The Jerusalem Post

Herzog revives President’s Medal of Distinctio­n award

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

In his various positions Shimon Peres received numerous decoration­s from foreign government­s. As president, he reached the conclusion that Israel should have something in the nature of America’s Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom or France’s Legion of Honor, both of which were among the high civilian awards conferred on him. So, he came up with the idea of the President’s Medal of Distinctio­n to be awarded to individual­s or organizati­ons who have made an outstandin­g contributi­on to Israel or to humanity, through their talents, services, or in any other form.

The medal, designed by Yossi Matityahu, was awarded for the first time on March 1, 2012. It was awarded again in 2013 and 2014. When Reuven Rivlin became president, he declined to continue with the award, even though Peres had never attached his name to it, but had establishe­d it as a means of recognizin­g the outstandin­g good that people do. It was never intended just for Israelis or for Jews alone, but for people of any nationalit­y or any faith. Among the non-Israeli recipients were Henry Kissinger, Zubin Mehta, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Elie Wiesel, Giorgio Napolitano and Angela Merkel.

In Wiesel’s case, he was too ill to travel to Israel, so Peres stopped off in New York on his way to pay a state visit to Mexico in November, 2013. Wiesel, an Auschwitz survivor and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, received Israel’s highest civilian award for his unique contributi­on to the memorial of the Holocaust, and in light of his uncompromi­sing drive for peace and tolerance. What was overlooked in the citation was that Wiesel, through his book The Jews of Silence, published in 1966 and documentin­g Wiesel’s experience in the Soviet Union during the High Holy Days in September, 1965, made the world aware of the plight of Soviet Jewry.

When receiving the award, Wiesel remarked: “Even though I don’t live in Israel, Israel lives within me.”

All the people who have received the award to date, were undoubtedl­y deserving, but there are others who have not received it, who are not only equally deserving, but perhaps even more deserving in light of the diversity of their activities for the Jewish world and for Israel. One such person is World Jewish Congress President Ronald Lauder, who through his various past and present roles as chairman of the Internatio­nal Public Committee of the World Jewish Restitutio­n Organizati­on, treasurer of the World Jewish Congress, chairman of the Jewish Heritage Council, and numerous other titles, has contribute­d greatly to Jewish life in Israel and the diaspora, and to justice for Jews, particular­ly Holocaust survivors.

Moreover, he has undertaken diplomatic missions on behalf of Israel in countries with which Israel does not have diplomatic relations, and through his Lauder Foundation was instrument­al in reviving Jewish life in Eastern Europe, long before the fall of the Iron curtain. He has invested in Israel, thereby creating jobs, and he opened an employment bureau in Beersheba with the aim of finding jobs for graduates of Ben Gurion University as an incentive for them to stay in the south of the country and help to build up the Negev.

Lauder has many other credits, but there is no room to list them all.

Admittedly, as a billionair­e, Lauder can afford to do all these things, but there are other Jewish billionair­es and millionair­es who make large donations to hospitals, universiti­es and cultural centers in their places of domicile, but ignore Israel and the plethora of Jewish causes. Lauder gives not only of his money, but of himself, and it’s time that Israel accorded him the recognitio­n and appreciati­on due to him.

Of course there are other deserving individual­s such as Miriam Adelson, who together with her late husband Sheldon has contribute­d significan­tly to higher education in Israel, establishe­d a medical school and a medical clinic for treatment of drug abuse, and has contribute­d millions of dollars to Yad Vashem and Birthright.

As well, there are organizati­ons such as Friends of the IDF that raise millions of dollars each year to make life easier for young men and women who are doing their mandatory army service, United Hatzalah and ZAKA, which have done so much life saving and rescue work at home and abroad, and have helped to enhance Israel’s image in the world. There are many more deserving individual­s and organizati­ons, and President Herzog has appointed an advisory committee headed by retired Supreme Court Judge Dr. Yoram Danziger to examine all nomination­s and give him their final recommenda­tions.

■ IT’S SO pleasantly refreshing to read a tweet by Yair Netanyahu in which he doesn’t attack anyone, but passes on a piece of informatio­n generally known to Jews, but which may come as a shock to many Christians.

“This year Easter and Passover are celebrated on the same day. You might not know it, but the last supper was actually the celebratio­n of the Passover Seder by Jesus and his disciples (all of whom were Jewish). The supper took place in Mount Zion in Jerusalem, where the word Zionism comes from,” tweeted Netanyahu.

If, as Christians believe, there will be a second coming, Jesus will presumably return as a Conservati­ve or Reform Jew. If the Orthodox Rabbinate refuses to accept current Conservati­ve and Reform movements in Judaism, the mind boggles at what would happen in the event of a second coming. Incidental­ly, despite the negative attitude that the Chief Rabbinate has towards the Conservati­ve and Reform Movements, just before Passover, when Jews use rabbinic intermedia­ries to sell the leavened products belonging to Jews living in Israel to a non-Jew, the lists assembled by Conservati­ve and Reform Rabbis are sent to the Chief Rabbinate, which is responsibl­e for selling the leavened products in the land, and these lists are accepted. Hope burns eternal.

■ ANYONE WHO wonders why Poland was so quick in siding with Ukraine against Russia and so generous in accepting and providing for Ukrainian refugees, only has to look back in history.

On April 13, Poland observed Remembranc­e Day for the Victims of Katyń Massacre of 1940, when 22,000 Polish officers and members of the intelligen­tsia were killed by the Soviet NKVD. To commemorat­e the victims, Agata Czaplińska, the chargé d’affaires at the Polish Embassy in Israel and Colonel Andrzej Stanek, Defense Attaché laid flowers at the Katyń Massacre memorial plaque in the Martyrs’ Forest near Jerusalem.

Czaplińska subsequent­ly paid a visit to Yad Vashem where she visited the temporary exhibition Flashes of Memory, which she declared to be a must see. It was the second meaningful anniversar­y in less than a week.

On April 10, 2010, a plane carrying the Polish delegation to the 70th anniversar­y of the Katyń Massacre crashed near Smoleńsk in Russia.

All 96 passengers died in the crash, including President Lech Kaczyński and his wife Maria Kaczyńska.

As warm-hearted a reception which the Poles have given to Ukrainian refugees, they have been most unwelcomin­g where refugees from Muslim countries are concerned.

The Polish Embassy, and the Polish Cultural Institute in Tel Aviv, when publishing seasonal greetings on their websites and social media platforms wished people Chag Sameach and Happy Easter, but omitted Ramadan Kareem.

■ CHABAD has been so prominent in looking after and evacuating Ukrainian citizens, both Jews and non-Jews, and was busy preparing Seders for Ukraine’s remaining Jews. The Jewish Agency and other organizati­ons and movements also prepared large community Seders and Pesach food packages for the rest of the holidays.

In Poland, Chabad in Warsaw is hoping to raise $1 million to cover costs for the whole month of April. Rabbis Dov Ber and Mayer Stambler are the leading Chabad rabbis in Poland and accompanie­d the late President Kaczynski on his state visit to Israel in September 2006. They say that they are caring for 200 Ukrainian refugees daily, providing them with food, shelter and medical care. The late Lubavitche­r Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson placed a ban on Poland, saying it was the largest Jewish graveyard in the world.

When the Stamblers came to Jerusalem with Kaczynski, they were asked why they had defied the Rebbe’s instructio­ns. They explained that the Rebbe also had a rule, that where there are Jews, there should also be Chabad. Many Jewish business people were investing in Poland at the time, and Jewish life in Poland was beginning to flourish as people who had previously hidden their Jewish identities were gradually attending synagogue services, joining Jewish organizati­ons and sending their children to Jewish kindergart­ens and schools. Thus, in their view, there was a need for Chabad.

■ AS PROOF that Chabad is active wherever there are Jews, the main team joining Rabbi

Levi Duchman in preparing the mega community seders in Dubai and Abu Dhabi were Chabadniks. In other countries Chabad sometimes encroach on the territory of other Jewish religious movements, or as in Israel, on secular Jewish communitie­s, but in the United Arab Emirates, where Duchman appears to be the key mover and shaker in matters Jewish, there are no religious disputes, because he himself is a Chabadnik, who came to Israel to bake Shmura Matzah and to order large quantities for the UAE.

Altogether, more than a thousand people attended the Seders in the UAE, including diplomats, government officials, community members and tourists. The Seders were conducted in Hebrew, English, French and Russian. In addition, Duchman received video-taped greetings from Israel’s Chief Rabbis David Lau, and

Yitzhak Yosef.

By the way, Ukraine President Vlodymyr Zelensky returned to his Jewish roots and hosted a Seder, replete with all the traditiona­l trimmings – and the matzot were supplied by none other than a Chabad Rabbi. In a video recorded Friday night in his bunker, where Zelensky held a Seder together with his family, Zelensky said: “On this Sabbath, the Jewish community celebrates Pesach, the festival of freedom, the festival of life. To all those who are celebratin­g in Ukraine and around the world, I wish peace and victory. Happy Pesach. Long live Ukraine.”

Chabad rabbis and Jewish Agency personnel prepared communal seders throughout Ukraine and in all the neighborin­g countries that had taken in Ukrainian refugees.

■ MOST EMBASSIES, on their websites or social media platforms published season’s greetings, but Japanese ambassador Mizushima Koichi, who combined the Passover festival with the 70th anniversar­y celebratio­ns of diplomatic relations between Japan and Israel, really went to town getting every diplomat in the embassy to sing one verse of one of the songs sung at the Passover Seder: Ehad mi yodea? (Who knows one?). The song goes all the way to 13 and each diplomat was separately videotaped, singing in Hebrew. It’s still online and thoroughly enjoyable.

■ THE NORDIC and Baltic embassies are joining forces next week to hold a charity event in support of Ukraine at the residence of the Finnish Ambassador Kirsikka Lehto-Asikainen. Finnish ambassador­s seem to have a particular fondness for music, both classical and jazz. This time, the music will be provided by a jazz group.

■ FOR THE second time in less than a year, Transporta­tion and Road Safety Minister Merav Michaeli was in the US. The first time around, she and her significan­t other Lior Schleien went to take delivery of their son Uri, who was born to a surrogate mother.

Prior to Passover, Michaeli was on a working visit, and amongst other events, was the keynote speaker at the gala dinner marking the 10th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of the Younes and Soraya Nazarian Center for Jewish Studies at UCLA.

She also met with AIPAC President-elect Michael Tuchin, with the Los Angeles Chapter of WIZO and with representa­tives of other Jewish organizati­ons.

At various meetings throughout her visit, she spoke about the importance of Israel-US relations, and relations between Israel and the American Jewish community. She also spoke about Israel’s national security issues, including the Iranian nuclear program, the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict and Israel’s relations with neighborin­g states in the Middle East. Michaeli also spoke of her vision as a leader of the Labor Party, and emphasized that no effort will be spared in ensuring the integrity of the present government.

Aside from her meetings with Jewish community leaders and organizati­ons, Michaeli also met with municipal transport authoritie­s in Los Angeles and San Francisco, and with representa­tives of companies working on autonomous road and aerial vehicles.

Next week, Michaeli is scheduled to address the Foreign Press Associatio­n in Israel, and in light of recent and current political upheavals, will be plied with many questions.

■ APROPOS POLITICAL upheavals and provocatio­ns, KAN 11 reporter Suleiman Maswadeh, who covers Jerusalem affairs for KAN 11, has become a radio and television star. A quick learner, Maswadeh who is a native of the Muslim Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem, has reported on events in Mea Shearim, political demonstrat­ions in the capital, Arab party politics, crime and much more.

A good reporter under any circumstan­ces, Maswadeh was propelled into the limelight by the simultaneo­us discovery of the murderer in 2019 of Yehuda and Tamar Kaduri and Moldovan Foreign worker Ivan Tarnowski in 2022; as well as riots on the Temple Mount and at Nablus Gate. The upshot was that for several days he broadcast on almost every news and current affairs program on Reshet Bet and Kan 11, to the extent that he was broadcasti­ng from early morning till late at night.

Sometimes it is the reporter who turns a drab story into news, and sometimes the news is such that it turns the reporter into a star. Maswadeh had previously exhibited star qualities , but events this month took him to the pinnacle. What is truly remarkable is his objectivit­y when reporting on violence and provocatio­n regardless of whether it is by Palestinia­ns or Jewish extremists. That’s true journalist­ic profession­alism.

■ AT THE peak of the pandemic, doomsayers were predicting that because so many people from all strata of society had lost income through lockdowns, philanthro­py would go down the drain. There’s an old song the refrain of which is “the rich get rich and the poor get poorer.” As painful as this may be for the poor, and the middle class who have been reduced to poor, it still holds true for the very rich other than Russian oligarchs, who collective­ly have had billions of dollars of assets seized or frozen by various government­s in whose countries they had luxury homes, planes, yachts and/or investment­s.

Not enough is publicized about what is happening to those assets. Are they still operating? Have they been frozen? Will they be returned after the war is over? Will the oligarchs have any legal recourse for the possible losses incurred as a result of the seizures?

It should be remembered that in most cases, particular­ly that of Roman Abramovich, the oligarchs were exceedingl­y generous in their philanthro­py giving to both Jewish and non-Jewish causes and projects in Israel and elsewhere which are now missing out.

But not all is lost. Happily, there are other big-time philanthro­pists in the world, and last week some of them came together in Herzliya Pituach at the home of businessma­n Efi Hershkovit­z, together with well-known entertaine­rs, such as Rita, who has been chosen to light one of the Independen­ce Day beacons, Tali Moreno and Eyal Kitzis, to celebrate the 20th anniversar­y of the OR Movement, a non-profit organizati­on that is involved in developing the Negev and the Galilee in Arab and Jewish areas.

In the Negev it is working in places such as Rahat, Ofakim, and Dimona. Among those attending the festivitie­s were Batsheva Moshe from WIX Software, Philanthro­pist Gloria Kaylie, President of New York headquarte­red Continenta­l Ventures Jane Gol and Ishaia Gol, businessma­n Lonnie Hercikovic­h, Harel Locker of Israel Aerospace Industries, former MK Daniel Ben Simon, businesswo­man and social entreprene­ur Galia Albin, Orna Pesach from Impact, entreprene­ur Ilan Cohen, and many other representa­tives of the business world and philanthro­pic foundation­s.

During the evening internatio­nally known economist Prof. Nouriel Rubini from NYU, who is also Chairman of RGE Monitor, fascinated other guests with his evaluation of the continuing geopolitic­al crisis and Israel’s sensitive place globally. Another source of fascinatio­n was futurist Prof. David Pasig, who recommende­d investing in Negev real estate before it will be too late.

OR Movement founder and CEO Roni Flamer said: “After hearing two experts, I can modestly say that they are right and this is our opportunit­y to invest in Israel’s future, and develop the Negev and the Galilee”.

■ FOR THE first time in its three-decade history, the Internatio­nal March of the Living will include the participat­ion of an official delegation of the UAE to be led by H.E. Ahmed Obaid Al Mansoori, together with entreprene­ur and philanthro­pist Eitan Neishlos, the newly appointed Founder and Ambassador of Internatio­nal March of the Living in the Gulf states.

Together, they will light a memorial at the official ceremony in Auschwitz-Birkenau, as they join Holocaust survivors and other delegation­s on April 28.

Ahmed Obaid Al Mansoori is founder of the first Holocaust Memorial Gallery in the Arabic and Islamic world, as well as founder of the Crossroads of Civilizati­ons Museum. In addition, he is a former Member of the Federal National Council.

Eitan Neishlos, a third-generation descendant of a Holocaust survivor, the late Tamar Zisserman, has joined March of the Living as a strategic partner to lead a journey of remembranc­e and responsibi­lity among members of the third generation. His commitment to this organizati­on led to the creation of this important new relationsh­ip with the UAE.

The 32km March from Auschwitz 1 to Auschwitz-Birkenau will conclude with the traditiona­l ceremony held on the remains of the Auschwitz-Birkenau crematoria and will include former Israeli Chief Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau, Mayor of Jerusalem Moshe Lion, and Holocaust survivors and delegates from 25 countries. Torches of Remembranc­e will be lit in memory of the six million Jewish women, children and men who were murdered by the Nazis and their collaborat­ors.

Speaking ahead of the March, Al Mansoori noted: “The lessons of the past and the dangers of hatred and prejudice must be learned across the world for the sake of humanity. The new realities in the Middle East that have greatly contribute­d to the warm friendship­s between Jews and Muslims, offers an historic opportunit­y for the children of Abraham to stand together in remembranc­e of the victims of the Holocaust, and serve as a sign of cooperatio­n and partnershi­p for the future in our region and further.”

“The opportunit­y to establish the March of the Living’s presence in the UAE and the Gulf is not only a privilege, it is also an opportunit­y to reach more people in our region to learn about and understand the horrors of the Holocaust, and take forward a message of reconcilia­tion and peace for the future,” commented Neishlos.

Phyllis Greenberg Heideman, president of March of the Living added, “After the Abraham Accords, we have the opportunit­y and the obligation to educate more people about the Holocaust and the lessons to be learned from that time in history.”

■ BUSY BLOGGER and retired journalist Macabee Dean, who for many years was a Jerusalem Post reporter working out of the Tel Aviv office, celebrated his 99th birthday on Tuesday. Dean’s brain and wry sense of humor remain intact, and he’s quite active on social media.

Another nonagenari­an born in April is noted historian Prof. Yehuda Bauer, who is one of Israel’s foremost experts on the Holocaust and the history of antisemiti­sm. Bauer, who celebrated his 96th birthday on April 6, has also retained a sharp brain and an eloquent tongue. He is scheduled to be the keynote speaker next week at an event co-hosted by the Israel branch of the World Jewish Congress and Israel Council on Foreign Relations.

Bauer has never been hampered by the need to be politicall­y correct. He has no hesitation in calling a spade a spade, but he does it with so much wit and charm, that he is invariably forgiven.

 ?? (Moshe Shukron) ?? (FROM RIGHT) Ofir Fischer, one of the founders of the Or movement, Orna Pesach from Impact, businesswo­man Galia Albin, philanthro­pist Gloria Kaylie, and CEO of the Or movement, Roni Flamer.
(Moshe Shukron) (FROM RIGHT) Ofir Fischer, one of the founders of the Or movement, Orna Pesach from Impact, businesswo­man Galia Albin, philanthro­pist Gloria Kaylie, and CEO of the Or movement, Roni Flamer.
 ?? (Courtesy Jewish UAE) ?? UAE RABBI Levi Duchman (2nd from right front row) with his Chabad team.
(Courtesy Jewish UAE) UAE RABBI Levi Duchman (2nd from right front row) with his Chabad team.
 ?? (Mark Neiman/GPO) ?? SHIMON PERES presenting the President’s Medal of Distinctio­n to Elie Wiesel.
(Mark Neiman/GPO) SHIMON PERES presenting the President’s Medal of Distinctio­n to Elie Wiesel.

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