The Jerusalem Post

Rivlin hosts historic dinner

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN and ROSSELLA TERCATIN

President Reuven Rivlin invited world leaders gathered in Jerusalem on Wednesday to send a message that they stand united against racism, antisemiti­sm and extremism.

Speaking at a gala banquet organized in the President’s Residence for the dozens of heads of states who are here to commemorat­e the 75th anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz, Rivlin said historical research should be free of politics.

“Historical research should be left to historians,” he said. “The role of political leaders is to shape the future .... I hope and pray that from this room, the message will go out to every country on earth that the leaders of the world will stand united in the fight against racism, antisemiti­sm and extremism.”

Rivlin called the gathering historic not only for Israel

and the Jewish people but for all humanity. It embodies the commitment of all those who attend to pass on the awareness of what happened during the Holocaust to the next generation­s, he said.

Rivlin spent much of Tuesday and Wednesday speaking individual­ly with a steady stream of leaders. He emphasized that attacks against Israel are a form of contempora­ry antisemiti­sm, adding that one cannot profess to love Jews and attack Israel, which is the Jewish homeland, or to love Israel and hate Jews.

Rivlin warned that antisemiti­sm and all forms of racism and xenophobia constitute an attack on democracy.

He previously had a series of face-to-face meetings with world leaders who came to the funeral of former prime minister Shimon Peres in September 2016. But they had not all sat together and broken bread with him at the one table.

Spain’s King Felipe took the podium on behalf of the guests reunited at Rivlin’s residence, starting his speech by quoting 12th-century Jewish philosophe­r and Torah scholar Moses Maimonides, known as the Rambam. “Maimonides, born in Sfarad [Spain], in the city of Cordoba, wrote all evils originate from ignorance,” Felipe said, adding that there is no greater ignorance than not knowing the simple truth that all men and women are created equal.

The king said the example set by Holocaust survivors has been enlighteni­ng humanity for decades, but remembranc­e itself is unfortunat­ely not enough.

“We all know that barbariani­sm grows where it is least expected,” he said. “We cannot look away.”

Felice denounced the surge of attacks against Jews all over the world.

“We will always need to persevere so that the words ‘never again,’ ‘leolam lo od,’

stay true,” he said.

World Holocaust Forum Foundation president Moshe Kantor also spoke at the event.

Holocaust survivor and Yad Vashem Council chairman Rabbi Israel Meir Lau and historian Prof. Yehuda Bauer, who was one of the dinner speakers, arrived before the start of the VIP reception and waited in the second reception room with media and staff, mostly Foreign Ministry

personnel. •

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