The Jewish Chronicle

Fauda star urges Anglo-Jewry to ‘stay strong’

- DANIEL BEN-DAVID

FAUDA STAR Yaakov Zada Daniel has said Israel needs UK Jewry to be strong and unafraid.

Addressing upwards of 260 people at the Jewish Child’s Day dinner in central London this week, Daniel said: “We [in Israel] need you to be strong and proud of being Jewish here in the UK, not afraid of anyone. We need you strong and [unafraid] of anything.

“It’s a very hard situation [for Jews] now, and fortunatel­y or unfortunat­ely, that’s what we are. Israel is the country of the Jewish people, and without this connection between us [of being Jews], you are here, and we are there. But we are one people, and we are united and [intertwine­d].

“We have one country, this is the Jewish land, and without your support and without your strength, Israel could not be. Am Yisrael chai.”

Daniel was in conversati­on with journalist Shirit Gal Kedar at the Rebuilding Young Lives event, the charity’s first in-person fundraisin­g dinner since 2019.

He is an alumnus and ambassador of the SOS Children’s Village Neradim, one of the 130 projects supported annually by JCD, where he grew up from the age of three.

Daniel said: “It is a great privilege for me to be a child who came [from Neradim] and to now be standing on stage in London, talking with you, your eyes [and attention] on me while I talk about myself, starring in a successful show. You can’t take anything for granted. [It is] because of Neradim I became the person I am today; all my values, confidence, everything.

“So, think what you can do. When you support a child [through JCD] like me, and maybe, one day, he will come and be on this stage [too]. These children are our future. These children are the future of Israel, and we need to give them all the push they need to one day be ambassador­s in Israel and to Israel.”

Speaking to the JC, Daniel said Fauda writers had begun working on the script for season five, but it had to be scrapped following October 7.

He said: “Everyone and everything was affected by that day. You cannot move, you cannot have a thought, you cannot [interact] without it being [at the forefront of your] mind. The trauma was [unpreceden­ted] in Israel.” He said “each person in Israel knows someone who was either killed or hurt” on October 7, including one of the children from Neradim, Sigal Etach, who was murdered at the Nova music festival.

Daniel was eager to talk fondly about his “house parent” at Neradim, English teacher and role model David Dattner, whom Daniel referred to as an “angel”.

Originally from London, Dattner was a pilot in the Second World War and later went to Israel to work with children. He died in 2012 and was buried near the village.

These days, Daniel supports Neradim in any way he can through fundraisin­g efforts or by taking the initiative to arrange large bar mitzvahs and bat mitzvahs for the village’s children.

Jewish Child’s Day, one of the UK’s leading grant-giving Jewish charities, has supported more than 1.5 million children in need since the charity’s establishm­ent 76 years ago.

Since the October 7 massacre, the charity has been ensuring displaced families in Israel that have children with special needs are supported with accommodat­ion and food. It has also been providing paediatric beds for babies and small children with disabiliti­es so they can be transporte­d easily and quickly to a safe space, and assisted deaf and hard-of-hearing children with emotional support.

The Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis acknowledg­ed “the significan­t contributi­on Jewish Child’s Day has made and continues to make. British Jewry can be exceptiona­lly proud of what JCD has achieved.” The evening raised approximat­ely £275,000.

A child you support might, one day, be on this stage like me

 ?? PHOTO: GRAINGE PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Powerful message: Yaakov Zada Daniel being interviewe­d by journalist Shirit Gal Kedar at the Jewish Child’s Day annual dinner
PHOTO: GRAINGE PHOTOGRAPH­Y Powerful message: Yaakov Zada Daniel being interviewe­d by journalist Shirit Gal Kedar at the Jewish Child’s Day annual dinner

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom