Putin to Yaffa Issachar: Everything will be okay
Russian President Vladimir Putin reassured Yaffa Issachar, Naama Issachar’s mother, during a meeting between them at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s residence on Thursday morning.
“Everything will be all right,” Putin told her.
Yaffa Issachar was present for a portion of the breakfast meeting between the two leaders, alongside Patriarch Theophilos III of the Greek Orthodox Church in Jerusalem, who facilitated the meeting between her and Putin.
They discussed the case of Naama Issachar, 26, an American-Israeli serving a 7.5-year sentence in a Russian prison for possession of 9.5 grams of cannabis. Netanyahu has officially asked Putin for a humanitarian pardon of the woman, who was arrested in April 2019 at a Moscow airport en route from India to Israel.
According to Yaffa Issachar, Putin told her, “I will return your girl home,” but he did not say when. She described Putin as charming and downto-earth.
Netanyahu said after the meeting: “We have just finished an excellent meeting, at the end of which President Putin requested Yaffa to join
also stand strong against the leading state purveyor of antisemitism, against the one government in the world that denies the Holocaust as a matter of state policy and threatens to wipe Israel off the map. The world must stand strong against the Islamic Republic of Iran.”
Netanyahu, in his speech, spoke of the Nazi death camp of Auschwitz as “the ultimate symbol of evil.” But for the Jewish people, it was also “the ultimate symbol of Jewish powerlessness” and “the culmination of what can happen when our people have no voice, no land, no shield.”
Regarding Iran, he expressed concern at what he described as a lack of “a unified and resolute stance against the most antisemitic regime on the planet,” its nuclear-weapons program and threats made from Tehran to destroy the Jewish state.
“Israel salutes President Trump and Vice President Pence for confronting the tyrants of Tehran that subjugate their own people and threaten the peace and security of the entire world,” Netanyahu said.
“They threaten the peace and security of everyone in the Middle East and everyone beyond,” he said. “I call on all governments to join the vital effort of confronting Iran.”
Putin, in his speech, spoke about Nazi collaborators in Europe who participated in the murder of Jews. The comments appeared to be a continuation of his spat with Poland and its government over responsibility for the outbreak of the World War II.
“The crimes committed by the Nazis were deliberate and planned, and the ‘final solution of the Jewish question,’ as they the called it, is one of the darkest and most shameful pages of modern world history,” Putin said. “But we will not forget that this crime also had accomplices who in their cruelty often excelled their masters. The death factories and concentration camps were operated not only by the Nazis, but also by their henchmen and accomplices in many European countries.”
Macron, in his speech, implored the world not to allow the memory of the Holocaust to be forgotten and for the world to unite against antisemitism and hatred in general.
“The international community must never forget the barbarism, the exclusion and shunning of others and of international law, which was trampled by the Nazi henchmen,” he said.
Macron drew attention to rising antisemitism around the world in recent years.
“The scourge of antisemitism has returned, and xenophobia has also raised its ugly head,” he said. “Antisemitism is not only a problem for Jews, it is first and foremost a problem of others. As demonstrated in the past, when antisemitism rises, so does the inability of accepting others, and racism also flourishes, and no one can be a victor.”
Prince Charles, who is on the first-ever official visit of a member of the British royal family to Israel, spoke of the importance of perpetuating the memory of the Holocaust.
“The magnitude of the genocide visited on Jewish people defies comprehension... The scale of the evil so great it threatens to obscure the individual stories of suffering and loss of which it is comprised,” he said. “That is why events like this are so vitally important.
“The Holocaust must never be allowed to become simply a fact of history... The lessons of the Holocaust are searingly relevant to this day. Seventy-five years after the Liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, hatred and intolerance still lurk in the human heart, still tell new lies, adopt new disguises, and still seek new victims.”
To combat such hatred, it must be remembered that all humans are “created in the image of God, and that “one human life is like an entire world,” using Hebrew for these expressions, Prince Charles said.
Steinmeier spoke movingly of his feelings of responsibility as a German, saying he was “laden with the heavy, historical burden of guilt.”
Steinmeier began and ended his speech by reciting the Jewish shehecheyanu blessing for new beginnings and renewal and said it was a gift for him to be able to speak at the event. He spoke emotionally about two victims, Ida Goldish and her three-year-old son, Vili, and their fate at the hands of Nazi Germany.
“Germans deported them. Germans burned numbers on their forearms. Germans tried to dehumanize them, to reduce them to numbers, to erase all memory of them in the extermination camps,” Steinmeier said. “They did not succeed. Ida and Vili were human beings. And as human beings, they live on in our memory.”
“The industrial mass murder of six million Jews, the worst crime in the history of humanity, it was committed by my countrymen,” he said.
Steinmeier deplored renewed antisemitism in Germany, saying hate was spreading. He mentioned several recent antisemitic incidents in the country and vowed that Germany would fight the phenomenon.
“The perpetrators are not the same. But it is the same evil. And there remains only one answer: Never again! Nie wieder! That is why there cannot be an end to remembrance,” Steinmeier said. •