The Jerusalem Post

To the skies nonetheles­s

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN greerfc@gmail.com

In January of this year, Australian Ambassador Chris Cannan was enthusing about El Al’s projected first commercial flight to Australia, which was scheduled to land in Melbourne. Cannan was telling Australian expatriate­s in Israel that the flight would get to Melbourne in time for Passover.

Due to the present crisis, that initial plan was scrapped, and El Al last month flew to Perth to take home Australian Zionist youths working on volunteer projects in Israel, and to bring back Israelis stranded down under. But this week, despite its suspension of commercial flights, another El Al plane left Israel at 5 p.m on Wednesday, this time bound for Melbourne, to bring home another full load of Israelis. Anyone walking along the main shopping areas of Melbourne’s Jewish suburbia will hear lots of Hebrew spoken in the street, in shops and in restaurant­s.

Meirav Elon Shahar, the Foreign Ministry’s coordinato­r for overseas operations, in a radio interview said that cooperatio­n with the government­s of other countries with regard to the repatriati­on of Israelis was extraordin­ary – and such cooperatio­n was not by the government­s alone. In Bolivia, a man by the name of Felipe put a plane at the disposal of the Israel Embassy to pick up Israelis stranded in five different parts of the country; and in Germany two German airlines are bringing stranded Israelis home to Israel and are putting the cost factor on the back burner.

Although El Al’s economic situation is currently at one of its lowest points, the very fact that in its repatriati­on operations, El Al has flown to countries where it had never flown before in its mission to bring Israelis home, may augur well for future destinatio­ns for Israel’s national carrier once the crisis is over.

It has already updated its fleet by taking possession of the first of 16 Dreamliner planes at a total investment of more than $1.25 billion. In order to once again take to the skies, it will have to reorganize its fiscal policy and will need a huge cash injection from the government, even though it is no longer a state-owned company.

■ THE STATUS quo has proved how suddenly life can change and how quickly the freedoms we take for granted can be curtailed by something beyond our control. There are many who mournfully predict that Israel will never be the same again, that economic recovery will take years, and that our social habits will be based on distance rather than closeness.

There is no doubt that much of what was in the pre-coronaviru­s era will be different. For instance, the world’s major sporting event, the Olympic Games, has been moved from this year to July next year. Up until now, the Olympic Games have been held every four years.

Does this mean that they will now be held every five years or that the 2024 Games will go ahead on the originally scheduled date? It certainly makes a difference as far as Israeli athletes are concerned, because unless they are still in top form next year, those selected to go to Japan this year, will lose their places on the Israeli Olympic Team. If they go for several months without training, their prowess will be negatively affected.

As far as profession­s go, some will become obsolete and others may have to downsize. The fashion industry is missing out on its spring/ summer season. Does that mean that this season’s styles will be held over to next year? If so, what happens to all the people involved in clothing design and manufactur­e? How long will it take for entertaine­rs to get back the gigs they had lined up for the coming year, and now that money is so tight, can they be assured of paying audiences?

It’s all very worrying.

Diplomacy has also changed. Four ambassador­s-designate who were scheduled to present their credential­s to President Reuven Rivlin on March 23, had their ceremonies cancelled due to restrictio­ns imposed by the Health Ministry.

Actually ,that’s rather strange taking into account that Rivlin has been hosting civilian and military officials on an individual basis. There was no reason to cancel the ceremony if 10 people were permitted into the room. Admittedly, the pomp that goes with it would have been absent, but the credential­s of the new ambassador­s would have been presented in accordance with internatio­nal protocol.

Nonetheles­s, the four ambassador­s-designate - Margarita Eliana Manjarrez Herrer of Colombia; Du Wei of The People’s Republic of China; Panayotis N. Sarris of the Hellenic Republic; and Anne Dorte Riggelsen of the Kingdom of Denmark - received full recognitio­n from Israel’s Foreign Ministry, which acting in accordance with the Vienna Convention, decided to recognize the four envoys as ambassador­s and not as designates effective March 23, 2020.

Letters of explanatio­n were sent out to the heads of embassies and consulates stating that due to the extraordin­ary measures being undertaken in Israel to protect public health in the face of the COVID-19 threat, it was unfortunat­ely not possible to hold the presentati­on of credential­s ceremony scheduled for March 23.

In light of these unique circumstan­ces, and in accordance with Article 13 of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961), the Foreign Ministry decided that as true copies of the credential­s of the four ambassador­s-designate were presented to the Foreign Ministry’s Chief of Protocol Meron Reuben, they would be considered as having taken up their functions as of March 23.

■ IN RESPONSE to a post written by Dror Eydar, Israel’s ambassador to Italy, Achinoam Nini is giving a virtual benefit concert this Saturday night April 4, on behalf of the people of Bergamo, Italy, which has suffered one of the highest death tolls in Europe.

Eydar wrote: “My heart cannot contain the agony. As the ambassador of Israel in Italy, I receive messages from people all over Italy.” He shared some of the details of a conversati­on that he had with a woman from Bergamo, Lombardy, who had written to him in desperatio­n.

“I called her, and she wept and wept, and I wept with her,” he wrote. “Please share her cry for help and spread it far and wide. This is a time of emergency and all humanity needs to join efforts in order to combat the deadly invader. Our sages taught us that salvation can come from anyone and from anywhere. So perhaps someone will read this cry, and be able to help these wonderful people.”

The woman had told him that she was sorry to bother him but that the situation in Bergamo was so desperate that hundreds of people were dying every day. Doctors, nurses and ambulance drivers are ill and the entire system is collapsing. Help is urgently needed.

“We are not able to bury our dead. No carrier is willing to enter Lombardy. Coffins are piled up everywhere; all the protection devices are used up,” she told Eydar, and asked if he could help by using other channels.

Although China is helping, she explained, deliveries of orders from China take at least two weeks and no one else is able to supply anything. Doctors work barefaced and fall ill. There are no more gloves or overalls available.

She added that she has close friends working in hospitals, and friends working in supply management. She, herself, is a volunteer and sees people dying. This includes helpless doctors, many of whom have died. One hundred family doctors are seriously ill.

The woman had cancer and her system is weak. “If I fall ill, they will not treat me, because they have to decide whom to treat, and prefer those who will survive,” she said. “Every hospital bed is occupied and so are the corridors.”

She did not know if Eydar, who was calling her from Rome, could hear the ambulances and helicopter­s around her.

“They don’t know where to put the patients. The doctors are collapsing. The situation is that if I get ill, no one would take care of me. I will only be able call the emergency services if I cannot breathe,” she said. “We are alone. We feel alone.”

In solidarity with Italian state institutio­ns, which this week lowered their flags to half-mast in tribute to the dead, Eydar also lowered the flag over the Israeli Embassy.

Nini, who has performed many times in Italy, was so moved by the message that she decided to do a virtual benefit concert together with her permanent accompanis­t, guitarist Gil Dor, from the studio of her home.

“This is an important time to show solidarity” she says on her official website.

She is also planning a future virtual concert on behalf of the people of Spain.

 ?? (Foreign Ministry) ?? FOREIGN MINISTRY Chief of Protocol Meron Reuben with Chinese Ambassador Du Wei.
(Foreign Ministry) FOREIGN MINISTRY Chief of Protocol Meron Reuben with Chinese Ambassador Du Wei.
 ?? (Foreign Ministry) ?? REUBEN WITH Danish Ambassador Anne Dorte Riggelsen.
(Foreign Ministry) REUBEN WITH Danish Ambassador Anne Dorte Riggelsen.
 ?? (Foreign Ministry) ?? REUBEN WITH Ambassador of the Hellenic Republic Panayotis N. Sarris.
(Foreign Ministry) REUBEN WITH Ambassador of the Hellenic Republic Panayotis N. Sarris.

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