Archives for 2011

Few had the courage

Yediot Ahronot

December 23, 2011

By Limor Simon

88-year-old Ilya Lieberman wanted the world to know that his wife Klavdia and her parents had risked their lives to save a Jewish mother and daughter during World War II. Ten years ago, he approached “Yad Vashem” to have them recognized as “Righteous Among the Nations”. Last week, Klavdia was honored posthumously at a ceremony in Ilya’s home in Bat Yam, featuring students from the Elon School in Holon. “The Righteous Among the Nations are disappearing, but I’ve come full circle. I did it for her,” says Ilya.

 

Ilya arrived at the ceremony for the “Righteous Among the Nations”, his eyes glimmering and his heart pounding with excitement. Wearing a jacket adorned with medals of honor, most of which he had earned as a serviceman in the Russian Navy, he marched down the esplanade leading to the “Elon” school in Holon. He smiled to the students, saying only “Todah”- the Hebrew for “thank you”, among the few words he knows in this foreign tongue. [Read more…]

ATZUM Launches “Jewish Tooth Fairy Fund” For Israeli Survivors of Terror

ATZUM has officially launched the ‘Jewish Tooth Fairy Fund,’ an initiative focused on providing a full range of dental services to Israeli survivors of terror attacks and their families who cannot afford the treatments and have no access to dental insurance.

In addition to actually funding the dental care of 10-15 survivors of terror per year – including routine dental treatments and endodontic, periodontic and prosthodontic services – the initiative also hopes to identify and recruit Israeli dentists and dental suppliers who would offer their services at a reduced fee to survivors of terror and their families.

“Due to the severity of their injuries, survivors of terror frequently suffer from acute dental issues that demand immediate and extensive treatment.  We have found that death or injury also leaves families unable to afford even the most routine dental care,” explained Rabbi Levi Lauer, Founding Executive Director of ATZUM.

“With the launch of this unique initiative, ATZUM will be able to provide these individuals with financial and practical assistance to obtain any necessary dental care services.” 

The ‘Jewish Tooth Fairy Fund’ is the brainchild of Rachel Rudman, Dara Freedman-Weiss and Dena Rapoport, graduate students who spent last year studying and volunteering in Israel.  Studying this year in New York, Massachusetts and Washington, D.C. respectively, the three have begun fundraising for the project with the goal of collecting $50,000 by the end of 2012.  ATZUM seeks additional donors to augment their efforts.

“Though my original objective was to simply meet with the students to discuss ATZUM’s projects and the issues we are facing with our clients, it quickly became so much more,” said Karyn London, the coordinator of ATZUM’s Roberta Project for Survivors of Terror.

“The students chose to become actively engaged in our projects, focusing on the dental needs of survivors of terror and making it their mission to find a solution to this problem.  It is very inspiring to see young graduate students take on a project like this and commit themselves to seeing it through to the end.”

Tribute To Newly-Identified ‘Righteous Gentile’ At Unique Student Ceremony

On Friday, December 9, ATZUM honored newly-identified “Righteous Among the Nations” Klavdia Likholetova, for her heroism and selflessness in saving Jewish lives during the Holocaust, at a special ceremony at the Eylon School in Holon.

Likholetova, who passed away in 2003 in Bat Yam, was represented by her husband, Iliya Leiberman, at the student-run ceremony arranged by ATZUM and the Eylon school staff.  Likholetova was recently recognized by Yad Vashem as a Righteous Among the Nations.  Leiberman accepted the certificate and medal on her behalf.

“It is vitally important that we honor the memory of each of these courageous rescuers, exceptional individuals who provided light in an era of unparalleled darkness and a moral compass to a lost generation,” said Rabbi Levi Lauer, Founding Executive Director of ATZUM. 

“We believe it is only fitting to celebrate Klavdia’s life with the children of Holon, the third generation of Jews she has a hand in saving and those she chose to make her neighbors later in life.”

In November 1941, Klavdia and her parents, Olga and Ivan, took in Maria Dawes, and her daughter Yekaterina, two Jews who were left homeless and penniless after a failed offensive by the Russian Red Army.  Though the Likholetova family home in the Ukrainian port city of Feodosiya was small and cramped, and they were in mortal danger for harboring Jews, they willingly hid and cared for Maria and Yekaterina for over two months.

Like more than 130 other rescuers, Klavdia chose to deepen her solidarity with the Jewish people following World War II and took up residence in Israel in 1998.  Her story remained a well-kept secret until recently. 

At the ceremony, opening remarks were made by Ronit Haimov, principal of the Eylon School; Miri Moshkowitz, the teacher who worked with ATZUM to organize the ceremony; and Yael Rosen, coordinator of ATZUM’s Righteous Among The Nations Project. The students then told the story of the Likholetova family, screened a presentation that they prepared with pictures of the family, read Haim Heffer’s poem on Righteous Among the Nations and sang a musical tribute to rescuers.

It was not clear until the last moment if Mr. Leiberman, who is in very poor health, would be able to attend the ceremony.  In the end, he not only attended but pooled his strength in order to stand and sing Hatikvah at the end of the ceremony with the students.  Following the ceremony, Russian speaking students approached Mr. Leiberman to thank him for coming and express how much Klavdia’s sacrifice meant to them.

Students Thank A Righteous Gentile Who Chose Israel as Home

Arutz 7

December 12, 2011

By Chana Ya’ar

Newly-identified, little-known “Righteous Among the Nations” Klavdia Likholetova was honored at a unique student ceremony last week by students who came to say “thank you” for the miracle of life, in the upcoming season of miracles.

Likholetova was recognized for her heroism and selflessness in saving Jewish lives during the Holocaust at a special ceremony held at the Eylon School in Holon on Friday — but it was her husband, Iliya Lieberman, who attended the ceremony arranged by the ATZUM organization, the students and schools staff.

Likewise, Lieberman had accepted the certificate and medal on behalf of his wife when Likholetova was recently recognized by the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial as a Righteous Among the Nations.

Likholetova herself had passed away in 2003 in Bat Yam, having made her home in the Land she had grown to love, had fled to herself after the end of World War II, together with the husband for whose people she had been willing to sacrifice her own life. [Read more…]

Ethiopian Israelis and the need for dialogue

Jerusalem Post

November 24, 2011

By Yael Rosen

Today, thousands of Ethiopian Israelis will celebrate Sigd, the annual holiday marking their ancestral desire to return to Zion over the generations.

The actual date of the holiday is the 29th of the Hebrew month of Heshvan, but because this year’s holiday falls on Shabbat, celebrations are pushed up to Thursday.

Many revelers will travel to the Armon Hanatziv neighborhood in Jerusalem for a festive reenactment of their annual ascent to a high hill in Ethiopia where they prayed for the end of their long, bitter exile and a swift return to the Promised Land.

In the late 1970s and 1980s, whole Jewish communities left their lives in Ethiopia behind and started walking toward Jerusalem. The journey was treacherous and many lost family members along the way. The dream of Zion clashed with the harsh realities of aliya, with numerous repercussions still being felt today.

As a commemoration of a traditional event from the “old country,” Sigd highlights the ever-growing chasm between the two generations of Israel’s Ethiopian Jews: those who made the journey from Ethiopia, and their children and grandchildren born into the Israeli reality. While the holiday still holds much importance for the elders, symbolizing their fulfilled dreams for the Land of Israel, much of the younger generation does not share those sentiments. [Read more…]

Holiday Support for Survivors of Terror

We at ATZUM understand that there are times – like the holidays – that are always more difficult times for Survivor of Terror families who regularly cope with grief, pain, trauma, sadness and anger.  It is our deepest wish to strengthen them during this period and to remind them that they are not alone.

Leading up to the New Year, we endeavored to speak personally to these families wishing them health and strength and a peaceful beginning of the year.

There are those families who in addition to the anguish and pain have a meager income which makes the holiday season even more challenging.  With the assistance of many friends and donors, ATZUM distributed food coupons for Rosh Hashana to these families enabling them to brighten their holiday table and bringing joy to their hearts.

Here’s to a year of peace and healing!

Yes, sex slavery exists here

Jerusalem Post Magazine
October 14, 2011

By Ruth Eglash

Within minutes of meeting Rabbi Levi Lauer, director and founder of the non-profit social rights organization ATZUM – an acronym for “work, justice and law” or “Justice Works” in English – it is easy to see how over the past decade his thought-provoking and deeply philosophical fast talk has contributed to improving the lives of countless individuals, often society’s most downtrodden.

“Jewish sovereignty means taking responsibility for the darkest places in your history and the most problematic places in your society, the most vulnerable citizens that live among you,” reflects the American-born Lauer, who made aliya more than 30 years ago, as he explains how he went from being a renowned Jewish scholar at some of the country’s most respected Jewish institutions – Pardes, WUJS and the Shalom Hartman Institute to name a few – to tackling a wide variety of under-acknowledged social problems, perhaps most fascinatingly the gritty horrors of Israel’s brutal sex slave industry.

“It seems to me that the Jewish world, particularly the traditionally observant community, has become abhorrently triumphant. It is so full of itself, so self-confident and sure in its newfound wealth, its newfound power and its newfound strength, that it has grown far less aware and responsive to the have-nots in the society in which it lives,” observes Lauer, who clearly embodies the tagline on his charity’s website: “ATZUM: Addressing Urgent Need in Israel, One Person at a Time.” [Read more…]

Taking on the taboo

Jerusalem Post
October 9, 2011

By Ruth Eglash

Human rights groups and the Knesset Subcommittee on Trafficking in Women are taking on Israel’s burgeoning sex service industry.

Committee chairwoman MK Orit Zuaretz is set to raise the stakes in the coming months battling prostitution with potential legislation that will make it illegal for a man to utilize the services of a prostitute.

“I am connected to this issue through my work as the chairperson of the committee and I have come to understand that the petrol that maintains trafficking in women is the demand for sexual services,” said Zuaretz, who recently returned from a two-week trip to the US to explore the white slave trade.

According to the MK, both women trafficked to Israel for work in the sex industry and local women who wind up working in one of the country’s many discreet apartments or brothels come from very poor or problematic family backgrounds. In short, their careers as sex slaves are derived from a lack of other options.

“These women never come from wealthy families and taking advantage of them in this way is like buying blood diamonds,” she points out. “If you buy a blood diamond it is criminal; if you buy the body of a woman it should be criminal too. I don’t understand why this is tolerated by the public in a Jewish state.” [Read more…]

‘Righteous’ Moved to Israel After Saving Jews in Holocaust

Jewish Daily Forward
October 6, 2011

By Nathan Jeffay

It’s a bigger sacrifice than most people could ever imagine. But for Esther Grinberg-Boissevain, risking her life by hiding  innocent Jews during the Holocaust just wasn’t enough of a contribution to the Jewish people. The Dutch nurse also decided to move to Israel.

Until three years ago, the residents of Ramat Yishai, near Nazareth, knew nothing of the remarkable story that brought their now retired community nurse to Israel. Then, the social charity ATZUM urged Grinberg-Boissevain to share it.
As a child, together with her parents and siblings in Haarlem, Netherlands, Grinberg-Boissevain helped to hide a Jewish family. After the war, she trained as a nurse, and at 27, she packed her bags and moved to a kibbutz.

“Israel was a special state, a new state, and there was an opportunity to help build and help care for people,” she told the Forward at a Rosh Hashanah party for so-called Righteous Gentiles, who are known as such for hiding Jews from the Nazis.

Grinberg-Boissevain is one of at least 130 Righteous Gentiles who made the decision after the war to move to Israel. It is only now with the group dwindling fast from old age that members are starting to tell and write down their stories. Grinberg-Boissevain, for example, has a homemade pamphlet that she shares with friends and acquaintances.

“People in Israel, even in the communities where [Righteous Gentiles] are living, just have no idea that they are there,” said Yael Rosen, coordinator of ATZUM’s 9-year-old project to make records of their stories. “People are amazed when they hear about the heroes living in their midst.” [Read more…]

Bittersweet Reunion of ‘Righteous Gentiles’

Jerusalem Post
October 6, 2011

By Arieh O’Sullivan/The Media Line

Holocaust-era heroes who risked their lives to save Jews left Europe to make homes in Israel, but their numbers are dwindling.

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RAMAT YISHAI – Viktor Melenik, an 82-year-old bon vivant with a couple of medals pinned to his lapels, bellows out: “Forget the soup, let’s have wine.”

A half a dozen folks in their 70s and 80s chuckle along in this unusual gathering of unassuming heroes of sorts at a café in northern Israel. Known as “Righteous Gentiles,” they helped saved Jews from persecution and extermination during the Nazi Holocaust. [Read more…]