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November 1, 2022

Campus Watch Nov. 1, 2022

Rep. Brad Sherman Denounces Berkeley Law Student Groups’ Bylaws Barring Zionist Speakers

Representative Brad Sherman (D-Sherman Oaks) denounced the student groups at Berkeley Law School that passed bylaws saying that they would never invite Zionist speakers to campus.

In an October 31 statement, Sherman said that these bylaws “would prevent figures such as President Biden or Berkeley Law’s own Dean Erwin Chemerinsky from speaking at these events simply because they believe that Israel has a right to exist.” “For too long, we have given antisemitism a pass when its proponents label it as anti-Zionism,” he added. 

“Kanye is Right About the Jews” Appears During Florida-Georgia Game

The message “Kanye is right about the Jews” was displayed outside of the stadium of the University of Florida-University of Georgia game on October 29.

A video of the message shows the words scrolling to the left on the outside wall of TIAA Bank Field in Jacksonville, Fla., where the Jacksonville Jaguars play. It is not yet known how the message was able to be projected onto the stadium. Both universities condemned the message as “antisemitic hate speech.”

“Gas the F—ing Jews” Note Found at Brown-RISD Hillel

An unsigned note calling for Jews to be gassed and other antisemitic tropes was found at the Brown-Rhode Island School of Design Hillel on the evening of October 30.

The note, found on the back of a donation card, read in full: “I would never give the rich stuck up entitled Jews any money. F—k you all. Hail [sic] Hitler. Gas the f—king Jews and hope you die.” The matter is currently under investigation.

Brooklyn Yeshiva Students Attacked With Eggs, Punched Amidst Shouts of “Free Palestine”

Three Jewish students were attacked with eggs just outside of a Brooklyn yeshiva while one of the perpetrators shouted, “Free Palestine!”

The Algemeiner reported that there were five perpetrators in total and that it was the second time in 2022 that an incident of this kind has occurred. The students are all teenagers. New York City Councilmember Kalman Yeger tweeted that “the environment in which this incident happens is one where criminals know there are no consequences for crime in New York, particularly hate crimes, and particularly against Jews.”

UW-Madison Condemns Man in Hitler Costume

The University of Wisconsin (UW)-Madison issued a statement on October 29 condemning a man who was wearing a costume of Adolf Hitler.

The man was seen by students walking along State Street off campus; he is not believed to be in any way affiliated with the university. University spokesperson John Lucas said in a statement that “UW-Madison stands against antisemitism and all forms of bigotry and discrimination.”

Man Arrested for Allegedly Posting White Supremacist Stickers at University of Albany

A 24-year-old man was arrested after allegedly posting white supremacist stickers in the University of Albany quad.

The stickers, according to News10, had messages saying, “Resist Zionism,” “Our Blood Is Our Faith Our Race Is Our Nation,” and “Blood and Soil.” One of the signs defaced a residence hall sign. The man, identified as Alexander Wolcott, faces one felony charge of aggravated harassment. He is not affiliated with the university, per WNYT.

Five Ithaca College Swastika Incidents This Year, But No Suspects Yet

The Ithacan, a student newspaper at Ithaca College, ran a piece on October 26 on how there have been five swastikas found on campus since January, and so far the investigations into them have come up empty.

The paper zeroed in on the most recent incident, a swastika that was scratched on the door of an elevator in a residence hall. There aren’t any cameras nearby the elevator, and there weren’t any cameras in any of the areas where the other four swastikas were found. Various students told The Ithacan that “more surveillance” is needed on campus.

UVM President Says Antisemitism “Will Not Be Tolerated”

University of Vermont President Suresh Garimella issued a statement on October 28 denouncing antisemitism on campus after the Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights announced in the previous month that they would be investigating the university’s handling of antisemitic incidents on campus.

Garimella said in his statement: “I want my message to be clear to the entire campus community: antisemitism, in any form, will not be tolerated at UVM. Conduct that targets and threatens Jewish individuals or groups, or that unreasonably interferes with their ability to participate in UVM programs and activities, is unacceptable.”

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Rosner’s Domain— Dealing with Ben-Gvir

Let’s talk about the elephant in the room. Let’s talk about Itamar Ben-Gvir. As I write this column, the outcome of Israel’s election is still an unknown. But the dominant presence of Ben-Gvir is an established fact. Yesterday’s outcast is now a legitimate player. On Sunday, he vowed to demand a specific ministerial portfolio — the ministry of Homeland Security. Benjamin Netanyahu, the head of Likud, shot back: Ben-Gvir isn’t going to get it. But the voters know better than both. It all depends on the outcome. It all depends on Ben-Gvir’s ultimate power to make or break a coalition. 

Ben-Gvir is not a newcomer. He has run for office more than once. Israelis are familiar with his undistinguished past. He was convicted and arrested for various crimes, including support of a terror organization. He was a bully, a provocateur, a follower of rabbi Meir Kahane, a radical. He was a leader of fringe groups, making outrageous statements, raging, battling with policemen and soldiers, causing trouble. 

He was as far from the mainstream as anyone could be, yet slowly made his way toward acceptance. How? Part luck (the political gridlock), part circumstances (the Arab riots of last year), part demography (the rise of right-religious groups), part tactic (restraining himself). He says he no longer fully supports the ideology of Kahane. He says he had changed. Until not long ago, a photo of Baruch Goldstein, a butcher of 29 Muslim worshipers in the Cave of the Patriarchs, was hang on his wall. He called Goldstein, a despicable murderer, “a hero.” Then he said he matured and no longer considers him a hero. He also said that he no longer calls the slain Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin “a traitor.” Rabin, he says, engaged in objectionable acts, but “the word ‘traitor’ is no longer a part of my vocabulary.”

He surely became more articulate in playing the game of politics. Some Israelis believe this only makes him more dangerous. Others believe he no longer poses a threat.

Did he truly change? He surely became more articulate in playing the game of politics. Some Israelis believe this only makes him more dangerous. Others believe he no longer poses a threat. A politician with radical ideas? Sure. A politician that should be banned and ostracized? No more than others. 

A moderate Israeli looks at the acceptance of Ben-Gvir as a respectable member of the right-wing bloc with great unease, and more than a grain of worry. And yet, there it is: Last month, we polled Israelis about Ben-Gvir and three out of four Likud supporters — that is, most supporters of the largest party in Israel — told us that Ben-Gvir is “good for Israel.” Others can call him “racist” or “fascist” or “dangerous”; they can call him what they want. This doesn’t seem to weaken him. In this election cycle, no matter the outcome, his voice was heard, his ideas spread, his agenda advanced. 

Why would anyone support him? There are two main reasons. First, to spite the establishment, to enrage the leftists, to troll the media and the intellectuals. Ben-Gvir is in many ways like Donald Trump, giving voice to an Israeli version of the “basket of deplorables.” Second, to convey a clear message against what many Israelis feel is a drastic problem, the rise of Arab crime and violence, and Israel’s hesitant response to curb it. Farmers who see their crops stolen by Arabs in the Galilee consider Ben-Gvir a possible remedy. Shop owners in Beer-Sheva who must contend with Bedouin organized crime hope that he might help them. Jewish residents of mixed cities, who must worry about the security of their children amid Arab hostility, look up to him. Whether Ben-Gvir can truly do anything to improve the situation is a good question. But voting for him is one way for Israelis to say enough, or else we must search to radical solutions. 

There are two questions for which we do not yet have good answers. First, would accepting and normalizing him be the better way to deal with his radicalism and tame it? Or is exclusion and rejection the only path forward. Second, how dangerous is Ben-Gvir really? Some believe that he truly had changed, softened, that he may not be mild and soft, but is no longer unbearable. These believers usually come from the camp in which Ben-Gvir gained power. Others believe that he has not changed, that his newly found congeniality is just a pretense, a trick. These usually come from the opposite political camp. The answers to both these questions are usually shouted, formulated with firm conviction and little clear evidence. 

Here is the truth: We have no way of knowing because some things are known only in retrospect. Whoever warned of the “fascist” Mussolini was right in retrospect. Whoever warned of the “fascist” Menachem Begin (and many leaders in Israel did) was wrong in retrospect. Most likely, Ben-Gvir is neither a Mussolini nor a Begin. Most likely, he will not save Israel, but it’s also premature to assume that he will destroy it.

Something I wrote in Hebrew

Finance Minister Avigdor Lieberman is of the view that Israel should steer clear of involvement in the Russia-Ukraine War. Here is what I wrote about him:

If someone wants to prove that Lieberman is probably not yet fully Israeli, and maybe never will be, his accent does not prove anything. The proof can be found in what the finance minister said, proving that he has not yet internalized the essence of Israeliness. Here’s what he said: “It’s important that we don’t develop delusions of grandeur, as if Israel can do everything and that we are a world power.” This is the proof. Lieberman is of course fundamentally right. Israel is not a world power. Lieberman, of course, warns against the obvious: Israel needs to guard against its tendency towards grandeur. He is wrong in only one thing: in assuming that this tendency can be tamed. In assuming that Israelis can look in the mirror and see themselves in their natural size — quite small.

A week’s numbers

See the column on the left-hand side for details:

A reader’s response:

Adam Crankh asks: “Aren’t you going to say something about the travesty of Itamar Ben-Gvir?” Answer: Just did my friend, but I can’t guarantee you’re going to like it. 


Shmuel Rosner is senior political editor. For more analysis of Israeli and international politics, visit Rosner’s Domain at jewishjournal.com/rosnersdomain.

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Israel Exit Polls Predict Narrow Win for Netanyahu With Help of Surging Right-Wing Bloc

(JTA) — According to exit polls, Benjamin Netanyahu looks to have eked out a victory in Israel’s election on Tuesday, with a projected bloc of 61-62 seats, at or just above the 61 needed to form a majority in a 120-seat parliament.

Those polls, taken at voting stations by local broadcasters and released at 10 p.m. Israel time, have been known to be skewed compared to the final vote tally. Votes will likely be tallied through Tuesday night.

What is clear is that the Religious Zionism slate, a partnership between far-right lawmakers Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, has garnered well over 10 seats, and potentially more than the 13-14 seats that pre-election polls had indicated. The Channel 13 exit poll has them earning 14 seats, while the Kan public broadcaster’s poll has them at 15.

Current Prime Minister Yair Lapid’s party, Yesh Atid, looks to have won between 22 and 24 seats, if the exit polls hold true, while Netanyahu’s Likud party looks to have earned 30-31.

“I ask to wait for the real results,” Meir Cohen, a senior member of Yesh Atid, told the Channel 12 news, according to the Times of Israel.

Netanyahu’s partnership with the Religious Zionism slate has boosted their standing — Ben-Gvir looks primed for a cabinet position, should Netanyahu’s planned coalition come to fruition — and worried Jewish leaders throughout the Diaspora. Ben-Gvir’s party, Jewish Power (Otzma Yehudit), had just barely squeaked into the Knesset, or parliament, in the last election in 2021, earning one seat. Ben-Gvir has unsettled American Jewish officials with his anti-Arab, anti-LGBTQ and other inflammatory rhetoric.

The early results show the highest voter turnout rate since 1999, at over 66%.

If the preliminary results hold, the outcome would mean a swift comeback for Netanyahu, who has only been out of the prime minister’s office 16 months. He would likely be given the first shot at forming a coalition of parties, with 45 days to do so by law. In addition to the Religious Zionism parties, Netanyahu’s coalition would include multiple other haredi Orthodox parties.

Both Lapid and Benny Gantz, the defense minister whose National Unity slate is earning 12-13 seats in exit polls, are holding out hope that Netanyahu’s bloc earns 60 or fewer seats, which could give either of them an opening to form their own coalition.

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NBA Star Kyrie Irving Defends Posting Link to Antisemitic Film

Brooklyn Nets star point guard Kyrie Irving defended his social media post linking to an antisemitic film during a post-game press conference on the evening of October 29.

In a since-deleted tweet, Irving had linked to the movie “Hebrews to Negroes: Wake Up Black America.” The movie, based on a book of the same name, is filled with “#antisemitic themes including those promoted by dangerous sects of the Black Hebrew Israelites movement,” Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt tweeted. ESPN Daily’s Pablo Torre tweeted that the beginning of the film in question shares a fake quote from Adolf Hitler that reads: “America has stolen the Jews. The Jewels of God. His Jewelry. The NEGROES. They are the TRUE HEBREWS. What a foolish move and a direct challenge to God. And they plan on moving these false white Jews to Israel.”

Irving defended his post as simply linking to something on a “public platform” and that it had to do with him “living as a free Black man here in America, knowing the historical complexities for me to get here.” “I’m not going to stand down on anything that I believe in,” Irving said. “I’m only going to get stronger because I’m not alone. I have a whole army around me.”

Nets owner Joe Tsai tweeted the previous evening, “I’m disappointed that Kyrie appears to support a film based on a book full of anti-semitic disinformation. I want to sit down and make sure he understands this is hurtful to all of us, and as a man of faith, it is wrong to promote hate based on race, ethnicity or religion.”

The NBA also said in a statement, “Hate speech of any kind is unacceptable and runs counter to the NBA’s values of equality, inclusion and respect. We believe we all have a role to play in ensuring words or ideas, including antisemitic ones, are challenged and refuted and we will continue working with all members of the NBA community to ensure that everyone understands the impact of their words and their actions.”

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Israeli Diplomat David Roet Discusses Job, Current Affairs

Ambassador David Roet, the Deputy Director General and Head of the North American Division at the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, discussed his background and current affairs in a Zoom interview with the Journal while he is visiting California.

The son of Holocaust survivors, Roet has been an Israeli diplomat since 1988, which included stints in Asia and Chicago, overseeing eight consulates around the United States, and being the Deputy Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations. His current position has been “fascinating,” and has allowed him to work with two different presidential administrations, Roet told the Journal. “Good to see that with regards to Israel it has been bipartisan support.” A couple of highlights from his current position include being a part of the Abraham Accords and President Joe Biden’s visit to Israel in July. He praised Biden for saying that you don’t have to be Jewish to be a Zionist and that the U.S. will always have Israel’s back.

As for current events, Roet said that Adidas “did the right thing” in terminating their relationship with rapper Kanye West over his myriad antisemitic remarks. “I was part of [the] formation on the first plenary meeting in the United Nations on antisemitism,” Roet said. “The antisemitism, one cannot ignore it or belittle it. I am very worried to see a world in which Jews are not allowed or told by some that they are the only minority that cannot define what is obnoxious and what is racist against them.”

On the issue of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, Roet said it was not a free speech issue but “an issue of singling out one country.” Roet said it was fine to criticize Israel but BDS goes further since it “goes against the existence of the state of Israel.” He is glad that many states in the U.S. are starting to acknowledge this.

The United Nations Commission of Inquiry has also been in the news over its never-ending investigations into alleged Israeli human rights abuses. Roet acknowledged that Israel has imperfections, but the commission appears to be unbalanced given that one member accused Jews of controlling the Internet and another has “a history of anti-Israeli feelings and statements and activities.” “This is only the committee as far as I know in the U.N. Security Council which has no ending date,” Roet said. “On the committee which is dealing with Syria, they have five people. The committee that deals with Israel has 25 people. So it’s another example of the bias that we find in the United Nations.” He added that such bias “damages the validity and credibility of a very important institute.”

The commission recently released a report alleging that Israel’s activities in the West Bank have amounted to “occupation as a permanent fixture.” Roet called the report “unfair” because it “does not mention once Hamas while [mentioning] Israel 275 times.” He thanks the U.S. and other countries for criticizing the report.

On the efforts to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, Roet said that his office and the Biden administration have agreed to disagree on the matter. “We have no doubt that the administration’s aim is not to have a nuclear Iran,” he said, but he believes “the deal is not good enough. We believe that it will not stop Iran from becoming a nuclear [power] and we have spoken to the administration about it for a long time. It doesn’t look like an agreement is coming anytime soon but we will have to see. In the meantime, Iran is showing its true colors in all around the Middle East but also now in Ukraine.” Ukraine has accused Iran of providing drones to Russia that they are using in their war against Ukraine. “I hope this shows to everyone what we know and have been saying for a long time about Iran,” Roet continued. “Wherever there is terrorism, there is Iran. In our area, in the Middle East and now in other places as well in the world.”

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Los Angeles City Council Passes IHRA Definition of Antisemitism

The Los Angeles City Council unanimously passed a resolution endorsing the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism on November 1.

The resolution, which was introduced by City Councilmember Paul Koretz, noted that “hate crimes reported statewide increased 32 percent from 2020 to 2021 and are at their highest reported level since 2001,” according to a report from the California Attorney General. “Contemporary manifestations of antisemitism may include: calling for, aiding, or justifying the harming of Jews; making dehumanizing, demonizing, or stereotypical allegations about Jews; denying the fact, scope, mechanisms, or intentionality of the genocide of the Jewish people during the Holocaust; accusing Jews as a people, or Israel as a state, of inventing or exaggerating the Holocaust; accusing Jewish citizens of being more loyal to Israel, or to the alleged priorities of Jews worldwide, than to the interests of their own nations; denying the Jewish people their right to self determination; applying double standards by requiring of Israel a behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation; using symbols and images associated with classic anti-Semitism; drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis; accusing Jews of being responsible for wrongdoing committed by a single Jewish person or group; or holding Jews collectively responsible for actions of the state of Israel,” the resolution stated.

The resolution concluded with a request for “City departments, staff, elected and appointed officials, and contract agencies to familiarize themselves with the IHRA definition of antisemitism, associated IHRA reference materials, examples, and articles, and incorporate their use where appropriate.”

Jewish groups praised the city council for passing the resolution.

“Those who understand this hatred as it appeared in Nazi Germany may not recognize all the ways Jews experience it today in Los Angeles,” American Jewish Committee Los Angeles Regional Director Richard Hirschhaut said in a statement. “As a result, many incidents of antisemitism are misidentified, unaddressed, or underreported. Adopting the IHRA definition will make our city government more informed, and help government leaders, law enforcement, educators and the media properly identify antisemitism and take appropriate action. We thank Councilmembers Paul Koretz and Bob Blumenfield for their leadership in spearheading this important effort.”

StandWithUs CEO and Co-Founder Roz Rothstein also said in a statement, “This is a victory against hatred and ignorance. Antisemitism comes from across the political spectrum and often mutates, which can make it difficult to identify. Those who recognize the persecution my family faced in the Holocaust may not understand all the ways it appears today in Los Angeles. The Holocaust did not begin with gas chambers. It began with vicious hateful words. That is why we need IHRA, a clear and widely accepted definition that will make our city government better educated and equipped to fight bigotry against Jews.”

Simon Wiesenthal Center Executive Director Rabbi Meyer H. May said in a statement, “Today’s unanimous LA City Council vote to adopt the IHRA working definition of antisemitism is a clear and powerful statement by the Council that antisemitism has no place in our city and indeed any manifestation of antisemitism directed toward Jews, Jewish community institutions and religious facilities is to be unequivocally identified for what it is – antisemitism and bigotry! The City Council’s decision wisely reminds what Simon Wiesenthal famously said, ‘For your benefit, learn from our tragedy (the Holocaust). It is not a written law that the next victims must be Jews. It can also be other people.’”

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Judy Zeidler: Foodie, Author, Friend, 92

The world lost a food icon and friend.

After a lengthy illness, Judy Zeidler passed away in the early hours of October 31 at the age of 92. 

A well-known food authority, author (“The Gourmet Jewish Cookbook” among others), TV show host, and restaurateur, Zeidler believed that the shared enjoyment of food and wine was one of the most fulfilling elements in life and that cooking and entertaining should be fun. 

Her family said that “one of her greatest joys was sharing her love of food and cooking, through writing, teaching and entertaining friends new and old.”

She was never too busy to open her kitchen and to donate cooking classes to benefit charitable organizations.

Through her cooking classes, she thrived to inspire her students to cook and entertain at home. She was never too busy to open her kitchen and to donate cooking classes to benefit charitable organizations.

A longtime contributor to the Jewish Journal (1994-2017), Zeidler wrote for The Los Angeles Times for more than two decades (1977 to 2000). Most of her time was as the Times’ Jewish food writer, some of it as a syndicated columnist and in the later years as a special contributor. Readers everywhere looked forward to Zeidler’s Jewish holiday articles; in fact her Potato Latke recipe won a Los Angeles Times Best Recipe Award. 

Born in the Boyle Heights (City Terrace) area of Los Angeles in 1930, Zeidler and her family moved to Eagle Rock, where she graduated from Dorsey High School. When she was a teenager, she met Marvin Zeidler at a B’nai Brith Eight Ball Dance. They married a few years later in 1950.

The Zeidlers’ move to a ranch in Topanga Canyon in 1963 – with four children and another on the way – kicked off her cooking career. She made her signature strudel for The Discovery Inn, ready to bake on order. 

 In the 1980’s and 1990’s she hosted “Judy’s Kitchen” on the Jewish Television Network (JTN). In 1990, the “LA Times” said that it was “probably the best-known program on JTN.” After a few years of episodes on Jewish and holiday cooking, her show began hosting many of the top chefs in Los Angeles, demystifying kosher cooking. This included Thomas Keller, Joachim Splichal, Evan Kleiman, Michael McCarty, Josie Le Balch and Michel Richard, as well as Susan Feniger and Mary Sue Milliken in their first television appearance. Many of the recipes were later compiled in her book, “Master Chefs Cook Kosher.”

Restaurateurs, art collectors and philanthropists, the Zeidlers were a team for their 72 years of marriage, and teenage years before that. They spend several months in Italy and France each year, visiting restaurants and food and wine purveyors; collecting new recipe ideas and food inspirations. 

Her final book, “Italy Cooks,” was in many ways a memoir of their 35 years of travel through Italy, including recipes from some of their friends. These friends were top restauranteurs throughout Italy, such as Massimo Bottura, Nadia Santin and Dario Cecchini, whom the Zeidlers befriended when he just had a little butcher shop. 

Zeidler’s other cookbooks include “Judy Zeidler’s International Deli Cookbook” and “30-Minute Kosher Cook.” She also co-authored “Home Cooking with a French Accent” with French chef Michel Richard. A frequent guest on national television and radio programs, Zeidler was on the board of several food and wine societies.

The Zeidlers also prided themselves on supporting upcoming artists, especially Los Angeles artists, and even involved them in her cookbooks. “The Gourmet Jewish Cookbook’s” illustrations are by Peter Shire; “Italy Cooks” are by Suzanne Dunaway. The Zeidlers’ art collection has early works by Duane Valentine, Sam Francis and John Altoon.

The Zeidlers co-founded the popular Citrus restaurant in Los Angeles, the Broadway Deli and Capo and Cora’s restaurants in Santa Monica, Brentwood Restaurant in Brentwood and Brass Cap in Santa Monica.

They became early supporters of the Skirball Cultural Center, when it was still housed at Hebrew Union College, and later created the restaurant at the Skirball, Zeidler’s Cafe, and now also at the Skirball, Judy’s Counter.

“Throughout our more than four decades of cherished friendship with Judy and Marvin Zeidler, Myna and I remained in awe of Judy’s unique ability to rejoice in times and seasons, festivals and celebrations, birthdays and anniversaries. She never forgot one, and she celebrated each in her incomparable way,” Skirball founder Rabbi Uri Herscher told the Journal.  

According to Herscher, every occasion had its special and delectable meal, followed days later by Zeidler’s photos and comments, which they savored as much as the meal itself. 

“The circle of her warmth and hospitality embraced us in the moment and beyond the moment,” he said. “Judy’s zest for life was our constant delight. It enriched our lives and heightened our joys. As manifold as were her culinary talents, they were exceeded only by her vitality and love.”

In addition to her son Marc, who passed away last year, Judy Zeidler is predeceased by her parents and her sister Sharyn Royal. She is survived by her husband Marvin, her other four children, seven grandchildren and four great grandchildren. 

While the kitchens may now feel a bit empty, may the memories of Judy Zeidler and her meaningful contributions to the Jewish food world be a blessing.

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Edward Robin, Community and Business Leader, 80

Innovative philanthropist and businessman Edward B. Robin, whose impact on Jewish life stretched from Los Angeles to New York and on to Israel and Russia, died on Oct. 8 after a long illness at Cedars Sinai Hospital, surrounded by his family. He was 80 years old.

Funeral services were held Oct. 12 at the Sinai Memorial Park with Rabbis Nolan Lebovitz and Edward Feinstein of Valley Beth Shalom synagogue officiating.

“Ed represented every day of his life the best of what our tradition expects of us as an honest, selfless and great leader for his family, his business and his community.”
– Richard Sandler

“Ed represented every day of his life the best of what our tradition expects of us as an honest, selfless and great leader for his family, his business and his community. Ed was a thoroughly decent human being who touched so many of us and we, and the world, are all better because of Ed,” noted Richard Sandler, a colleague and friend of Robin for 40 years.

After graduating from the University of Florida and the Duke School of Law, Robin moved from Charleston (South Carolina) to Los Angeles, where he initially worked as an attorney for the National Labor Relations Board.

In 1975 he embarked on what was to become his lifelong dual role as a pioneer in the specialized insurance field and the protection of Jews worldwide.

A mere listing of his leadership roles in Jewish organizations worldwide would call for a book-length article.

For instance, as chairman of the National Coalition Supporting Jews he became a chief advocate for the freedom and rights of Jews in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, the Baltic states and Eurasia.

Additional offices included vice chair of the Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles, chairman of the Young Leadership Cabinet of the United Jewish Appeal and founder and chair of the North American Jewish Forum.

Among the highlights of numerous activities was his organizing of the 1987 Rally for Soviet Jews in Washington DC, which drew some 250,000 supporters.

Robin was equally committed to the welfare of domestic Jewish communities, holding leadership roles in the LA Jewish Federation and in the field of Jewish health organizations.

In addition, he served as board member Valley Beth Shalom Synagogue, American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, Jerusalem Press Club, the Paideca-U.S. program and board member and chair of the Wende Museum of the Cold War in Culver City. 

Edward Robin is survived by Peggy Robin, his wife of 58 years, children Jill Linhardt (Nat Linhardt) and Richard Robin (Nurit Robin) and eight grandchildren.

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