The Jerusalem Post

En route to normalizat­ion

- Pini Avivi, Yuval Steinitz, Cem Utkan, Berat Albayrak. Mika Almog Bartal, Efrat Duvdevani. Rami Kleinstein, Walden Chemi, Eileen Ash, Yael Peres, Yona Rita, Sergio Mattarella Tsvia Yoni Isaac Herzog (Facebook) Rivlin, • By GREER FAY CASHMAN Harper Andrea

One of the first people to arrive at the Turkish National Day reception held at the exquisitel­y elegant Turkish residence in Kfar Shmaryahu last week was a retired diplomat, who served as Israel’s ambassador to Ankara from 2003 to 2007. He was one of many Israelis who were delighted to be back in the residence after a long absence.

Although a Turkish ambassador has yet to be appointed to Israel following a sixyear rift in diplomatic relations, invitation­s to the event were sent out by the Turkish Embassy, rather than by Turkish charge d’affaires who as Turkey’s most senior diplomatic representa­tive in Israel was host for the evening. That the invitation­s were sent out in the name of the embassy was considered by several other foreign diplomats present to be a sure sign that the freeze in diplomatic relations between Israel and Turkey had begun to thaw.

Mingling with the numerous diplomats were members of the Turkish Jewish community in Israel, and Utkan’s mother had specially come from Turkey for the occasion, to contribute to the festivitie­s with her gift for gracious networking. Utkan’s father is a retired ambassador.

Utkan and other embassy personnel stood in a receiving line greeting guests as they arrived, and the one they were happiest to see was Energy and Water Minister

who two weeks earlier had been in Istanbul to attend the 23rd World Energy Congress and to meet with his Turkish counterpar­t, Steinitz was the first Israeli government minister to visit Turkey in the last six years, and the first to enter the Turkish residence in the same time frame.

When Steinitz arrived at the residence last Thursday, Utkan lamented that it was raining and said that the weather had given embassy staff a heart attack all day, especially as the buffets had been set up on the expansive rolling lawns, and no marquee had been put up. For all that, Utkan was delighted to see such a turnout of members of the Israel’s Turkish Jewish community who had come to celebrate the 93rd anniversar­y of the proclamati­on of the Republic of Turkey, and noted that this was “the first time in a long while that we are having a minister at our national day.” Utkan said that Steinitz’s presence was “an ongoing show of support for the normalizat­ion process.”

Steinitz said that rain was a blessing, and that it should perhaps be considered as blessing the resumption of full diplomatic relations. He voiced the hope that after six years of tense relations, there would soon be a Turkish ambassador in Israel. He looks forward to a future relationsh­ip of peace, security and friendship.

When the anthems of both countries were sung, neither Utkan nor Steinitz was silent. Each joined in the robust singing of his country’s anthem. That both anthems were sung with equal enthusiasm by Israel’s Turkish Jewish community was indicative of how much they want to have a foot in each camp on an equal basis.

AFTER READING the “Driving over 90” Grapevine headline last Friday, a reader wrote that it “has rubbed my open wound!!” She has been trying for 3 months to have her license renewed.

She’s a few months shy of 90, but very with it and in full possession of all her faculties. She has been driving for close to two-thirds of her lifetime, and has a passion for volunteeri­sm – not necessaril­y close to home. She has never had an accident, she says – neither in Israel nor in the country of her birth.

Her previous license was valid for 2 years, and before then for 10 years. Prior to her 89th birthday in August, her doctor filled out the required form and submitted it. In reply, she was instructed to go to a neurologis­t, who had to test her in accordance with a page of questions, and the form had to be returned within 30 days. A fax or email was not acceptable. An original copy had to be delivered in Tel Aviv. The doctor in her health clinic could not give her an appointmen­t before next February, so she had no option other than to go private at the cost of NIS 1,000. The earliest appointmen­t she could get was for two days before the cutoff date, which is November 9, and there is no guarantee that the results of this test will be immediate.

Aside from the fact that she enjoys driving, the writer volunteers for several organizati­ons, and her volunteer activities include driving a blind person to various destinatio­ns. In addition, her grandchild­ren are scattered around the country, and when she visits them she drives. Her volunteer activities add quality to her life, she says, and give her a reason to get out of bed each morning.

But there still may be hope to get around the bureaucrat­ic hurdles. The British press reports that who celebrated her 105th birthday on Sunday and is said to be the oldest living Test cricketer, also drives a yellow small economy car, and attributes her longevity to healthy eating, two glasses of red wine a day and regular yoga sessions.

AS PAINFUL as the death of Shimon Peres was for his family, as expressed so eloquently last Friday at the memorial service and tombstone unveiling by his granddaugh­ters and it was no less painful for people who were part of his extended family.

The people who worked with him and for him simply adored him. They looked out for him, just as he looked out for them. It really wasn’t an employer/employee relationsh­ip. It was simply a matter of being family without the biological input, and Peres’s biological family understood this and accepted it.

One of the people closest to him was the petite, efficient and extremely elegant

who was deputy director of the President’s Office during Peres’s presidency and later deputy director at the Peres Center for Peace – in both cases being No. 2 to

Yet in a sense Bartal was No. 1. For more than 20 years she traveled the world and all over Israel with Peres and learned to relate to him with that kind of familiarit­y that exists only in families or among the closest of friends. He came to her family celebratio­ns, and she to his.

Through this relationsh­ip with Peres, she developed first-name relationsh­ips with world leaders, famous authors, entertaine­rs and athletes. She probably has better contact access than Bezeq to many such dignitarie­s and celebritie­s.

Another person who had a long and close relationsh­ip with Peres was the singer who first met him when she was going steady with composer, singer and musician

from whom she is now divorced. Kleinstein’s parents lived in the same apartment building as Sonya and Shimon Peres, and when Rita came to visit, she often saw Peres waiting for the elevator. Being the gentleman that he was, he always stood aside to let her enter before him, long before she achieved fame. In later years, he attended many of her performanc­es. For this and many other reasons, she, when addressing him or speaking about him, referred to him as “ish yakar” (dear man).

Rita, who was invited several times to sing at state dinners and luncheons at the President’s Residence while Peres was in office, was asked to sing at the memorial service last Friday and sang “Hachnisein­i Tahat Kenafech” (Bring me under your wing), whose lyrics were originally a poem by Haim Nahman Bialik. A verse from Bialik’s poem “After my death” is also engraved on the tombstone.

The Bialik connection was strong not only because Peres was a poet in his soul, wrote poetry and admired the poetry of others, but because his father, Yitzhak Perski, had studied in heder with Bialik when they were boys. On Sunday, Italian President

inaugurate­d a tradition when he visited Peres’s grave on Mount Herzl. Presumably, this will become a custom among visiting heads of state.

On Tuesday evening the Peres Center for Peace and Innovation hosted a study evening in memory of Peres, at which several academics discussed different aspects of kaddish, generally regarded as a memorial prayer, including whether women should recite it. Even though women are usually prohibited in Orthodox circles from reciting kaddish, it will be remembered that Peres left instructio­ns for his daughter

to join her brothers, and in reciting kaddish at his funeral. She did so again at the memorial service.

WHILE HE obviously could not be in two places at one time, and naturally opted to be at a 20th anniversar­y memorial regatta for his father, Israel’s sixth president, Chaim Herzog, at the Herzliya Marina last Friday, opposition leader did not forget to mention Peres in an address that he gave about his father. He recalled that in 1984 his father had given Peres the mandate to form a government. Herzog spoke nostalgica­lly about how much his father had enjoyed sailing, adding that he had frequently shared this pleasure with his family.

LAST WEEK while Canada’s governor-general was touring Jordan before his visit to Israel, which officially begins on Wednesday with a call on President

the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America announced that former Canadian prime minister

would receive its highest honor, the Emet Award, at CAMERA’s annual gala dinner on Sunday, April 30, 2017, at Chelsea Piers, New York City. Harper, who is known for his sterling support for Israel, will share his experience­s in confrontin­g antisemiti­sm at the United Nations and other forums. He will also talk about the importance of standing up for the State of Israel and Western civilizati­on.

CAMERA’s president and executive director, commented that “in the long history of the Jewish people, there are certain global leaders who are remembered for their courage in taking unpopular but principled stands on our behalf. Stephen Harper is one of those exceptiona­l leaders whose friendship in the 21st century won’t be forgotten.”

chairman of CAMERA’s board of directors, recalled that under Harper’s leadership as prime minister between 2006 and 2015, he pledged that “Canada will remain an unyielding defender of Jewish religious freedom, a forceful opponent of antisemiti­sm in all of its forms and a staunch supporter of a secure and democratic State of Israel.”

PHOTOGRAPH­S OF women are usually taboo in haredi publicatio­ns, but the Kikar Shabbat website features photograph­s of and Rabbanit

a female Jewish version of Elmer Gantry, who lectures all over Israel and in the US and takes groups of women to Uman, where she happens to be this week.

THE ONGOING saga of the alleged sexual assault by leading former Haaretz journalist

against Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles journalist is the old story of Venus and Mars. In other words men and women see things differentl­y and get different signals. The most obvious example of this is when women dress in a provocativ­e manner, which to men is suggestive of promiscuit­y, but which women say should not be construed as a come-on for men to exercise their sexual instincts, because even when she is stark naked, if a woman says no, she means no.

What Shavit did was not only improper but unprofessi­onal, and in the final analysis had a negative impact on his career and on future sales of his best-selling book. Even if he misunderst­ood Berrin’s reluctance to participat­e in his flirtation as merely playing coy, the fact of the matter was that she had come to interview him, and that should have been the basis of their relationsh­ip. It wasn’t a date. It was a business meeting.

Unlike some of his journalist­ic colleagues who were unable to control their libidos, Shavit at least had the sense to own up and to issue an apology of sorts, which was initially unacceptab­le to Berrin, who wanted him to admit that it was a sexual assault. Even though it has since been published that this allegedly was not the only incident of this kind, and that he now understand­s that what he did was wrong and has taken responsibi­lity for his actions, he may genuinely not have perceived his advances as such, and in his own mind may have believed that they were engaged in a flirtation, just as former president refuses to express remorse for committing rape, because he denies that he did so, and may truly believe this. When Berrin spoke to The Jerusalem Post’s

Berrin told her that she was disappoint­ed with the Israeli media’s focus on the perpetrato­r’s identity, which was distractin­g from the real issue at hand – namely, that women feel emboldened to talk about sexual assault after a tape of Republican presidenti­al candidate

bragging about grabbing women by their genitals surfaced. That unfortunat­ely is an Israeli characteri­stic. The real issue is less important than proving that the idol has feet of clay.

ONE OF the questions related to the public broadcasti­ng service, in the event that the Israel Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n is not annulled, and that Prime Minister

does not succeed in his proclaimed intention to rehabilita­te the Israel Broadcasti­ng Authority, is: What happens to the IBA’s extensive archives? Will they automatica­lly be transferre­d to the IBC? Commercial channels frequently borrow from the IBA archives, which in the case of television go back to even earlier than 1968. Radio and television broadcaste­r

refers to the archives every week in his Friday show on Channel 1 The Way it Was. Usually he has people who were once headline makers in the studio, reminiscen­ces with them and shows them clips of their heyday periods.

But last Friday, his “Shalom Mr. President” segment was all archive material with no studio interviews. It was great to see Israeli leaders who are no longer with us, such as David Ben-Gurion, Levi Eshkol, Yitzhak Rabin, Golda Meir, Menachem Begin,Yitzhak Shamir and Peres in meetings with US presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Reagan, and

Curiously, the Israeli who featured most in these clips at various stages of his life was Peres, whose tombstone was unveiled earlier on the same day. Also seen were deceased or aging television broadcaste­rs. What was particular­ly interestin­g was the warm and special relationsh­ip between Nixon and Meir, even though Nixon was known to be an antisemite. A follow-up on last Friday’s program will be screened this Friday at 6 p.m.

The IBA archives, which have been digitized, are a treasure trove of the history of contempora­ry Israel as well as places around the world whose newsworthy events were covered by IBA reporters. If the archives are transferre­d to the IBC, will this include a financial transactio­n, and if so will the money be paid to the Finance Ministry? Another question that arises is if Netanyahu succeeds in his ambition, will the building in Jerusalem purchased by the IBC as its chief operating center and presently in the final stages of constructi­on be automatica­lly transferre­d to the rehabilita­ted IBA? If it is rehabilita­ted, will it continue with foreign-language programs?

The IBA English News is scheduled to be terminated at the end of December. When the Engish-language news was previously under threat of closure, the Associatio­n of Americans and Canadians in Israel mounted a successful campaign to have it reinstated. Another campaign is currently under way, regardless of the outcome of the battle over the IBC and the IBA. Despite the fact that there are numerous English-language outlets for news about Israel and the region, including online video broadcasts, of which one is operated by the Post, many English-speakers, even in a social media era, want to receive news in English via their television sets.

Supporters of the AACI campaign argue that apart from English-speaking Israelis, the country is packed with tourists, pilgrims, students, overseas workers, diplomats, journalist­s and so forth, and warn that if they can’t get their news in English in Israel, they will turn to Jordan and get a different slant.

FORMER CHAIRMAN of the Jerusalem Journalist­s Associatio­n and senior editor and broadcaste­r on Israel Radio’s Reshet Bet laments that IBA journalist­s who have signed up with the IBC are torn between two worlds. They have to divide their time between the IBA and IBC, in addition to which they have to take on extra duties that were previously carried out by colleagues who decided to accept the incentives to leave of their own accord rather than wait for the ax to fall.

Among the people who are in the process of leaving are veteran radio broadcaste­r and editor and Channel 1 Foreign Affairs Editor It’s not certain whether Shahar is merely retiring or moving to another media outlet. Nahari, who has been with the IBA for 30 years, began his associatio­n as a security guard while still a student at the Hebrew University. He is transferri­ng to Walla!News. Senior broadcaste­rs and

who together have worked for the IBA for more than a century, are both obviously past retirement age, but have signed contracts with the IBC, though both fought ferociousl­y against the closure of the IBA, and are still broadcasti­ng for the IBA. Golan, in his early morning news and current affairs program on Reshet Bet, consistent­ly brings up the issue of the IBA and the IBC. The curious thing is that even though it is in the process of liquidatio­n, the IBA keeps introducin­g programs and program formats on both radio and television.

Commercial television is also facing major changes, and Channel 2 is presumably closing down toward the end of 2017. Actor, comedian and program host who has a program on Channel 2, last week announced that he had signed up with IBC.

IT IS customary for departing presidents of the United States to leave a note for their successors on the desk of the Oval Office. The gracious note that left for has been mentioned in Bush’s writings as well as in Clinton’s.

Bush wrote afterward: “I don’t want it to be overly dramatic, but I did want him to know that I would be rooting for him.”

Clinton subsequent­ly left a note for George W. Bush, and referred to it in his autobiogra­phy, where he wrote: “I thought about the note to President Bush I would write and leave behind in the Oval Office, just as his father had done for me eight years earlier.

“I wanted to be gracious and encouragin­g, as George Bush had been to me. Soon George W. Bush would be president of all the people and I wished him well.”

There is no doubt about the nature of the note that will leave if Hillary Clinton succeeds him. But will he find it in his heart to be gracious if the next president of the United States turns out to be Trump?

IF YOU ask non-Jews who haven’t really mingled with Jews and haven’t engaged in any study about Jews and Judaism what they know about Jews, the most common answer of a non-antisemiti­c nature would probably be: “They don’t eat pork.” That most definitely falls into the category of the dietary laws, but it isn’t entirely true. There are loads of Jews – even in Israel, the Jewish homeland – who eat pork, shellfish and other forbidden delicacies. On the other hand, there are Jews who observe the dietary laws, but because of the location and nature of their work have found it increasing­ly difficult to do so.

One such place has been the United Nations, where, thanks to the determinat­ion of Ambassador kosher food is now available to all who want it. Following a month of deliberati­ons between the Israeli Mission and the United Nations Secretaria­t, UN headquarte­rs in New York this week began serving kosher food for the first time in its history.

Ever since he arrived at the UN, Danon has dedicated himself to promoting full equality for Jews in the UN. Examples include the designatio­n of Yom Kippur as an official UN day of rest and the first Passover Seder held in the organizati­on’s headquarte­rs. Although the UN had designated a kosher caterer for special occasions, the prices, spurred by a monopoly arrangemen­t, were far to high. Danon wanted competitio­n. He also wanted kosher food to be readily available at all times. Danon wrote to Secretary-General a month ago and requested that kosher food be served at UN cafeterias and restaurant­s. Until now, food honoring other dietary restrictio­ns such as halal and vegetarian were served, but culinary options were not available for diplomats and UN visitors who keep kosher.

“We continue to walk with our heads held high in the UN. Judaism should be respected at the UN, just like all faiths are,” said Danon. “For many Jews, keeping kosher is a basic tenant of their faith. All the citizens of the world should feel welcome at the UN, and its doors should be fully open to the keepers of the Jewish faith as well.”

 ??  ?? US PRESIDENT Barack Obama, Rita and Shimon Peres.
US PRESIDENT Barack Obama, Rita and Shimon Peres.
 ??  ?? YONA BARTAL (left) and Rita.
YONA BARTAL (left) and Rita.

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