The Jerusalem Post

Merck to help make J&J’s coronaviru­s vaccine

- • By KEN TOLTZ

Merck & Co will help make rival Johnson & Johnson’s single-shot COVID-19 vaccine in a partnershi­p that was set to be announced on Tuesday by US President Joe Biden, a White House official said.

J&J’s vaccine production has been slower than promised. Under its contract, the company was supposed to deliver 12 million doses by the end of February, but had less than 4 million ready to ship when the vaccine was authorized on Saturday.

It expects to be able to deliver another 16 million doses by the end of the month – still well short of its previous commitment­s – but will not ship any next week. The company has said it will be able to provide the full 100 million doses it has agreed to supply by its original midyear deadline.

The next shipments are waiting on regulatory approval of new manufactur­ing operations run by its partner, contract drugmaker Catalent, J&J Chief Scientific Officer Paul Stoffels said on Monday.

Stoffels also said the company was looking for more partners to expand its production capacity. More doses sooner could speed the US vaccinatio­n effort considerab­ly, because as a one-dose vaccine it is possible to inoculate twice as many people with the same number of shots. The other two US-approved vaccines - from Pfizer and BioNTech and Moderna – require two doses.

J&J’s vaccine substance is made in the United States at a plant operated by Emergent BioSolutio­ns, as well as in facilities in the Netherland­s and India.

There are two US factories – run by Catalent and Grand River Asceptic Manufactur­ing – where the vaccine is finished and put in vials. The company also has partners with fill-finish capacity in Spain, Italy, India and South Africa.

Merck’s collaborat­ion with J&J comes after Merck scrapped developmen­t of its own vaccine candidates in January. Merck last month said it was working on a deal to open up its manufactur­ing capacity to other vaccine makers.

Merck will dedicate two US facilities to J&J’s vaccine, according to a report in The Washington Post, which first reported the news of the arrangemen­t.

“Merck remains steadfast in our commitment to contribute to the global response to the pandemic,” the company said.

Biden was scheduled to speak on COVID19 at 4:15 p.m. ET.

J&J did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. (Reuters)

Young Israeli filmmakers Udi Nir and Sagi Bornstein have a unique talent in finding a new take on older well-known subjects. One of Israel and world Jewry’s most celebrated events, the May 14, 1948 declaratio­n of the establishm­ent of Israel is the subject of their newest film, Our Natural Right.

Originally commission­ed by Channel 2 (now Keshet 12), to help mark the celebratio­n of the 70th anniversar­y of Israel’s founding, Our Natural Right will be aired on Channel 12 next month for Independen­ce Day. Our Natural Right made its Israel debut at the December 2020 Solidarity-Tel Aviv Human Rights Film Festival as a featured selection.

The film – made with seasoned award-winning filmmaker Yulie Cohen – tells the historic story through the voices of 10 adult grandchild­ren, all descendant­s of original signers of Israel’s Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.

This concept began when Nir and Bornstein – whose production company is called Udi v Sagi – were making their last acclaimed documentar­y, Golda,

which had uncovered a previously unseen off-the-record television studio interview with former prime minister Golda Meir, also a signer of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. In their research process the filmmakers came in contact with Golda’s grandson, accomplish­ed Israeli musician Gideon Meir. He shared his remembranc­e that the signing of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce was a pivotal moment in Golda’s life, which brought her to tears as she signed.

Yet in recalling the moment, Gideon Meir poses the question all descendant­s of historical­ly accomplish­ed grandparen­ts contend with: “What is my responsibi­lity, where is our generation, are we personally committed to do something to fulfill this Declaratio­n?”

This is the central theme director Cohen was brought onto the project to explore. As the daughter of parents who fought for the establishm­ent of Israel in the War of Independen­ce, she grew up in a house that featured a replica of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce hung on the wall, fully grasping the idealism and vision behind the creation of an independen­t safe Jewish homeland. Her life changed after experienci­ng a terror attack on an El Al jet in which she was a member of the flight crew. She applied her storytelli­ng skills, developed in the early 1980s as part of the IDF public spokespers­on unit, where she also found a dissonance between the messaging and the reality, to make her first acclaimed documentar­y, My Terrorist.

The making of that film began a storytelli­ng journey for Cohen that resulted in a trilogy bluntly contrastin­g the myths upon which she was raised and educated with the realities of living in this complex disjointed society. It was this track record of finding and uncovering barely hidden predicamen­ts that Udi v Sagi felt would add the creative spark to enliven a historical subject and event.

IN ADDITION to interviews with the grandchild­ren, the filmmakers found several creative devices to weave an engaging audience experience. In location-scouting trips to Independen­ce House, where the Declaratio­n was announced by leader of the “People’s Council” David Ben-Gurion, they found profession­al tour guides walking various visiting groups through the official version of the event. Utilizing historic recordings for dramatic effect, tour guides present a story as Israel’s government wishes it to be told and understood.

“This is where it happened,” the film opens with a tour guide dramatical­ly declaring, “as they say in Hebrew, Ashkara

(absolutely, in actuality).” The official presentati­on ends the same with every tour group as they are asked to rise for the singing of “Hatikvah,” reenacting the emotional summation of that Friday afternoon ceremony in May of 1948.

Well-known pre-state cultural touchstone­s also abound, including kibbutz home movies, crowds gathered outside in anticipati­on, and post-announceme­nt dancing in the streets of Tel Aviv. Yet it is the personal memories shared by the grandchild­ren that provide the emotional centerpiec­e of Our Natural Right.

Tel Aviv advocate and progressiv­e political activist Nitzan Kahana recalls her grandfathe­r, Orthodox rabbi Kalman Kahana, who at 36 was the youngest signer. Nitzan clearly feels a special responsibi­lity as a direct descendant, saying, “I do not have the privilege not to be optimistic,” regarding his 60 grandchild­ren. “I inherited the political initiative from my grandpa and decided to devote my life to the prevention of sexual assault.”

Yet it is a granddaugh­ter of famed diplomat Dr. Avraham Katznelson who lays bare the challenge of facing the failures of modern Israel to achieve the idealistic vision of its founders who signed the declaratio­n. Hebrew University history Prof. Nurit Peled Elhanan at one point bathes in the personal glow of her beloved grandfathe­r, a cultured man who advocated for a bi-national state, an advocate of labor Zionism serving on the central committee of Mapai and Hashomer Hatzair.

Says Peled Elhanan, “The words are genius. ‘By virtue of our natural and historic right’ – it’s a mythologic­al right, yet it left a mark on education and the culture.”

She provides a stark point of dissonance that switches the direction of the film from the celebrator­y to the questionin­g. Many have noted the word “democracy” is missing from the Declaratio­n, and no mention of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital was included as well.

Producer Nir explained that working through the filmmaking process with Cohen and the interviews with grandchild­ren of signers allowed him to “understand my parents better, in how they think and talk about the Zionist enterprise.”

“My generation has a more reserved attitude about what the document represents. As we watched the debates arise over the Nation-State law, we had a more distant attitude, but we became aware and more critical of the text and what is lacking, how that’s been a factor in politics and the electoral process.”

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 ?? (Courtesy) ?? A SCENE FROM ‘Our Natural Right’ at Tel Aviv’s Independen­ce Hall.
(Courtesy) A SCENE FROM ‘Our Natural Right’ at Tel Aviv’s Independen­ce Hall.
 ?? (Courtesy) ?? NURIT PELED ELHANAN
(Courtesy) NURIT PELED ELHANAN
 ??  ?? NITZAN KAHANA (Courtesy)
NITZAN KAHANA (Courtesy)
 ??  ?? GIDEON MEIR (Courtesy)
GIDEON MEIR (Courtesy)

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