At the end of last summer, Naftali Bennett, the head of the Yamina party and a man with no job other than being an opposition politician, wrote and published a short book: “How to Beat a Pandemic.”
How?
Writing a recipe for how is one thing, beating it in real life is quite another. And Bennett, the lucky guy, will get to do both. He wrote the book when he was in the opposition, and now, as Prime Minister of Israel, he will get a chance to implement its conclusions. First stop: Ben Gurion airport. In the last couple of weeks, some Israelis came back to the country carrying the Indian variant of COVID-19. The result is worrying: schools in which dozens of students got infected; cities in which mask rules are back in place, just days after masks were eliminated. Israel is not yet in crisis mode, and the number of people directly impacted is still small. But on the street one can already hear people joking with one another as they walk their dogs. “Yes, I decided to take a little walk before the quarantine is back.”
What happened? Two things. One, the Indian variant is highly infectious, and a few unvaccinated teens can quickly spread the disease. Two, Israelis cannot sit still. As soon as the airport was opened, they hurried to renew their routine of constant travel. One survey from yesterday found that half—half!—of all Israelis intend to travel abroad this summer. Dear world, five million Israelis are coming your way. Dear world, please make sure to send them back unharmed.
Alas, some of them do come back with the unintentional capacity to harm. They get COVID, they fly, they enter the country, they engage with other people and pass along the virus. At the airport they discover that Israel did not yet implement Bennett’s manual for battling a pandemic. We’re seeing long lines, no masks, little supervision. Many of them are sent home too soon. Many of them do not obey the command to stay home, quarantined for a few days. The result is a rapid rise in the number of infected Israelis. A rapid, scary, and depressing rise in new COVID cases.
Last week I wrote about Bennett’s first test: a law that he must pass for which there is still no majority. The resurgence of COVID could be his second, even more important test. And for now, his government does not seem more efficient than the government that Bennett was so eloquent in criticizing.
For now.
Of course, we should give it some time to organize. We should give it some time to prove that a better way to manage the country during a pandemic can be found. The Netanyahu government was highly efficient in getting the vaccines and immunizing the population. It was ineffective in running the country while we were all waiting for the vaccines to be developed and shipped. Bennett was one of the more pointed critics of the government because of its inefficiency and clumsiness. “The obvious goal,” he wrote in his book, is “to maintain an almost normal routine of life alongside the corona.” He also wrote that this is “an achievable goal.”
The transition from knowing what needs to be done to doing what needs to be done seems simple but is the most difficult transition in every policymaker’s career. Knowing is easy because it only involves one person, the one who thinks he knows. Implementing is messy and complicated. It involves other people who might have other ideas. It involves a bureaucracy that does not always function with the necessary efficiency. It involves political interests—such as not offending your partners, and not enraging the public. Bennett is a fresh PM. Does he want to begin his term with a move that is likely to enrage the five million Israelis who plan to travel this summer?
The transition from knowing what needs to be done to doing what needs to be done seems simple but is the most difficult transition in every policymaker’s career.
Today, he pleaded with Israelis to stay home. Nice try. If we learned anything from the first round of the pandemic, it is that requests and pleadings do not have enough impact on people who really want to travel/work/attend school/attend synagogue/dine at a restaurant. Bennett will soon have to deal with families who must see a grandfather who lives in Australia, with Haredim who come from New York, with soldiers who already bought a ticket to Greece, with droves of Israelis who got the vaccine and lost their sense of vulnerability. If he wants all of these to refrain from travel (again, half the country plans to travel), he will need to do more than ask. He will have to quickly tighten the procedures at the Ben Gurion airport. He will have to make decisions that will not be popular. He will have to do all this while a combative opposition is ready to undercut his authority and question his legitimacy.
So yes, writing a book was the easy part.
Shmuel Rosner is an Israeli columnist, editor, and researcher. He is the editor of the research and data-journalism website themadad.com, and is the political editor of the Jewish Journal.
Beating a Pandemic is Easy? This is Bennett’s Second Test
Shmuel Rosner
At the end of last summer, Naftali Bennett, the head of the Yamina party and a man with no job other than being an opposition politician, wrote and published a short book: “How to Beat a Pandemic.”
How?
Writing a recipe for how is one thing, beating it in real life is quite another. And Bennett, the lucky guy, will get to do both. He wrote the book when he was in the opposition, and now, as Prime Minister of Israel, he will get a chance to implement its conclusions. First stop: Ben Gurion airport. In the last couple of weeks, some Israelis came back to the country carrying the Indian variant of COVID-19. The result is worrying: schools in which dozens of students got infected; cities in which mask rules are back in place, just days after masks were eliminated. Israel is not yet in crisis mode, and the number of people directly impacted is still small. But on the street one can already hear people joking with one another as they walk their dogs. “Yes, I decided to take a little walk before the quarantine is back.”
What happened? Two things. One, the Indian variant is highly infectious, and a few unvaccinated teens can quickly spread the disease. Two, Israelis cannot sit still. As soon as the airport was opened, they hurried to renew their routine of constant travel. One survey from yesterday found that half—half!—of all Israelis intend to travel abroad this summer. Dear world, five million Israelis are coming your way. Dear world, please make sure to send them back unharmed.
Alas, some of them do come back with the unintentional capacity to harm. They get COVID, they fly, they enter the country, they engage with other people and pass along the virus. At the airport they discover that Israel did not yet implement Bennett’s manual for battling a pandemic. We’re seeing long lines, no masks, little supervision. Many of them are sent home too soon. Many of them do not obey the command to stay home, quarantined for a few days. The result is a rapid rise in the number of infected Israelis. A rapid, scary, and depressing rise in new COVID cases.
Last week I wrote about Bennett’s first test: a law that he must pass for which there is still no majority. The resurgence of COVID could be his second, even more important test. And for now, his government does not seem more efficient than the government that Bennett was so eloquent in criticizing.
For now.
Of course, we should give it some time to organize. We should give it some time to prove that a better way to manage the country during a pandemic can be found. The Netanyahu government was highly efficient in getting the vaccines and immunizing the population. It was ineffective in running the country while we were all waiting for the vaccines to be developed and shipped. Bennett was one of the more pointed critics of the government because of its inefficiency and clumsiness. “The obvious goal,” he wrote in his book, is “to maintain an almost normal routine of life alongside the corona.” He also wrote that this is “an achievable goal.”
The transition from knowing what needs to be done to doing what needs to be done seems simple but is the most difficult transition in every policymaker’s career. Knowing is easy because it only involves one person, the one who thinks he knows. Implementing is messy and complicated. It involves other people who might have other ideas. It involves a bureaucracy that does not always function with the necessary efficiency. It involves political interests—such as not offending your partners, and not enraging the public. Bennett is a fresh PM. Does he want to begin his term with a move that is likely to enrage the five million Israelis who plan to travel this summer?
Today, he pleaded with Israelis to stay home. Nice try. If we learned anything from the first round of the pandemic, it is that requests and pleadings do not have enough impact on people who really want to travel/work/attend school/attend synagogue/dine at a restaurant. Bennett will soon have to deal with families who must see a grandfather who lives in Australia, with Haredim who come from New York, with soldiers who already bought a ticket to Greece, with droves of Israelis who got the vaccine and lost their sense of vulnerability. If he wants all of these to refrain from travel (again, half the country plans to travel), he will need to do more than ask. He will have to quickly tighten the procedures at the Ben Gurion airport. He will have to make decisions that will not be popular. He will have to do all this while a combative opposition is ready to undercut his authority and question his legitimacy.
So yes, writing a book was the easy part.
Shmuel Rosner is an Israeli columnist, editor, and researcher. He is the editor of the research and data-journalism website themadad.com, and is the political editor of the Jewish Journal.
Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.
Editor's Picks
Israel and the Internet Wars – A Professional Social Media Review
The Invisible Student: A Tale of Homelessness at UCLA and USC
What Ever Happened to the LA Times?
Who Are the Jews On Joe Biden’s Cabinet?
You’re Not a Bad Jewish Mom If Your Kid Wants Santa Claus to Come to Your House
No Labels: The Group Fighting for the Political Center
Latest Articles
Jewish Californians Gather in Sacramento to Turn Concern into Action
Rabbis of LA | Rabbi Aaron Wants to Bathe You in Sound
Rabbis of LA | How Rabbi Artson Fell in Love with God
Emhoff at Jewish California Summit; Israel’s Birthday; New AFTAU Hire; Repair the World
Rachel Goldberg-Polin Speaks at L.A. Synagogues, Yom HaAtzmaut Program in Beverly Hills
The Charles Bronfman Prize Announces CultivAid CEO Tomer Malchi as 2026 Laureate
Israeli Colleges and Universities Support Reservist Students in a Difficult Time
“Our main role is to keep the students moving forward, even when the path is complex.” – Professor Yossi Rosenwaks
Antisemitism Un-Masked on Broadway
The play “Giant” and its urgent, timely message could not have come sooner—in part because it clashes with the antisemitism we see on the news. Today a dandy like Dahl is not the problem. What we are all witnessing now is low-class thuggery prowling city streets.
“Netflix is a Joke” Returns to LA with Jewish Acts Galore
The Book and the Sword
You must keep one foot in the sanctuary even while going out to war; and you must go out to war even when your heart yearns to remain in the sanctuary.
In the Desert – A poem for Parsha Bamidbar
What went so wrong in the desert?
A Bisl Torah — Your Time Capsule
If you created a time capsule representing who you are and what you stand for, what would be included?
Not Wandering in the Wilderness with Bewilderness
A Moment in Time: “Me Time”
Inaugural ‘Core Vital Voices Conference’ for Orthodox Women Who Provide End of Life Care
Chaplains are called to be present. We hold, we witness, we support others in accessing their spiritual resources, and we accompany. We honor the grief, loss, and love by seeing and hearing them when it is unbearable.
Print Issue: The Speech I Won’t Give at Georgetown Law | May 15, 2026
An outcry over my support for Israel in my Jewish Journal columns forced me to withdraw from my commencement address at Georgetown Law School. Here is the speech I was going to give.
Israel’s Noam Bettan Advances to Eurovision Grand Final
This is the fifth time that Israel has qualified for the Eurovision final in the past six years.
The Klezmatics Are Made for These Times
“We Were Made for These Times” is as inventive and joyous an album as I’ve heard in a long time. And the most proudly Jewish.
Motherhood, War and Media: WIZO Luncheon Reflects a Changing Reality Since Oct. 7, 2023
In a sold-out event at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills, WIZO (Women’s International Zionist Organization) hosted its annual Mother’s Day Luncheon.
Brian Goldsmith’s Senate Bid Rooted in Fighting Antisemitism in California
He became the first senior adviser to Democratic Majority for Israel PAC, helping elect pro-Israel politicians to Congress and winning more than 80% of races.
AJU’s Ziegler School: Growth and Transformation
The challenge is how we can reinvent rabbinical training so that it’s not clinging to models that no longer work, is sustainable, and addresses the needs of today and tomorrow’s Jewish community.
A Guava Gourmet Cheesecake for Shavuot
Let’s just say, Shavuot gives us a wonderful, guilt-free excuse to indulge in this guava mango cheesecake!
Celebrate National Hamburger Month
While there may be limitations on how to enjoy burgers due to the laws of kashrut, it just means Jews have to get a little more creative.
Table for Five: Bamidbar
Counting Soldiers
Kehillat Israel to Return to Palisades 16 Months After Devastating Fire
It’s not just a momentous occasion for the congregation but is significant for the larger Palisades community as well, as it helps restore a sense of faith that the community will reemerge stronger than ever.
‘Once Upon My Mother’ Brings Roland Perez’s Extraordinary True Story to the Screen
The story centers on Esther Perez (portrayed by Leïla Bekhti), a Moroccan-Jewish immigrant and devoted mother of six. When her newborn son Roland is diagnosed with a clubfoot and given a bleak prognosis, Esther refuses to accept limits placed on his future.
More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.