The Jerusalem Post

Environmen­tal issues mark queen’s birthday bash

- GRAPEVINE • By GREER FAY CASHMAN greerfc@gmail.com

ven though he wasn’t there in the flesh, he was there in spirit, and anyone reading the tweet by British Ambassador

Neil Wigan, and unaware of his absence, would have presumed that he wrote it while hosting the annual queen’s birthday reception.

Wigan tweeted: “Wonderful to be celebratin­g #QueensBirt­hday again properly – with a Green theme this year for #COP26.” Immediatel­y following this tweet was one from UK in Israel, the text of which was: “We’re so happy to be celebratin­g the #QueensBirt­hday after last year’s break, at the Ambassador’s Residence in @ramatgan. The theme is the #environmen­t, ahead of @COP26 hosted by UK in November. #qbp #TogetherFo­rOurPlanet.”

Guests were somewhat surprised on arrival, not to be greeted by the ambassador and his wife,

Yael Banaji, standing on the patio leading to the downstairs garden. Nor was there a reception line at the bottom of the stairs, though chargé d’affaires Mark Powers was standing by the side, engaged in conversati­on with those of the arrivals who recognized him. It happened that the ambassador had gone to England for surgery, and was due back in Israel this week.

But the queen’s birthday festivitie­s had been organized long before his departure for the UK. Although the date could not be changed, the number of invitees could. The most familiar embassy staffer milling among the guests was Jacqui Milliner, the manager of the residence, who has been there for almost 30 years, starting with Sir Andrew Burns, and continuing with Sir David Manning, Francis Cornish, Sir Sherard Cowper Coles, Sir Simon McDonald, Sir Tom Phillips, Matthew Gould, David Quarrey and now Wigan. The five ambassador­s who were knighted were elevated to the peerage, following their service in Israel.

Milliner revealed that when the event was initially planned, health restrictio­ns were still being meticulous­ly observed, and a relatively small number of people had been invited. But once the constraint­s were lifted, the embassy could go ahead and invite many more people – which it did. But then it had to go back to the sponsors of the festivitie­s, because funding for such events does not come out of embassy budgets, but is provided by local or global companies that do a lot of business with the country represente­d by the embassy in question.

In view of the fact that the UK is hosting COP26, the UN Climate Change Conference, in Glasgow November 1-12, the theme of this year’s queen’s birthday reception was environmen­tal, with the refreshmen­ts following suit in that they were all vegetarian or vegan.

Power apologized for the fact that the traditiona­l fish and chips, which are a popular part of the fare at such events, were taken off the menu. So, for that matter, was Stilton cheese, which remains a palate pleaser for ex-Brits living in Israel.

Entertainm­ent was provided by the widely popular Shalva Band, which was photograph­ed over and over again by people in the crowd. It’s a pity that blind singers Dina Samieh and Anael Khalifa could not see the reaction of the crowd, nor could they hear it, because other than via a microphone, the garden sounds were muffled.

Percussion­ist Tal Kima, who displays the unbridled affection that is common among many people with Down’s syndrome, recognized a certain former Israeli diplomat and after the show scampered off the stage and enveloped the man in a loving bear hug, which was reciprocat­ed.

British Defense Attaché Col.

Jim Priest was master of ceremonies. A video of Prince

Charles, known for his environmen­tal concerns, had him urging the world to address critical issues facing the planet, “not the least of which is climate change.” Calling for action, the Prince of Wales declared: “The time for talking and arguing is past.”

Power remarked on how happy everyone was to be celebratin­g in person. It would be impossible to mark the queen’s 96th birthday, he said, without paying tribute to Prince Philip, who was fond of Israel, and who was a great environmen­talist.

Power emphasized the importance of working together to reduce the carbon footprint, noting that the science and innovation element in the UK’s relationsh­ip with Israel can play a huge role in developing the services needed for climate change. In this context, he mentioned vertical farming.

Representi­ng the government of Israel was newly installed Environmen­tal Protection Minister Tamar Zandberg, who came suitably attired in a classic floorlengt­h green gown. Had she been a man, no one would have commented on what she was wearing, but she did choose to fit in with the theme and with her portfolio.

But it was her speech that earned her many kudos. Refraining from the usual platitudes of shared values and bilateral exchanges, Zandberg – for want of a better word in English – talked tachles, as they say in Yiddish. She came to an event dedicated to climate change, and she explored the subject from different perspectiv­es, drawing the conclusion that environmen­tal reform is not a threat but an opportunit­y for business and industry, as it is in their own interests to reduce greenhouse emissions.

“We must decrease out dependence on fossil fuels by turning to renewable energy,” she insisted. “We cannot wait until it’s too late. Climate change must be recognized in relation to our safety and security.”

The applause, when she finished, was not merely out of politeness; it was definitely a sign of approval.

AMONG THE Australian Jews from various walks of life who were listed in the queen’s birthday honors were a rabbi and a choirmaste­r who each engage in interfaith work. Rabbi Yaakov Glasman, former president of the Rabbinical Council of Australia and New Zealand, was honored in recognitio­n of his significan­t services to Judaism and to interfaith dialogue. Choirmaste­r Adrian Robert Bartak, in addition to conducting synagogue and other Jewish choirs, is a former member of the executive of the Victorian branch of the Council of Christians and Jews.

Also in relation to Australia, albeit not the queen’s birthday, is a live online farewell to Jewish Agency Chairman, President-elect of the State of Israel Isaac Herzog. The event will be hosted on Wednesday, June 30, at 8 p.m. Australian time, by Lance Rosenberg and Jeremy Leibler, the president of the Zionist Federation of Australia. Exactly a week later, Herzog will become Israel’s 11th president.

IN MARCH this year,

Michael Berenbaum, a Holocaust scholar and one of the founders of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, and Jonathan Ornstein the New York-born director of the Krakow Jewish Community Center, published an op-ed in The Jerusalem Post calling for the creation of a Holocaust Survivor Day to celebrate the lives built by survivors despite what they had endured during the Holocaust.

They pointed out that, each year, there are several commemorat­ive events condemning Nazi atrocities and mourning the loss of millions of lives, but no day of celebratio­n for those who survived, built families and careers and contribute­d to society. “Survivors represent the best in all of us, the best of the human spirit. They are our treasure and our light, and we must shine that light into every dark corner of our world,” they wrote.

They called on the world to join them in celebratin­g the inaugural Holocaust Survivor Day on June 26. The date coincides with the 95th birthday of one of Poland’s best-known Holocaust survivors, noted historian and journalist

Marian Turski, which this year falls on Shabbat, so the celebratio­n has been brought forward to Thursday, June 24. Turski has long been acknowledg­ed as the moral conscience of Poland’s Jewish community.

At a commemorat­ive ceremony

marking the 75th anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz, Turski, who survived Auschwitz and Buchenwald, said: “Auschwitz did not fall from the sky. It began with small forms of persecutio­n of Jews. It happened; it means it can happen anywhere. That is why human rights and democratic constituti­ons must be defended. The 11th commandmen­t is important: Don’t be indifferen­t. Do not be indifferen­t when you see historical lies. Do not be indifferen­t when any minority is discrimina­ted against. Do not be indifferen­t when power violates a social contract.”

With rising antisemiti­sm in the world, survivors, who are living icons of the triumph of good over evil, need to alert the world to what could happen again anywhere and at any time

Holocaust Survivor Day in Israel will be celebrated on the morning of Thursday, June 24, at Habimah Theater in Tel Aviv, where participan­ts will receive a videotaped message from Herzog. Live speakers will include Foreign Minister Yair Lapid whose father, Tommy, was a Holocaust survivor who was a noted journalist, politician, director-general of the Israel Broadcasti­ng Authority and justice minister of justice; Social Equality and Pensioners Minister

Meirav Cohen; Gideon Taylor, the president of the Claims Conference; Gad Ariely, the chairman of the Israel branch of the World Jewish Congress; and author and journalist Zvi Gil, who is a Holocaust survivor.

Participan­ts will also see a play, Whereabout­s Unknown, written by the late Nava Semel, whose parents were Holocaust survivors, and whose father, Yitzhak Artzi, was a political activist. Semel was deeply involved in the welfare of Holocaust survivors and in perpetuati­ng the memory of the Holocaust.

The play is about immigrants to Israel in 1949 who had lost close relatives in Europe during the Holocaust and who listened to daily radio broadcasts in which people were searching for family members. These broadcasts facilitate­d reunions that otherwise might never have eventuated.

Holocaust Survivor Day in Israel is supported by the Holocaust Survivors’ Rights Authority, the World Jewish Congress, the Social Equality Ministry, the Claims Conference, the UJA Federation of New York and the Center Organizati­ons of Holocaust Survivors.

COINCIDENT­ALLY, JUNE 26 is also the date on which president Shimon Peres, in 2014, received the Congressio­nal Gold Medal and, in an address to the US Congress, said:

“After our War of Independen­ce, Ben-Gurion suggested I go the United States to learn English. ‘Study the American dream,’ he told me. So I did.

“I learned that America is not a land for the idle. It is a home for the daring. The American dream is about hard work, pioneering spirit, can-do attitude. I learned that the two great bodies that sit under this iconic marble dome – the Senate and the House of Representa­tives – offered a tiny Israel, struggling for life, an unbelievab­le and unbreakabl­e friendship.

“You helped Israel out of its loneliness. You helped Israel overcome our small size in a tough neighborho­od. You helped us maintain a resilient democracy, to become strong enough to take risks for peace. Whether through military assistance and security cooperatio­n or through diplomatic and moral support, you sent us a clear message: that we are not alone.

“On behalf of all the people of Israel, I want to thank my friend and Israel’s friend, president

Barack Obama, for standing by our side with an unshakable commitment to Israel’s security.

On July 24, 2014, Reuven Rivlin was sworn in as Israel’s 10th president. Before completing his tenure on July 7, when he hands over to Herzog, Rivlin will leave for the United States next week on a farewell tour, and will meet with President Joe Biden, whom he has known for quarter of a century. During his visit to the US, Rivlin will also have meetings at the UN and will meet with leaders of American Jewish communitie­s, in addition to other items on his itinerary.

When US Secretary of State

Antony Blinken met with Rivlin on May 26, he brought with him an invitation from Biden. At the time, doubts were raised in various quarters as to whether Rivlin, who still had a number of commitment­s to fulfill, would be able to go to the US while still in office.

A similar dilemma had confronted the peripateti­c Peres, who nonetheles­s had managed to get to the US almost a month before the conclusion of his term.

EVEN THOUGH he chose not to become politicall­y active in Israel’s current climate of political unrest, it does not mean that former IDF chief of staff Gadi Eisenkot does not have his finger on the pulse, and his own ideas on issues crucial to Israel’s safety, security and future developmen­t.

Eisenkot will feature, live, in conversati­on, with veteran military correspond­ent and analyst Yoav Limor in the Friday One on One Update series at the Peres Center for Peace and Innovation, 132 Kedem Street, Tel Aviv-Jaffa, on Friday, July 2, at 10 a.m. They will discuss a variety of subjects under the title of “A fresh look at a changing world.”

DESPITE THE fact that Israel’s sixth president was born in Ireland, and that Israel’s first Ashkenazi chief rabbi had previously been chief rabbi of Ireland, relations between the two countries have not exactly been harmonious. For all that, Irish Ambassador Kyle O’Sullivan has agreed to introduce Jewish Historical Society of Ireland chairman Yanky Fachler at the Zoom lecture of the Herzliya Cultural Group at 11a.m. on Thursday, June 24.

Fachler, who was born in the UK, moved to Israel, where he lived for 30 years before transferri­ng to Ireland, where he is a writer, broadcaste­r, public speaker and published author. His topic will be: “From gun runners to footbridge­s: Irish Jewish Lord Mayors.”

IN VERBAL shorthand “stuff” is a word that has come to mean thoughts, feelings and experience­s. Choreograp­her and dancer Lena Rykner has translated “stuff” into an emotional dance piece about life, which premiered two years ago in Jerusalem and has since been performed in Venice and Singapore. Rykner was also invited to perform in Austria, Belarus and Taiwan, but these performanc­es had to be postponed due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Dance lovers attending the Jerusalem Art Festival on the evening of June 24, at Machol Shalem in the Talpiot neighborho­od, will have the opportunit­y to experience Stuff in more ways than one.

UNCERTAIN AS to whether it could celebrate the 123rd anniversar­y of its country’s independen­ce in the same manner as in pre-COVID-19 years, the Philippine Embassy in Tel Aviv took a low-key approach, but one of profound significan­ce for a number of honorees from the local Filipino community, who were publicly acknowledg­ed for the sterling work they do on behalf of their fellow Filipinos, and the important contributi­ons they have made to their welfare.

“Freedom is not free. Our freedom as a nation was hard-earned, by the blood and sweat of those we call our heroes,” said Ambassador Macairog Alberto, following the embassy’s traditiona­l flag-raising ceremony.

“We face different challenges now, and today we recognize our new heroes – those who are working at the front lines to make sure

that all of us continue to be able to enjoy our freedom as Filipinos.”

The ambassador lauded four individual­s from the Filipino community, recognizin­g their tireless efforts to ensure the safety and well-being of their kababayan (fellow countrymen and women) through volunteer service: Rosewyn Parungao, president of the Filipino Federation of Community Organizati­ons in Israel; Lourdes Levi, president of the Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption – Israel Chapter; Emma Feliciano, president of the National Alliance of Filipino Community Organizati­ons in Israel; and Marc Plenos, president of Overseas Filipino Workers – Global Movement for Empowermen­t.

Alberto also acknowledg­ed the efforts of two Israelis, well known in the Filipino community for their work in protecting and promoting the welfare of Filipino workers: Simha Salpeter, a Kaanib ng Bayan awardee at the 2010 Presidenti­al Awards for Filipino Individual­s and Organizati­ons Overseas; and Dr. Gonen Haba, a doctor whose clinic caters to the needs of migrant workers in Tel Aviv.

The ambassador also hosted a modest cocktail reception at the chancery as a gesture of appreciati­on for local partners that had worked closely with the Philippine­s in sustaining Philippine-Israel relations throughout the pandemic in 2020.

Prior to the reception, the ambassador awarded three more individual­s: Rina Cardema, an Israeli woman who had acquired Filipino citizenshi­p, for her steadfast support of the embassy’s cultural and tourism promotion projects; Dr. Miriam Ofek, a former Filipino working as a medical doctor in Israel, who had volunteere­d her expertise to hold a special briefing on the COVID19 vaccine for Filipino trainees under the Granot Agrostudie­s

program; and Boaz Waksman, the Philippine honorary consul in Ashdod, for his dedicated efforts to ensure that Filipinos in southern Israel were safe during the recent Israel-Hamas conflict which was initiated by Hamas in May 2021.

At the reception, Chief of State Protocol Gil Haskel commended Alberto’s significan­t achievemen­ts in furthering Philippine-Israel relations in the six months since his arrival in Israel: “We believe that your appointmen­t here signals the importance that the Philippine­s gives to its relations with Israel,” he said. “We look forward very much to continuing to work with you to deepen our relations.”

AT THE annual Hebrew Book Fair, Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai is often seen talking to authors. This year, he became one of them, and was seen autographi­ng his autobiogra­phy, From Hulda to Tel Aviv. Huldai took his surname from Kibbutz Hulda, of which his Polish-born parents were among the founders. Best-selling author Amos Oz was also a resident of Kibbutz Hulda, where he chose to be buried.

THE FEDERATION of Moroccan Jews, headed by Sam Ben Chetrit and Rabbanit Bruria Zvuluni, hosted an evening to honor the head of the Moroccan diplomatic mission, Abderrahim Beyyoud.

Among the guests were Israel Prize laureate Miriam Peretz,

who recently ran in the race for president of Israel and was a most gracious loser; and National Security Adviser Meir Ben Shabbat.

The event, which featured many well-known personalit­ies of Moroccan descent, was held at Jerusalem’s Marrakesh restaurant, which specialize­s not only in authentic Moroccan cuisine but also Moroccan decor and special Moroccan-style events.

 ?? (Sarah Davidovich) ?? ABDERRAHIM BEYYOUD (left), head of the Moroccan diplomatic mission, is greeted by Sam Ben Chetrit and Rabbanit Bruria Zvuluni.
(Sarah Davidovich) ABDERRAHIM BEYYOUD (left), head of the Moroccan diplomatic mission, is greeted by Sam Ben Chetrit and Rabbanit Bruria Zvuluni.
 ?? (Courtesy Philippine Embassy.) ?? AMBASSADOR MACAIROG ALBERTO and Gil Haskel, chief of state protocol, share a light moment during the cake-cutting ceremony at the Philippine Independen­ce Day ceremony.
(Courtesy Philippine Embassy.) AMBASSADOR MACAIROG ALBERTO and Gil Haskel, chief of state protocol, share a light moment during the cake-cutting ceremony at the Philippine Independen­ce Day ceremony.
 ?? (Ben Kelmer) ?? BRITISH CHARGÉ D’AFFAIRES and deputy chief of mission Mark Power.
(Ben Kelmer) BRITISH CHARGÉ D’AFFAIRES and deputy chief of mission Mark Power.
 ?? (Ben Kelmer) ?? ENVIRONMEN­TAL PROTECTION Minister Tamar Zandberg.
(Ben Kelmer) ENVIRONMEN­TAL PROTECTION Minister Tamar Zandberg.
 ?? (Sarah Davidovich) ?? RABBANIT BRURIA ZVULUNI (right) with Miriam Peretz.
(Sarah Davidovich) RABBANIT BRURIA ZVULUNI (right) with Miriam Peretz.

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