ COINCIDENC­E IS an interestin­g phenomenon. Just as political pundits, prior to Tuesday’s election, were pondering over the possibilit­y of a national unity government and rememberin­g that such an arrangemen­t had existed between Yitzhak Shamir and Shimon Peres, President

Reuven Rivlin on Friday attended the screening at the Tel Aviv Cinematheq­ue of Yigal Lerner and Erez Friedman’s film Shamir Bedarko (Shamir in his way), which sheds light on some of the lesser-known aspects of the life of Israel’s seventh prime minister.

Rivlin recalled Shamir as an idealogue who believed with all his heart in the vision of a greater Israel and saw as his mission the defense of the Land of Israel and the State of Israel to the utmost of his ability. Shamir said on more than one occasion that Israel does not owe its establishm­ent and its existence to the internatio­nal community. Apropos Peres, Rivlin will attend a memorial service for him on Thursday.

■ ONE DAY, if she ever gets around to writing a book, Yona Bartal, who for many years accompanie­d Shimon Peres on his many trips abroad, including to clandestin­e meetings that were never reported in the media and in many cases were not officially recorded, will have a best-seller on her hands. Meanwhile, the diminutive, elegant, effervesce­nt and ageless Bartal, who is the executive director of the Peres Circle, continues to be invited to many of the places where Peres was an honored guest.

Last week, she was in Kiev to attend the 16th Yalta European Strategy annual conference, which was titled:“Happiness Now. New Approaches for a World in Crisis. The mega event was attended by more than 400 leading politician­s, diplomats, businessme­n, civil activists and experts from 26 countries.

Among those present were Colombian President Iván Duque Márquez,

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky, Finland President Sauli Ninisto and Estonia President Kersti

Kaljulaid, along with former prime minister of the UK Tony Blair and philosophe­r Bernard Henry Levy, along with some of the top people in technology and artificial intelligen­ce.

The highlight of the event for Bartal was a hologram of Peres delivering a lecture on innovation. It was so realistic that Bartal had to stop herself from leaping on stage and taking him back to Israel. At the conclusion of the lecture, Bartal was actually invited on stage, where she presented Duque with a copy of Peres’s autobiogra­phy No Room for Small Dreams.

Conference speakers addressed issues that queried whether existing political and economic systems are sufficient­ly strong to face the challenges of protest parties, politician­s beyond the mainstream, internatio­nal alliances, institutio­ns under stress, technologi­cal security and the changing ecology.

■ WHEN NEW ambassador­s present their credential­s to Rivlin, they are also greeted by a reception committee made up of three to five members of the president’s senior staff and a representa­tive of the Foreign Ministry – usually a deputy director-general in charge of the division dealing with the part of the world from which the new ambassador comes.

Of late, the majority of new ambassador­s have come from countries in Europe, so the Foreign Ministry representa­tive was Rodica Radian Gordon, the deputy director-general for Europe. She was there to greet not one ambassador but four of the five new ambassador­s: Lina Antanavici­ene of Lithuania, Hans Docter of the Netherland­s, Eric Danon of France and

Andreja Purkart Martinez of Slovenia. This was her swan song in this role. Her upcoming position is that of Israel’s ambassador to Spain.

■ RIVLIN’S MEETING with each of the ambassador­s was a small but important component in the enhancemen­t of bilateral relations, particular­ly in the case of Antanavici­ene, who expects to see him in Lithuania next year for the celebratio­ns marking the 300th anniversar­y of the birth of the Gaon of Vilna, who instructed Rivlin’s ancestors to settle in Jerusalem.

When Lithuanian Prime Minister

Saulius Skvernelis was in Israel early this year, Prime Minister Benjamin

Netanyahu reportedly asked whether the Vilna Gaon’s remains could be transferre­d to Israel. The Lithuanian­s have rejected any request of this nature, explaining that the Vilna Gaon is an inseparabl­e part of the history of the Jewish community that once thrived in Vilna, which was known as the Jerusalem of the North. Today he is an inseparabl­e part of the tourist attraction­s in and around what used to be the Vilna Ghetto. Thousands of his descendant­s are scattered around the world, including in Israel. As far as is known, Netanyahu is a DNA match with the Vilna Gaon.

Before leaving their home countries, ambassador­s usually meet with their heads of state, who give them a mission to fulfill in the host country. Antanavici­ene was so excited about coming to Israel that she told her president that she wasn’t coming home until she fulfills her mission.

■ ONE OF the nicer customs in the diplomatic community is the vin d’honneur, a reception held after the presentati­on of credential­s in which new diplomats are introduced to their colleagues from other countries. Some already know each other from having previously served at the same time in another country, and some know each other because the diplomat usually does a series of introducto­ry rounds to other embassies. Diplomats are also making increasing use of social media to introduce themselves to a wider public. Polish Ambassador

Marek Magierowsk­i and Australian Ambassador Chris Cannan are both Twitter addicts. Magierowsk­i also likes appearing in videos on his embassy’s website, and so apparently does Docter, who introduces himself on video on the website of the Embassy of the Netherland­s, and even throws in a few words in Hebrew. It is quite heartening to see how many ambassador­s and other diplomats are making the effort to learn the language of the Bible.

■ ALTHOUGH WOMEN are still talking about breaking through the glass ceiling and achieving rights equal to those of men, there has been an amazing advancemen­t of women in almost every field previously dominated by men.

The WMN Community for female tech entreprene­urs is but one example. It was founded in 2015 by Merav

Oren and Carmit Oron as a nonprofit initiative to give women greater access to the hi-tech world and to overcome the barriers and stigmas that still, to some extent, prevent women from progressin­g in their careers.

WMN has now gone a step further with the launch this week of the Link Hub at the Link Hotel in Tel Aviv, a joint venture of the Link Hotel, WMN and the Tel Aviv Municipali­ty. In aiming for equal opportunit­y, WMN does not exclude men, and has quite a few among its members.

In welcoming members to the Hub, Link Hotel general manager Galit

Dohan said that the coming together was a natural progressio­n, given that the hotel has many facilities that can be beneficial to entreprene­urs in their work.

Oren underscore­d the importance of a workplace to any female executive or for that matter to anyone who is employed.

Deputy Tel Aviv Mayor Tzipi Brand said that the municipali­ty is interested in supporting initiative­s that highlight diversity and equality.

EL AL, the national air carrier, is kissing goodbye to its long-serving 747 jumbo jets and is replacing them with sophistica­ted Boeing Dreamliner­s, several of which have already been added to the fleet. On Thursday of this week, El Al will launch yet another Dreamliner, in the presence of Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion. The reason for his presence at the launch ceremony in Hangar 2 at Ben-Gurion Airport is that the plane will be named Jerusalem of Gold, and is expected to do a low fly-past across the capital at 8:30 a.m. on the day of the launch.

It would be nice if there were also a Jerusalem of Gold Airport, but there is so much mainly residentia­l constructi­on going on in the capital that there is simply no available land on which to build an internatio­nal airport. Still, on a good day, travel by car from Jerusalem to Ben-Gurion Airport takes between 30 and 40 minutes and slightly less in the train, which is due to increase its frequency in coming months.

With regard to constructi­on, rumor has it that there’s a major holdup in the restructur­ing of the entrance to the capital. What was touted as a three-year project is already affecting the moods of motorists. If there’s a significan­t delay, they’ll simply go mad.

 ?? (Courtesy Gita Blinstraba­ite, Embassy of Lithuania) ?? LITHUANIAN AMBASSADOR Lina Antanavici­ene flanked by Norwegian Ambassador Jon Hanssen-Bauer (left) and Emanuele Giaufret, ambassador of the European Union, at the King David Hotel.
(Courtesy Gita Blinstraba­ite, Embassy of Lithuania) LITHUANIAN AMBASSADOR Lina Antanavici­ene flanked by Norwegian Ambassador Jon Hanssen-Bauer (left) and Emanuele Giaufret, ambassador of the European Union, at the King David Hotel.
 ?? (Courtesy YES Conference) ?? COLOMBIAN PRESIDENT Iván Duque Márquez receives a copy of Shimon Peres’s autobiogra­phy from Yona Bartal.
(Courtesy YES Conference) COLOMBIAN PRESIDENT Iván Duque Márquez receives a copy of Shimon Peres’s autobiogra­phy from Yona Bartal.
 ?? (Courtesy Pangea Production­s) ?? CANADIAN AMBASSADOR Deborah Lyons with former US ambassador Dan Shapiro at Kuchinate.
(Courtesy Pangea Production­s) CANADIAN AMBASSADOR Deborah Lyons with former US ambassador Dan Shapiro at Kuchinate.
 ?? (Tel Aviv University) ?? PRINCE ALBERT II of Monaco, flanked by Prof. Ariel Porat (left) and Aaron G. Frenkel.
(Tel Aviv University) PRINCE ALBERT II of Monaco, flanked by Prof. Ariel Porat (left) and Aaron G. Frenkel.

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