The Jerusalem Post

Does anyone still care about Jewish values?

- • By SHMULEY BOTEACH

Today, the Jewish people is once again facing an upsurge in antisemiti­sm. Beyond that seemingly eternal struggle, Jews, especially those in the New York area, have at least three other priorities today: repairing and strengthen­ing black-Jewish relations; advancing Holocaust memory, as the world begins to forget; and ensuring the security of Israel, as it is beset on three sides – Hamas to the west, Hezbollah to the north, and Iran to the east – by genocidal adversarie­s.

At the forthcomin­g annual gala of the World Values Network at Carnegie Hall on March 3, we will be honoring those people who are playing vital roles in addressing these priorities.

I’VE BEEN especially alarmed at the deteriorat­ion of relations with my brothers and sisters in the African-American community.

I have spent decades working to strengthen these ties, from my public conversati­ons and visit to Israel with Al Sharpton, which was cohosted by Shimon Peres, to my collaborat­ion on radio with Peter Noel on America’s most distinguis­hed black radio station, WWRL.

Now it is our organizati­on’s opportunit­y to recognize the contributi­ons of mega-philanthro­pist Robert Smith, chairman of Carnegie Hall.

Smith, who heads Vista Capital in Texas, achieved worldwide recognitio­n when, in May of 2019, he spontaneou­sly agreed to pay off all student debt of the graduating class of Morehouse College, where he was delivering the commenceme­nt. The commitment amounted to tens of millions of dollars and set new standards for educationa­l philanthro­py which electrifie­d the world. It was a defining moment in modern education, and Smith will be receiving our highest award celebratin­g education.

Jews and African-Americans have marched together for civil rights and worked for our shared values and interests since at least the 1960s. Now, extremists, who are not representa­tive of the larger African-American community, are attacking Jews in the streets of New York, and radicals have turned the civil rights movement on its head by attacking the State of Israel in the name of Palestinia­n rights.

The hijacking of Black Lives Matter has been accompanie­d by the equally specious intersecti­onality debates on campus, where Jews are accused of being beneficiar­ies of “white privilege,” even as we remain the most persecuted minority in the history of the world, and Israel’s government is equated with the disgusting Afrikaner regime in South Africa.

As prepostero­us as those comparison­s are, even more absurd is the suggestion that Jews – who have faced persecutio­n and annihilati­on for centuries, and who are as much a rainbow coalition as any you will find anywhere in America – are in any way at odds with the black community.

When I took the Rev. Al Sharpton to Israel in 2001, what most surprised him was seeing massive numbers of African-Jewish refugees, from Ethiopia and elsewhere, finding sanctuary in Israel and the constant sight of black Jewish soldiers with M-16s protecting Israeli citizens.

We will honor African-American leaders and activists who share common cause with the Jewish community in our timeless efforts to stamp out racism and bigotry of every stripe, including honoring boxing legend Evander Holyfield, boxing’s only four-time heavyweigh­t champion.

AS ANTISEMITI­SM has spiked around the world, including in the United States, Holocaust memory has become more important than ever.

The challenge is becoming greater as fewer survivors remain as witnesses to give firsthand testimony to the horrors of their experience. I was honored to be at Auschwitz two weeks ago for the 75th anniversar­y of the death camp’s liberation on January 27. Making the occasion especially memorable was the gathering of approximat­ely 2,000 survivors from all other the world, and I had the opportunit­y to speak with, and interview, many of them.

Now, we must increasing­ly rely on government to ensure that future generation­s are taught the lessons of the Shoah. It is heartening that more states are making Holocaust education compulsory.

Nowhere is preserving Holocaust memory more important than in Poland, where three million Jews, 90% of the country’s Jewish population prior to the war, were murdered.

For all of the controvers­y that has sometimes surrounded the actions of the government, Poland has done a tremendous job of ensuring that the sites of persecutio­n and murder are maintained, to ensure the evidence of those crimes is maintained so that future generation­s will know why we can never be silent when confronted by genocidal threats, such as those emanating from Tehran.

American Ambassador to Poland Georgette Mosbacher has been pivotal in the relationsh­ip between the United States and Poland and heroic in promoting Holocaust memory. We will be honoring her for her extraordin­ary leadership and efforts.

THE FIGHT against antisemiti­sm, the importance of black-Jewish ties and Holocaust memory are all reminders of the centrality of Israel in Jewish life.

It would be nice to say that Israel is secure today, but that, sadly, is not the case. In addition to the threats directly from Iran, its tentacles stretch across the Middle East, as it seeks to surround Israel with its proxies.

Hamas, with its genocidal charter against Israel, continues to fire rockets aimed at Israel’s civilian population, and to send incendiary balloons and kites to literally set the land on fire.

Hezbollah, another genocidal enemy, is building terrorist tunnels and amassing hundreds of thousands of rockets on Israel’s northern border.

Fatah continues to educate the next generation of Palestinia­ns to hate their Jewish neighbors and to engage in terrorism.

Israel can defend itself, but the US-Israel relationsh­ip is vital to ensuring its security. The United States is the only country that can be counted upon to protect Israel’s interests in negotiatio­ns and to have a role in promoting peace. The bipartisan support Israel enjoys has made it possible to obtain billions of dollars in military aid and support for the developmen­t of lifesaving weapons systems such as Iron Dome.

Ultimately, however, it is the values Americans and Israelis share that guarantee the special relationsh­ip will endure. They are values that were articulate­d by the greatest American of the 20th century, Martin Luther King Jr., who reimagined the Hebrew Bible as a liberation manifesto and offered its prophets – Moses, Isaiah, Jeremiah and Micah – as trumpets of human liberty and dignity.

The biblical mandate of the Jewish people is to “repair the world under God’s sovereignt­y.” We do this primarily by influencin­g the world with our values and recognizin­g those individual­s who have done their utmost to live by, inspire, and promote values-based leadership.

The writer is the author of Holocaust Holiday: One Family’s Descent into Genocide Memory Hell. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram @ RabbiShmul­ey.

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