SOUTH AFRICA’S PATH TO NOWHERE

ANC government repeatedly alienates partners for development in South Africa

By Pamela Ngubane

In a heart-warming series of events, Israel has repeatedly displayed its commitment to continue growing its ties in Africa. This follows the announcement by Chadian President, Mahamat Deby, that his country would open an embassy in Israel.

The Chadian leader travelled to Israel to officiate the inauguration of the embassy in Ramat Gan in early February. Deby cited that Chad and Israel were at a decisive turning point in their relationship, during a meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem that week. This followed waves of peace talks in the Middle East and Northern Africa, which have resulted in a remarkable increase in economic cooperation between Israel and other states.

Back to Africa. “We believe that our co-operation can help not only advance our relations and our co-operation, but it is also part of Israel’s coming back to Africa and Africa coming back to Israel,” said Chadian President Mahamat Idriss who is seen here meeting with Israel’s State President, Isaac Herzog following the opening of the Chadian Embassy in Ramat Gan, outside Tel Aviv.

Deby was welcomed in Israel with great diplomatic fanfare by President Isaac Herzog and Foreign Minister Eli Cohen for the opening of the Chadian embassy. At the time, Prime Minister Netanyahu reported that this would form part of a tremendously important relationship with a major country in the heart of Africa.

The news of Chad formalising its diplomatic ties to Israel were followed closely by reports that Israel and Sudan would sign a “historic peace agreement” in Washington in a few months’ time, indicating an irrefutable move to promote peace, dialogue and increase economic cooperation between Africa and Israel in 2023.

The Sudanese agreement is particularly noteworthy because it overturns the Khartoum Resolution of 1967, which was issued at the conclusion of the 1967 Arab League summit, convened in Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, in the wake of the Six-Day War. The resolution is infamous for containing what became known as the “Three Nos”:

“no peace with Israel”

“no recognition of Israel”

“no negotiations with it”

This has been comprehensively shattered this year and replaced with three Yes’s for peace.

‘Power’ to the People. Children in Iringa, Uganda, where the Israeli nonprofit organization, Innovation Africa connected a clinic to electricity via solar power, December 21, 2019. (Sue Surke/Times of Israel)
 

Countries in Africa and the Middle East continue to welcome Israeli technology and innovation through these historical peace agreements and talks. This is an unsurprising fact, given that Israeli solar technology now provides a stable water supply to over 3.5 million people in Africa, and to over half a million people in South Africa as well.

One would be forgiven for imagining that these developments would encourage South Africa’s national government to adopt foreign policies which would aim to promote Israel in our country as a partner for our continued development and basic service infrastructure. And yet, here we are, completely disengaged from reality. Our Minister of International Relations, Naledi Pandor, won’t pick sides when it comes to Russia and the war it has waged on innocent civilians in Ukraine! However, when it comes to Israel, it’s always been a hard no. Why? Because Israel offers the ANC government (currently polling below 50%) with the only straw of relevance they have left to the South African electorate. And even then, it is entirely misguided and based on a narrative that has never served Palestinians or Israelis at all.

Impacting Millions. Since its inception in 2008, Israeli company ‘Innovation Africa’ with its solar and water installations, impacts millions across 10 African countries Uganda, Malawi, Tanzania, Zambia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Cameroon, South Africa, eSwatini, Ethiopia and Senegal.

South Africans have been called to categorically reject the appropriation of the suffering of black people under colonisation; and Apartheid by the enemies of Israel as a tool to de-legitimise the Jewish state. This has been communicated on a number of occasions by several stakeholders, including the South African Zionist Federation and the South African Jewish Board of Deputies, as well as Stand With Us.

The Holy Land of Israel remains the ancestral and indigenous homeland of the Jewish people. The return en masse of Jews throughout the world to re-establish their state two thousand years of exile and statelessness, is the legitimate and legal expression of the Jewish people’s struggle for national self-determination.

Israel is the only democracy in the Middle East and is home to a multicultural society where the rights of all religions, minorities, ethnicities and beliefs are protected and promoted. It is the only country in the Middle East where the population of Christians is growing and has a number of holy sites which are critically relevant to Christians and their faith.

Skewed Foreign Policy. While quick to condemn Israel at every opportunity, Minister of International Relations Naledi Pandor has refused to condemn Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine that is claiming thousands of innocent lives. Reinforcing the two country’s friendship, Pandor is seen here welcoming her Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov for talks in Pretoria. This February 2023, joint “war games” military exercises with Russia and China were held in South Africa.

And yet – the ANC continues to feel threatened by Israel’s growing ties in Africa. So much so, that our national government shamelessly allows the narrative of an “Apartheid state” to consume all conversations about Israel in our country.

South Africa’s foreign policy between Israel and the Palestinians should take a de-hyphenated approach if we are to contribute meaningfully to securing peace for the people living in both territories during our lifetime. This will ensure that South Africans continue to access the best that Israel has to offer, while creating a safe space for the difficult conversations that need to take place to address the senseless violence and suffering that has destroyed families across both borders to date.

At this rate, we need to start asking ourselves, as South Africans, some hard questions. Has the ANC government been captured by the BDS movement? And is BDS dictating our foreign policy to our public representatives?



About the writer:

A Social Science Honours graduate, Pamela Ngubane is a history teacher who was appointed as the Spokesperson of SAFI (South African Friends of Israel)






While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

Lay of the Land Weekly Newsletter- 26 February 2023

Unveiling the contours and contrasts of an ever-changing Middle East landscape Reliable reportage and insightful commentary on the Middle East by seasoned journalists from the region and beyond

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Articles

(1)

COALITION PURSUES COLLISION

Creating schisms within Israel and Jewish communities abroad, a government on a warpath with its people

By David E. Kaplan

On the Soles of their feet for the Soul of the Nation. Israelis defining who they are and who they do not want to be.

When history critically looks back, does this government want to be tarred for the transition of Israel’s image from ‘Start-up Nation’ to Wind-down Nation? With a hike in interest rates and money taking a hike out the country, how in 74 years did we go from smart to stupid in less than a month?

COALITION PURSUES COLLISION

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(2)

IT’S A LONG AND WINDING ROAD

The bumpy path of building relations between Africa and Israel

By Jonathan Feldstein

Continent of Contrasts. While Israeli is removed at AU conference, in Congo Israeli is welcomed with love.

It’s no easy task to build bridges when the mission of some is to demolish them. The writer found himself in this situation while visiting the Congo trying to build bridges between Africa and Israel, when days later – under pressure from South Africa and Algeria – an Israeli observer at the African Union’s annual summit in Ethiopia was FORCIBLY ejected.

IT’S A LONG AND WINDING ROAD

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(3)

THE ARAB VOICE –  FEBRUARY 2023

A selection of opinions and analysis from the Arab media

Arab writers opining on Middle East issues, address the wider ramifications of the devastating 2023 earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria.

THE ARAB VOICE –  FEBRUARY 2023

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LOTL Cofounders David E. Kaplan (Editor), Rolene Marks and Yair Chelouche

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While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

THE ARAB VOICE –  FEBRUARY 2023

Arab writers opining on Middle East issues, address the wider ramifications from the devastating earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria


(*Articles translated by Asaf Zilberfarb)


WHAT ABOUT THE SYRIAN VICTIMS

By Sami Abd Al-Latif Al-Nisf

An-Nahar, Lebanon, February 9

The world has been sending its heartfelt condolences to the innocent victims of the recent earthquakes in Turkey and Syria. The destruction caused by the earthquakes, coupled with the freezing temperatures, hail and rain, necessitates the urgent and generous support of Kuwait, the Gulf and Arab countries, and the international community.

The magnitude of the disaster is unprecedented. This is the worst earthquake to hit Turkey since 1939. As the Turkish leadership noted in their recent address yesterday, the survivors of the earthquake require aid in the form of tents, blankets, medicine and food.

As we rally to support the Kuwaiti and Gulf relief efforts for Turkey, we must also ensure that aid is delivered to those affected by the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Syria. Working in coordination with the Syrian leadership and international organizations, we must guarantee that the aid reaches those in need in areas such as Hama and Aleppo.

Ruin in Rumaila. A family from the Rumaila area in Jableh district in northwestern Syria stands close to their destroyed house. © UNICEF/Hasan Belal

It is time for any internal or external political disputes to be set aside, and for us to fulfill our responsibility to our brothers and sisters in Syria facing this catastrophe. Geological studies suggest that this could be the start of a series of devastating earthquakes that may continue until the end of the year.

We must not forget those in need. At this time, when the world is moved by the plight of the victims of the earthquakes in Turkey and Syria, it is important to remember the lack of humanity shown by some extremists when similar disasters have befallen non-Muslim nations.

Instead of empathizing with those in need, they have gloated, expressed hatred and attributed these natural disasters to the words and actions of political leaders in those countries, without explaining why the whole population is being punished for the wrongdoings of a few. How can they justify the exposure of our Islamic countries to the same disasters with even more severity and casualties? It is essential that we show a little humanity and modesty.

– Sami Abd Al-Latif Al-Nisf



ERDOGAN AND THE SYRIAN REGIME POST-EATHQUAKE

By Kheir Allah Kheir Allah

Al Rai, Kuwait, February 9

The devastating earthquake that struck southern Turkey and northern Syria has had a dramatic impact on the political realities of the two regions. In particular, Turkey’s plan to form a buffer zone within Syrian territory, some 30km to 35km deep, has been thrown into question.

The Turkish regions that have been affected by the earthquake, have seen much of their infrastructure destroyed. Rebuilding these areas will require tens of billions of dollars, compounding the existing economic crisis already gripping Turkey.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s grand ambitions to take a dominant role in the region, all the way to Libya, have been starkly revealed as overreaching. He must now reevaluate his plans for 2023 and Turkey’s regional role, as well as the 1923 international treaties that imposed restrictions on Turkey following the fall of the Ottoman Empire, notably with regard to its control of the Bosporus strait.

The recent earthquake in Turkey has highlighted the country’s need for support from the US and Europe – if it wishes to be respected as an influential player on the world stage. Erdogan’s attempt to curry favor with Vladimir Putin by purchasing a Russian S-400 anti-aircraft missile system, despite Turkey’s status as a core member of NATO, is a misguided maneuver that will not bring the country closer to its goals.

Additionally, the end of Erdogan’s efforts to pressure Bashar Assad into meeting certain conditions and signing a new version of the Adana Agreement of 1998, will be seen as a relief by the Syrian regime. The agreement that enabled the handover of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan to the Syrian regime, allowed Turkey to authorize its forces to enter Syrian territory if necessary.

Despite attempts to spread news of international leaders contacting the Assad regime, a sense of relief will not last long. In fact, the world, including powerful Arab nations, will increase its focus on Syria, albeit from a humanitarian perspective, rather than for the purpose of rehabilitating a regime that is aware it is at war with its own people and lacks autonomy in decision-making.

The Syrian regime has become a follower of the Islamic Republic of Iran. This development will likely be welcomed by Syrian Kurds, represented by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). The SDF’s ties to the US will strengthen, and they will have more freedom of action as a result of their relationship with the US and the reduction of Turkish pressure.

The devastating earthquake that struck southern Turkey and northern Syria was a tragic event that overshadowed all other news around the globe. But the resulting political realities, both in terms of Turkey, President Erdogan and its regional role, and the Syrian regime, cannot be ignored.

Human tragedy complicates Turkey’s agenda. Seen here is Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan visiting on February 8 displaced residents in Kahramanmaras, Turkey.(Photo Anadolu Agency/Anadolu)

The fate of the Syrian regime is now hostage to the destiny of the Iranian regime and the various regional issues it is associated with. Ultimately, the Western world will return to its interests in how to address Iran’s nuclear program, as well as the Iranian regime’s destructive role in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and elsewhere.

Attention will be paid to Iranian militias and their presence in southern Syria, and whether or not Iran will respond to the recent Israeli strike which targeted a key military site in Isfahan possibly linked to the production of ballistic missiles. Here, it is worth noting the growing possibility of US-Israeli coordination on Iran, and its activities outside its borders.

The devastating earthquake in Turkey and Syria has brought to the forefront, not only the human tragedy of the event, with an estimated 40,000 dead and tens of thousands of displaced people, but also the political ramifications.

The earthquake raises questions about Turkey’s role in the region and the world. President Erdogan had been hoping for 2023 to be a year of new beginnings for Turkey, with the removal of restrictions imposed by treaties signed a century ago. The success of this will depend on two things: the outcome of the May elections and Erdogan’s ability to face reality rather than clinging to illusions. It is up to Erdogan to be more realistic in his dealings with Greece, rather than using it as a campaign issue for internal voter mobilization.

 – Kheir Allah Kheir Allah






While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

The Israel Brief- 20-23 February 2023

The Israel Brief – 20 February 2023 Diplomatic breach at African Union. Mass protests across country. UNSC vote against Israel cancelled. Israeli MK’s in Kyiv.



The Israel Brief – 21 February 2023 First reading of judicial overhaul bill passes. UNSC issues rare statement of condemnation. Israel warns UK of threat to anti-Tehran journalists. Earthquake in Turkey and Syria felt in Israel.



The Israel Brief – 22 February 2023 Clashes in Nablus. Judicial reform updates. Clashes at Wailing Wall. Earthquake off Mediterranean coast.



The Israel Brief – 23 February 2023 IDF strike targets in response to rockets. Ambassador Erdan pens strong letter to NY Times Executive Editor. I2U2 Business forum. Oman opens airspace to Israeli airlines.





While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

COALITION PURSUES COLLISION

Creating schisms within Israel and Jewish communities abroad, a government on a warpath with its people

By David E. Kaplan

Opening the papers each morning solicits a groan followed by the moan. It’s crazy but this government is set to undo all the good work built over the years.

The shekel is sliding and money is exiting, and soon people may too! This is a country that traditionally encourages Aliya (immigration); but its new government’s policies may lead to Yerida (emigration) – of both people and purse. As reported in The Times of Israel, bank officials believe  some $4 billion moved out of Israel in recent weeks!

Headlines today in The Jerusalem Post February 22, 2023, reads:

 ‘As shekel slides, PM rejects call for gov’t oversight on interest rates”, and underneath in even bigger font and in bold, a warning that “Judicial change threatens minority rights”.

I could have taken the news headlines any day of the week for the last seven weeks, and all would have been as disquieting. What makes it even more distressing is that it is all of our own making. For a country priding itself on being SMART, this period will go down as STUPID! Does this government want to be responsible for Israel’s proud image of Start-up Nation to turn to Wind-down Nation?

Seemingly oblivious to the warning signs or obvious dangers, Netanyahu’s coalition purposely pursues collision.

Talking Heads. Opposition Yair Lapid (l) has proposed that President Isaac Herzog (r)  set up a commission to examine the matter of judicial reform. (photo OLIVIER FITOUSSI/FLASH90)
 
 

And in that it has been worryingly successful:

  • It collided with the country’s State President, Isaac Herzog,  who made a reasoned desperate appeal to take time out and pause the process for dialogue and compromise. The President’s warning of “a powder keg about to explode” solicited from the Justice Minister, “I won’t stop for a minute.”
  • It collided with the BANKERS that have warned Finance Minister Smotrich that judicial shakeup is causing economic fallout. Reported on Channel 12, Uri Levin, the CEO of Israel Discount Bank, is said to have expressed at a meeting that “The shekel is growing weaker, Israel’s risk factor is rising and our stock exchange is doing worse than others around the world.” Levin’s concerns were reportedly supported by other top bankers with another participant reportedly saying that  “money is leaving Israel at a rate ten times higher than usual.” And what was the reaction? Smotrich reportedly dismissed the warnings and accused the bankers of having double standards. This is not normal; this is lunacy.
  • It collided with Israel’s Attorney General, Gali Baharav-Miara, who has ordered the Prime Minister to not get involved in the controversial overhaul of the country’s  judiciary due to a conflict of interest stemming from his ongoing corruption trials. So the PM lets his coalition cohorts bulldozer the process along and he pretends mum because “I can’t get involved.”
  • It collided with Israeli major retailers. Over 50 CEOs of major retail chains and companies in Israel called for a compromise amid concerns over the government’s proposed changes to the judicial system.
  • It collided with over 460 ex-Shin Bet agents urging Likud agriculture minister Avi Dichter warning that the proposed legislation is a ‘coup’ against democracy. Among the signatories were three other past directors of the organization – Carmi Gillon, Ami Ayalon, and Yuval Diskin. They wrote: “We turn to you and ask — do not lend your hand to moves that threaten the foundations of the democratic regime, the unity of the people, and national resilience.”
Overall, Dichter Supports Overhaul. Minister Avi Dichter ignores letter signed by hundreds of former Shin Bet security service agents urging the former chief of the agency to not back the government’s plan for a drastic overhaul of the judiciary, warning it will threaten the foundations of Israel’s democracy.
  • it collided with seven Israeli Nobel laureates who warn that scientific excellence can only thrive in democratic nations with full freedom. “This isn’t a small change,”  expressed Nobel Prize laureate for Economics  Kahneman in an interview. “It’s a huge revolution…. that changes the nature of the country from a working democracy to something that is not a democracy, that is pretending to be a democracy.”
  • it collided with its overseas allies including US President Biden who in a statement to The New York Times, Biden said, “The genius of American democracy and Israeli democracy is that they are both built on strong institutions, on checks and balances, on an independent judiciary.” Building consensus for fundamental changes, he cautioned, is “important to ensure that the people buy into them so they can be sustained.”
  • It collided with one of the most vociferous  supporters of Israel abroad, the eminent jurist, Prof. Alan Dershovitz who says he’s been a student of Israel’s Supreme Court for over half a century and that it is key to the Jewish state’s battle against propagandists claiming it is not a democracy. He warns that the institution “should be kept out of the realm of partisan politics.”
  • It collided with major Diaspora philanthropists who warn that judicial overhaul threatens Israeli democracy. Fifteen leading donors and charities, including Birthright’s Charles Bronfman, say they are “deeply concerned’ by government’s plans and strongly urge dialogue.”
Urging Dialogue. Charles Bronfman seen here speaking at a Taglit-Birthright event is among 15 major donors and charitable foundations, urging PM Netanyahu to enter into a dialogue on the proposed judicial reforms recommended by President Isaac Herzog.
  •  It collided with Jewish leadership in the USA. Departing from the tradition of reticence on Israeli politics, the Jewish Federations of North America  – one of the largest and most prominent Jewish institutions in North America  – warned the Israeli Prime Minister against his government’s plan to legislate an “override clause” that would allow a 61-seat Knesset majority to overrule Supreme Court decisions. “Such a dramatic change to the Israeli system of governance will have far-reaching consequences in North America, both within the Jewish community and in the broader society,” the group said.
  • it collided with  much of the people of Israel who are taking to the streets in ever increasing numbers to protest not because they lost an election but because they fear losing democracy. One marcher’s placard summed up the sentiment:

For Sale: Democracy. Model: 1948. No brakes

Hi-Teck in Hi-Gear against Government. Workers from the tech sector protest against the government’s planned judicial overhaul. The signs say, ‘No freedom, no high tech,’ and ‘Tech workers protest.’ Tel Aviv, February 7,

Although the legislative process is well on its hasty way, it is still not too late to seek dialogue and reach a compromise to prevent an unnecessary and irreparable rapture of Israeli society. As we approach Independence Day in April and are reminded of the value of solidarity and wise leadership over 75 tough and turbulent years, let us be guided by our State President who has suggested not a halt but a pause to find a judicial compromise.

Ridicule rather than Respond. This government unwisely choses to ridicule rather than respond to these mass protests.
 

Is that too much to ask when one considers what is at stake?

I am reminded of the Prime Minister’s superb book ‘A PLACE AMONGST THE NATIONS’, where Israel – against all the odds – stupendously succeeded in this quest.

It would be a shame to lose it in the heart of our people!



Model Behaviour. Displaying their commitment to Zionism and the State of Israel, protestors against the government’s judicial overhaul carry while marching in Tel Aviv, a huge model roll-out of Israel’s 1948 Declaration of Independence. (Photo: Tomer Neuberg, Flash 90)





While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

IT’S A LONG AND WINDING ROAD

The bumpy path of building relations between Africa and Israel

By Jonathan Feldstein

I just returned home to Israel after an extraordinary 10-day trip in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, a massive country in central Africa. I had always wanted to visit Africa but until several months ago, Congo was not on my top ten list, or even on my radar at all.  To give you an idea of its size, it covers a land area larger than Spain, France, Germany, Sweden, and Norway combined.

I visited in the context of my work as President of the Genesis 123 Foundation which builds bridges between Jews and Christians and Christians with Israel in ways that are new, unique, and meaningful. Most Israeli Jews like me who engage in building bridges between Jews and Christians do so in North America, mostly due to the commonality of language and Judeo-Christian culture.

Meeting the Media. The writer speaking at a press conference following a meeting with Modeste Bahati Lukwebo, the President of the Congolese Senate.

Part of our outreach is however directed south. Through managing an incredible WhatsApp group of Christians throughout Africa, ‘Africa Praying for Israel’, I have built strong relationships and deep friendships. I have experienced genuine love and support for Israel and the Jewish people, often from people for whom I am the first Jew they have ever met, albeit in most cases virtually.

Congo is unique.  It’s the second largest country in  Africa in size, the fourth largest in terms of population, and it’s 90% Christian.  As a Christian nation whose president, Félix Tshisekedi, is both a devout Christian and ardent Zionist, support and love for Israel is palpable from the top down. It is why I visited when I did.  President Tshisekedi served as head of the African Union where he advocated for Israel to return to the AU as an observer, meeting fierce resistance from Islamic and antisemitic countries.

My visit took place a week before the AU vote on Israel’s status, hosted by Congo Bless Israel.  We were received by the Senate President, and dozens of governmental, ministerial, religious, and business leaders. Throughout the trip, everywhere I went, I experienced overwhelming love and support for Israel and the Jewish people. 

Our purpose was to widen and deepen relationships, support President Tshisekedi and the other Congolese and African leaders supporting Israel, and pray and advocate for Israel in the AU, raising Congo as an example not just for Africa but the world.

Hands-on Diplomacy. The writer being introduced to Modeste Bahati Lukwebo, the President of the Congolese Senate.

It is not to be taken for granted that throughout my visit, I walked openly as an Orthodox Jew everywhere. It is common when traveling in (many) parts of the world where Jews are not as welcome, or where it is outright dangerous, for Jewish men to hide their identity by covering up their kippah (Jewish skullcap) with a baseball hat, and removing or hiding other religious symbols. That’s hard for non-Jews who love Israel to understand. Throughout Kinshasa, complete strangers came up to me multiple times, greeting me with “Shalom,” telling me how they love Israel and asking to take a selfie. Amazingly, people sell Israeli flags on the street alongside the Congolese flag. It is something I had never previously experienced and it wouldn’t be happening if the love wasn’t sincere and that it was not good for  business. Afterall, people would not pay money for a flag unless there was some love for that country.

Israel and the Jewish people have a long history in Africa from Abraham, Joseph, Jacob, and Solomon, to more recent expressions of support for meaningful relations from Theodor Herzl, Golda Meir, and massive amounts of Israeli support for many of the newly independent nations in Africa, emerging from colonialism within years of Israel’s declaring independence.

Africa for Israel. Prayer for Israel at a mega church in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

It was this passage of Theodore Herzl, the father of political Zionism, that so later inspired Golda Meir to emerged as the builder of bridges between Africa and Israel:

There is still one other question arising out of the disaster of nations which remains unsolved to this day, and whose profound tragedy, only a Jew can comprehend. This is the African question. Just call to mind all those terrible episodes of the slave trade, of human beings who, merely because they were black, were stolen like cattle, taken prisoner, captured and sold. Their children grew up in strange lands, the objects of contempt and hostility because their complexions were different. I am not ashamed to say, that once I have witnessed the redemption of the Jews, my people, I wish also to assist in the redemption of the Africans.”

Foundations were long ago established, and despite rocky interludes, the recent establishment of diplomatic relationships with Morocco, Chad, and Sudan are welcome developments.

Many Congolese believe not only that Israel has an important role to play in Congo and that Congo needs and wants to have an expansive relationship with Israel, but also that part of the reason Congo is “cursed” as a poor and largely undeveloped nation, rests on Congo breaking relations with Israel following Arab League pressure in the 1970s. 

On one hand, Congo is so big and abundant with resources, yet these are largely undeveloped, the lack of basic infrastructure is jarring, and there are provinces with millions having virtually no fresh water or electricity. Poverty is widespread. People refer to “Rich Congo, Poor Congolese.” Nevertheless, Congo is a beautiful, colorful, and lively nation. There’s a great sense of national pride evident by flags being sold on street corners (not just around Independence Day), to singing joyful songs about their country as part of church worship services.

From Jerusalem to Kinshasa. The writer outreaching in Africa attending a press conference.

Congo is an important leader in Africa, and ally of Israel.  There’s a sense that the time is ripe for relations to blossom. People confided in me that the heavy presence of Chinese, Indians, Pakistanis, and Lebanese in their country were more there to reap from Congo’s mineral wealth than to invest.  Israel on the other hand, brings resources that will build Congo, not rape it. Israel would be well served to reopen its embassy in Kinshasa, where one in five Congolese live.

During my visit, as part of our wider “Africa Praying for Israel” initiative, I hosted a virtual Africa-wide prayer event, regarding Israel’s status as an AU observer member. Dozens participated from nations throughout Africa, offering fervent prayers each from their local perspective and in several languages reflecting their former western colonizers.

Much of the prayers focused on blessing Israel and being blessed.  Relating to the diplomatic vote at the AU, one pastor noted that  “Blessings come from blessing Israel” and referred to Genesis 12:3 as “God’s foreign policy statement.” 

Body & Soul. A woman showing devine support for Israel with her body, mind and spirit.

Participants from South Africa and Nigeria expressed sadness and repented from their nations’ taking the lead in opposing Israel. They prayed for God to forgive their leaders, for not understanding the truth, for wisdom for African leadership and governments, and to remove the stain of those that label Israel an Apartheid state.

Since the leadership of Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi, Israel’s status in the AU has been a battle. It is a battle that persists. At the upcoming AU conference in February, they are set to vote on a wide agenda of items including Israel’s status. Prayers are encouraged and can be sent to Gen123Fdn@gmail.com to be brought to the Western Wall as well.

EPILOGUE FROM THE EDITOR

David E. Kaplan writes:

It was not to be. This article was written only days before the AU conference opened on the 18 February in Addis Abiba. Regrettably, even with all the prayers for good, evil prevailed when due to the grotesque opposition of South Africa and Algeria to Israel’s presence, the  Jewish state’s delegation of observers were physically expelled from the opening ceremony.

Jews again are being thrown out! We have seen this before; now in Africa! Shame!

A video shows the Israeli delegation, led by the Deputy Director General for Africa at the Foreign Ministry, Sharon Bar-Li, unhappily leaving the conference hall after several minutes of agitated discussion. Responding to the incident, Israel’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Lior Hayat said:

 Israel takes seriously the incident in which the Congresswoman for Africa, Ambassador Sharon Bar-Li, was removed from the African Union hall despite her access badge accredited observer status. It is sad to see the African Union being taken hostage by a small number of extremist countries such as Algeria and South Africa, driven by hatred and controlled by Iran.”

The ambassador added:

We ask African countries to oppose these actions that damage the organization of the African Union itself and the entire continent.”

When Israel was granted observer status in 2021, it was said at the time that the new status could enable Israel and the AU to forge stronger cooperation on various aspects, including the fight against the coronavirus and the prevention “of the spread of extremist terrorism” on the African continent. What happened may not be good for Israel, but for sure, it is far less good for Africa. There is so much that Israel can contribute to Africa. In the spirit of Herzl and Golda, Israeli is ready and willing as it showed being one of the first delegations to assist in the devastating earthquake in Turkey, a country too that has had a rocky relationship with Israel in recent years.

What shabbily occurred now  at the AU conference in Ethiopia is a harsh reminder why Israel has rescued most of the Jewish community there and brought them safely “home” – to Israel.

When it comes to building bridges between Africa and Israel, it appears a lot more needs to be done – including, in the words of Jonathan Feldstein – a lot more praying!


Israeli diplomat booted out from African Union summit in Ethiopia




About the writer:

Jonathan Feldstein ­­­­- President of the US based non-profit Genesis123 Foundation whose mission is to build bridges between Jews and Christians – is a freelance writer whose articles appear in The Jerusalem Post, Times of Israel, Townhall, NorthJersey.com, Algemeiner Jornal, The Jewish Press, major Christian websites and more.





While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

Lay of the Land Weekly Newsletter- 19 February 2023

Unveiling the contours and contrasts of an ever-changing Middle East landscape Reliable reportage and insightful commentary on the Middle East by seasoned journalists from the region and beyond

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The Israel Brief

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Articles

(1)

PROUDLY PART OF ‘THE MADDING CROWD’

Israel at critical crossroad after President Herzog addresses nation. Which way will it go?

By David E. Kaplan

Man of the Moment. Breaking protocol, President Isaac Herzog addresses the nation warning of dangers from within.

With ever widening protests against government’s hasty judicial overhaul – now into its 7th week – is that ancient thread that binds Israel’s unique social fabric unwinding? Breaking with presidential protocol, the State President intervenes into political arena where no president dared before. What impact will Isaac Herzog have?

PROUDLY PART OF ‘THE MADDING CROWD’

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(2)

AN OLIVE BRANCH EXTENDED

A look at Operation Olive Branch – Israel’s Search and Rescue Efforts in the aftermath of the Turkey-Syria Earthquake

By Rolene Marks

Israel to the Rescue. Israeli and Turkish flags flying alongside IDF search & rescue teams in Kahramanmaraş, Turkey.

As soon as news broke of the earthquake’s devastation in Turkey and Syria, Israel offered help and immediately set in motion sending one of the first and one of the largest and experienced delegations to help in Turkey. Why when the call goes out – even sometimes when it does not – Israel is the first to respond?

AN OLIVE BRANCH EXTENDED

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(3)

HOW DID THE HOLOCAUST BYPASS FINLAND?

The big story of a small Nordic Jewish community

By Rony Smolar

Stranger than Fiction. Jews in Finnish Army allied with Nazi Germany, outside makeshift synagogue during WW II.

How did it happen that whenever and wherever Nazi Germany came across Jews, they mass murdered them but not in Finland? A surprising twist in this Scandinavian saga,  Rony Smolar, Chairman of the Helsinki Jewish Congregation provides surprising answers and insights.

HOW DID THE HOLOCAUST BYPASS FINLAND?

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LOTL Cofounders David E. Kaplan (Editor), Rolene Marks and Yair Chelouche

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While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

PROUDLY PART OF ‘THE MADDING CROWD’

Israel at critical crossroad after President Herzog addresses nation. Which way will it go?

By David E. Kaplan

“What are you doing this Saturday night?”

For many Israelis today the answer is  simple and obvious.

It’s a long time since so many thousands upon thousands of Israelis collectively know in advance how they are going to spend their Saturday nights. Whether in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Beersheba, Haifa or my home city of Kfar Saba, it will not be inside visiting friends or at restaurants or pubs but outside to city crossroads screaming “de-mo-cra-tia” (democracy) and “busha” (shame), while holding aloft Israeli flags.  These ‘crossroads’ are a metaphor of where the country is today – at a crossroad. Anxious about the future character of their country as it threatens to mutate into something dreaded, people of all ages in chilly weather will stand for hours on the soles of their feet for the soul of their country.

Proudly Zionist. To some in the rightwing media that have tried to characterize the protestors as “post-Zionist”, this photo exposes the lie. Proudly holding aloft Israeli flags, these protestors proclaim themselves not “post” but present and passionate Zionists.

I am proud to be one of them!

People ask:

What is the point of protesting?”

What do you hope to achieve?”

They are just going to ignore and proceed anyway. Why bother?”

Well, for one thing, a lot of important folk have joined in “bothering”.

These include judges and jurists, Israeli generals and former security chiefs, bankers and titans in hi-tech, leaders of Israel’s opposition parties joined by world leaders like the presidents of the US and France. All have one thing in common – all have Israel’s interests at heart. They can’t all be “misguided” as I have been called.

Democracy under Threat. The “whole world is watching” says a poster at a protest in Jerusalem against Israel’s planned judicial overhaul. (Leib Abrams/FLASH90)

On the contrary, more and more think the Prime Minister and his government are “misguided” in forcing the country down a dangerous road with a reckless driver behind the wheel. Whether reckless or proverbially carjacked with a gun to the head from coalition partners, the Prime Minister is seemingly disregarding all the warning signs, reminiscent of  one Marie-Antoinette, blinded to the reality outside the palace walls and arrogantly saying:

 “Let them eat cake

We know how that story ended!

And then, a NEWS FLASH – the State President from his residence in Jerusalem is going to address the nation.

When? We learn only hours away, at 8.00 that evening in what his office called “a special address to the nationin fateful days.”

“Fateful days” in Israel is war talk but we are not at war. Or maybe we are – at war with ourselves.

We feel we are in uncharted terrain. The situation must be beyond serious if the President, knowing he did not enjoy the approval of the Prime Minister or any in the coalition to so proceed, was still determined to do so. The state of the nation, Herzog felt, demanded he intervene. This was largely unprecedented in Israeli history for a president to address the nation warning the people not against a foreign danger but a danger from within and from the highest echelons of power – the Prime Minister and his coalition government!

People across Israel sat glued to their TV’s when President Herzog walked solemnly up to the podium.

Man of the Moment. Breaking with presidential protocol, a solemn and worried Israeli President, Isaac Herzog, addresses the nation warning of dangers from within.
 

I reflected as he began to speak that this was a far cry when on the 17 March 1949, Chaim Weizmann was sworn in as Israel’s first president. Recognising that his coattails were somewhat clipped by Ben Gurion and that his position was largely ceremonial, he was heard to cynically quip:

 “The only place they will allow me to poke my nose into is my handkerchief.”

Breaking the protocol of the presidency, Isaac Herzog was undaunted to ‘poke his nose’ into current Israel’s affairs of state, On the 12 February 2023, Israel’s State Presidency was as far removed as ‘ceremonial’ as its ever been in its history of 74 years.

In his primetime address to the nation, the President made a passionate appeal to the government less to halt – noting that “change” and “reform” were legitimate pursuits – but more to suspend its hurried legislative process to pave the way for negotiations with the opposition on a broad compromise.

With deepening rifts between right and left, secular and devout, the President cautioned:

I feel, we all feel, that we are a moment before a confrontation, even a violent confrontation…….The powder keg is about to explode, and brothers are about to raise their hands against brothers.”

The President in his heartfelt address brought the full weight of his office in his appeal to a government hellbent on bulldozing its judicial overhaul and imposing it on a highly polarized Israeli society. In urging a pause to the judicial shakeup, the President  proposed a 5-point plan.

The immediate reaction from the government were not encouraging. Justice Minister Yariv Levin – who is the Prime Minister’s point man to driving this judicial overhaul – sounded more like the proverbial Marie-Antoinette when he shrugged off the President’s appeal on Channel 13, saying the legislation would not be halted:

 “even for a minute.”

Herzog reiterated his calls to calm public discourse around his proposal.

Where is this leading?

Well, if the government was ignoring its State President, not so the former  prime minister, Yair Lapid, who called for a ‘Presidential Committee’ on the government’s proposed judicial “reforms” that should begin with a 60-day freeze on all legislation connected with it. Addressing the Knesset, Lapid said:

Sixty days is the blink of an eye in the life of a democracy,” and called for a “proper process” for how such a committee would work. “We waited 74 years. Nothing will happen if it takes another few weeks, during which we will save the nation of Israel from a terrible crisis.”

Also positively responding to the President’s call to save the nation from “a terrible crisis” were 400 ex-senior security officials, including former heads of the police, Shin Bet and Mossad, who signed a letter urging President Isaac Herzog not to agree to any laws that contradict Israel’s core democratic values as part of his efforts to mediate a compromise. The letter reiterated the President’s concern that the proposed legislative steps would “constitute a judicial revolution that will cause damage for generations to come.”

Signatories to the letter of appeal include former Shin Bet chief Nadav Argaman; former Mossad directors Tamir Pardo and Danny Yatom; ex-police commissioner Shlomo Aharonishki and former national security adviser Uzi Arad.

Is this government even ready to listen?

If not, they will probably also ignore the full page  personal appeal  appearing in Israeli newspapers addressed to the President Isaac Herzog by seven Jewish Nobel Laureates – six of whom are Israeli. They are Prof. Aaron Ciechanover(2004 Chemistry), Prof. Avram Hershko (2004 Chemistry), Prof. Daniel Kahnerman (2002 Economics), Prof. Roger Kornberg (2006 Chemistry), Prof Michael Levitt (2013 Chemistry), Prof. Aryeh Warshel  (2013 Chemistry) and Prof. Ada Yonath (2009 Chemistry). Their appeal is based on the negative impact Netanyahu’s government’s proposed legal “reform” will have on scientific research and higher education. They write:

 “We call on the President of the State of Israel to take a clear stance against the proposed changes, on the Prime Minister to return to the positions he himself advocated until recently, and on the members of the Knesset to hear our voice and halt the proposed changes to the legal system.”

How Israel  – “The Startup-Nation” – prides itself on being such a small country with so many Nobel laureates but when the time arises that these same prized laureates warn the country, this government  ignores them because, they believe they “know better.”

City Square Packed in Protest. “We are the only democracy in the Middle East, and we are not going to allow that to change,” said former Minister of Defence Benny Gantz in his address at the demonstration in Kfar-Saba,18 February attended by the writer.

These are troubling times if every Saturday night in the calendar is blocked off to go protest. After 7 consecutive weekends of protest, at the latest demonstration in Kfar Saba  – addressed by the former Deputy Prime Minister and former Minister of Defense Benny Gantz – it was announced that almost a quarter million Israelis were joining in the demonstrations at over 60 sites across Israel. This includes the almost 135,000 people in Tel Aviv who marched from Dizengoff Center to Kaplan Street.

Where to next?

The setting reminds me of two great medieval armies standing ready on a European battlefield, only a brief gallop apart.

To avoid an impeding societal clash, we hope the wise appeal of the President will prevail in time.

Is Israel unraveling? There are enough people who love it to ensure it doesn’t. In the meantime, the protesters will continue and I will be among them as a proud Zionist.





While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

HOW DID THE HOLOCAUST BYPASS FINLAND?

The big story of a small Nordic Jewish community

By Rony Smolar

Lay of the Land has over the months published many articles on the systematic mass murder of the Jews in Eastern Europe, particularly exposing the wide collaboration of the local populations of many of these countries and the coverup of their governments today. When one learns that the Jewish community of Lithuania was virtually wiped out wile at the most, there were only 1000 German soldiers at any one-time during WWII in this Baltic republic, one then begins to question:

Who helped the Nazis do all the killing?

A surprising twist  in the Scandinavian tale is the experience of the Jews of Finland, a country that participated in WWII initially in a defensive war against the Soviet Union, followed by another battle against the Soviet Union acting in concert with Nazi Germany and then finally fighting alongside the Allies against Germany.

So how the Jews in this Nordic state escaped the fate of their co-religionists elsewhere in all of Europe, Rony Smolar, Chairman of the Helsinki Jewish Congregation and Central Council of the Jewish Communities in Finland provides surprising answers and insights.

David E. Kaplan, Editor – Lay of the Land

+++++++++++

What you may be surprised to learn is that during 1941-1944, the comradeship-in-arms between Finland and Germany led to an almost surreal situation, such as when German soldiers solemnly attended prayer services in a Finnish synagogue on the front line, just some miles from the battles. There they sat and listened when the Jewish soldiers of Finland read their prayers and portions of the Bible from the Torah scrolls that were donated by the Helsinki Jewish congregation. The German soldiers that were sent to the eastern front to reinforce the Finnish positions never interfered with the sermons.

Jewish soldiers of the Finnish Army, who were allied with Nazi Germany, outside the makeshift synagogue near the front lines during World War II.

I learned this from my late father, Isaac  – Sholka‖ Smolar, who founded this unique synagogue called  – ‘Sholkas shul’, almost as a challenge to the German soldiers.

My father also told me that the Jewish soldiers in the synagogue were confused, even afraid, when they saw German soldiers sitting shoulder to shoulder with praying Jewish men. The Jewish worshipers noticed that some of the Germans even showed a certain respect for the service.

This surprising experience took place while elsewhere in Europe, Jews were persecuted, as synagogues were burned and desecrated. However, this peculiar paradox  – of Jewish soldiers in the Finnish army fighting alongside German soldiers against a common enemy – the Russians, did not stop here.

Where else in wartime Europe did German soldiers, whose own country had sworn to free Europe from all Jews, would salute Jewish officers or that Jewish medical officers would treat German SS-men whose lives were literally placed in Jewish hands? On one occasion, a Jewish major in the Finnish medical corps – risking his own life and under heavy enemy fire – managed to transfer a whole German field hospital to a safer location!

Major Leo Skurnik, a Jewish medical officer (second row, second from right), was awarded an Iron Cross. In September 1941, in the face of heavy Soviet shelling, Skurnik organised the evacuation of a field hospital on the Finnish-Russian border, saving the lives of more than 600 men, including members of the SS.

Where else did it happen that German army officers awarded Jews the Iron Cross for bravery that they defiantly  declined to accept?

The field synagogue  – Sholka ́s shul‖ – stood out as a beacon literally reflecting the wartime attitude of the Finnish authorities towards its small Jewish population of some 2,000 souls. While priests provided important counseling on the battlefield and were supplied with portable altars and pulpits for prayer services,  Jews, due to their small numbers, had to provide for their own. The military authorities showed understanding toward the religious needs of Jewish soldiers, and whenever possible, they were granted leave on religious holidays and were permitted to set up and pray in their field synagogues.

A field synagogue in Karelia, Eastern Finland, during the Second World War

The synagogue functioned as a meeting place for the Jewish soldiers. They would travel over long distances on skis and on horseback for the Sabbath prayers. Many wanted to meet friends; and so the synagogue became a place where they could share experiences and enjoy traditional food from Jewish delicatessens sent from home.

The attitude of the German army command toward the Jews and the synagogue in Finland was exceptional. They considered the field synagogue to be an internal Finnish affair, something that demanded respect and a matter in which they had no right to interfere. Not even the German diplomatic corps, or military staff in Finland, tried to have the synagogue closed.

The Jewish soldiers in the Finnish army certainly did not feel comfortable fighting alongside the Germans, but some documents show that the Germans also found it extremely difficult to believe that they would be fighting side-by-side with Jewish soldiers in the Finnish war. Many had never met a Jew and were heavily influenced by Nazi propaganda.

The fact that many of the Jewish soldiers spoke Yiddish, a language that resembles German, helped them to communicate, though this caused friction in some situations between the Jewish and non-Jewish Finnish soldiers that could not find a common language with the Germans.

The four Blankett brothers were part of several hundred Jewish soldiers in the Finnish army during World War II.

When the Winter War broke out in November 1939, the small Jewish community was fully prepared to offer their sons in the defense of Finland.

One hundred ten Jewish men participated in the war, fifteen of whom were killed in action. The Winter War was, for Finnish Jews, considered to be a war of independence, where it could be said that Jews had ultimately fought for the  the right to be called Finns. Two hundred sixty-seven men participated in the Continuation War of 1941-1944, in addition to the many Jewish women who served in the Finnish women’s auxiliary defense services, called Lotta Svärd‖, and other civilian works. Eight Jewish men were killed in that war.

From the Jewish perspective, the situation during the Continuation War was unique. The Jewish soldiers of Finland were fighting on the same side as Germany, a country that sought the extermination of Jews in Europe. From the Jewish soldiers’ perspective, it was strange for them to fight their Russian brothers of the same faith who were amongst the enemy forces. Finnish Jews have their roots deep in Russia; in some cases, cousin fought a cousin and uncle fought his nephew.

Jewish soldiers fulfilled their duties concerned and uncertain about their future. Afterall, Jews thought differently from the majority of the Finnish population, who believed that if Germany lost the war, Finland would also lose; but if the Germans were to win, so would Finland. Regardless of whether the Soviet Union or Germany won the war, the Jews saw themselves as always being on the losing side. It is important to stress that the fear of Germany was overshadowed by a passion to preserve Finnish independence and retake the lands taken by Stalin in the Winter War.

However, FEAR dogged the footsteps of Jewish soldiers as they went about their duties. As reports of the horrible fates of Jews in other parts of Europe spread, doubts entered their minds. They wondered would they and their families meet a similar fate? There were incidents of threats aimed at the Jewish soldiers, especially in the far northern sector of the battles in the Finnish Lapland, where an SS northern division operated. The fears were sometimes exaggerated, though not unfounded.

Finnish Jews were also in a difficult position in the eyes of the Jewish refugees, who in the late 1930s had escaped from Germany, Austria, and Czechoslovakia. They questioned how it was that Jews could serve defending Finland alongside Germans? Being allied with Germany was a major moral question that every Jewish soldier would face for years to come.

After the war it was uneasy for Finnish Jews when questions were asked from Jews from other parts of the world.

  • How was it possible that Finnish Jews fought side by side with German soldiers?
  • Didn’t Finnish Jews know what was happening in the Third Reich and Nazi occupied areas?
  • Hadn’t anyone told them that the annihilation of the Jews in Europe was in full speed?
  • Why were Jewish soldiers fighting against the Soviet Union knowing that this could lengthen Hitler’s time in power?
  • Were Finland’s Jews traitors?

The reputation of Jewish soldiers as Germany’s allies was questioned years later at the Congress of World Jewish War Veterans in Jerusalem. Veterans from other countries refused to have anything to do with the representatives from Finland.

Needless to say, the full wartime picture needed urgent enlightening. The big question remained:

Could Finland’s Jewish men have refused to participate alongside Germany during the Continuation War?

The answer is definitely no. That would have been a dereliction of duty from a Finnish  perspective and would have risked the lives of all Jews in Finland.

Veteran Jewish soldiers later explained their actions by saying that Finland was fighting its own, separate war against its eastern neighbor, an enemy which it shared with Germany, and that Jewish soldiers defended neither Germany’s interests nor the expansion of Nazi Germany’s rule. Like other Finns, they fought for the independence of Finland.

It was only after the war ended that reports began to circulate about demands by Nazi Germany for the liquidation of the Jewish community in Finland. The fate of the Jews in Finland could have been similar to that of the Jews of Hungary, Norway, or Estonia, since they were also included in the Wannsee Protocol of January 1942, known as Endlösung, the Final Solution, that listed 11 million Jews of Europe that were to be destroyed by the Nazi regime. The document listed the 2,300 Finnish Jews, one of the smallest communities. Did this small number save the Jews of Finland? That connection has not been proven. In other words, Finland’s Jews did not have numbers to warrant German attention.

Germany placed greater weight on maintaining a good working relationship with Finland than on pursuing anti-Jewish initiatives that would have risked disrupting the military collaboration by provoking public and official Finnish opposition. Furthermore, the Nazi propaganda trumpeting allegations of Jewish economic influence would have had little resonance in wartime Finland, where Jews were mostly involved in small businesses having little effect on the Finnish economy.

Also, while Finland was not immune to antisemitism, the sentiment was never widespread or violent.

It is worth mentioning that during World War II, Finnish attitudes toward minorities in general, and Jews in particular, stemmed from the Nazi ideology identifying Jews with Bolshevists. A number of Soviet leaders and well-known Bolsheviks were Jews. This fact easily led people to conclude that when a person is Jew, he must be a Bolshevik – and an enemy of Finland. In the light of Nazi Germany’s race doctrine, Finland and the Scandinavian countries were viewed as members of the superior, northern race. The achievements of Finland’s Winter War were so impressive that the Germans felt inclined to elevate the Finns racially to almost Germanic in comparison.

In certain circles in Finland, this raised questionable interest.

An example of this took place in a classroom in Helsinki when a teacher, during a biology class, called a Jewish student to the front of the class. He measured his skull to demonstrate that the boy belonged to an inferior race. The Jews of Finland were on edge when Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler came to visit just half a year after the crucial Wannsee Conference. Then, Prime Minister of Finland Johan  Rangell revealed after the war that his German guest had asked him about the question of the Jews in Finland, to which he replied

similar to those of King Christian X of Denmark, “Wir haben keine Judenfrage‖”, meaning:

We don’t have any Jewish question.”

Documents show that this topic was dropped and never raised again, even though there is evidence that Himmler was interested in the Jews of Finland. In an unguarded moment during Himmler’s visit, the Finnish Army’s intelligence managed to photograph the documents in the Nazi leader’s briefcase. In addition to containing military plans, as expected, it also included a copy of the Wannsee Conference ́s protocols that listed the number of Finnish Jews with their names and addresses.

In the archives, there is a transcript of the meeting between Himmler and his host, Marshal Mannerheim. It shows that the German guest tried to initiate discussion about the Jews. “Not even one single Jewish soldier will be taken from my army to be turned over to Germany. That cannot happen except over my dead body”, stated Mannerheim. It appears that Mannerheim’s resolute response made an overpowering impression on Himmler. There is evidence that Hitler was reportedly awed by Mannerheim as well. Hitler flew to Finland in June 1942 to congratulate Mannerheim on his seventy-fifth birthday. Whatever the words spoken on that occasion, Mannerheim’s part in shielding Finland’s Jews from Germany is widely acknowledged.

Jews in Helsinki lived in fear, even though they continued to enjoy full civil rights throughout the war. Democracy and rule of law prevailed in the country and anti-Jewish laws were non-existent. Many secretly followed the movements of German troops in the streets of Helsinki with horror. Swastika banners were everywhere. Jews kept their distance from German soldiers and avoided all kinds of contact with them.

The synagogue of Helsinki in 1908. (Photo by IK Inha)

In other parts of Finland as well, Jews avoided German soldiers. In a restaurant in the city of Turku, a few drunken German soldiers demanded that a Jewish man leave the premises or they would rearrange his nose. The manager of the restaurant advised his Jewish customer to leave, and so he did.

There was also an incident where a famous Jewish soprano who in a concert for German troops, turned down a request by the audience to sing the Horst Wessel Song, the song that had become the Nazi Party anthem and Germany’s official co-national anthem from 1933 to 1945. This was an act of bravery.

One of the two synagogues in Finland, Turku Synagogue in the city of Turku – the oldest city in Finland – was completed in 1912.

During the war, there were about 150 Jewish refugees in Finland, mainly from Germany and Austria. Entrance had been rather easy, for Finland had existing agreements with Germany and Austria for traveling without a visa. Due to possible repercussions resulting from joint Finnish-German relations and for fear of incidents, officials (especially the Interior Ministry of Finland and its subordinate, the feared state police, Valpo), took care to keep the Jewish refugees away from Helsinki. The authorities did not want the German soldiers to come face-to-face with any Jewish refugees in the capital, so they were transferred to small villages to fend for themselves.

Language difficulties and lack of funds meant that refugees faced a very difficult situation in their isolation. In cooperation with the authorities, Jewish congregations around Finland came to their aid and they were provided with funds, employment and clothing. For the Jewish holidays; they also received traditional provisions, religious books and so on.

A Finnish Jewish businessman by the name of Abraham Stiller (the brother of the famous film producer from the 1920s and 1930s, Mauritz Stiller, who made the Swede Greta Garbo a prominent movie star in Hollywood) became both a defender and a mouthpiece of his Jewish brethren. His humanitarian efforts were felt by Jewish prisoners of war (POWs) from the Red Army and even Muslim Tatars who were captured by Finland. Stiller visited most POW camps where Red Army Jews were imprisoned.

By the end of the war, Abraham Stiller had saved the lives of 150 Jews who had sought for refuge in Finland. In later years, he would become known as the “Schindler of Finland”.

Mauritz Stiller was a Swedish film director of Finnish Jewish origin, best known for discovering Greta Garbo and bringing her to America. His brother, Abraham Stiller saved the lives of 150 Jews who had sought for refuge in Finland. In later years, he would become known as the “Schindler of Finland”.

A dramatic turn took place in November 1942, when Finnish security personnel, operating in secrecy, handed eight foreign Jews into the hands of Gestapo in occupied Estonia, the southern neighbor of Finland. Press censorship could not stop the news of these deportations from reaching both Finnish Jews and the 150 refugees.

Abraham Stiller was one of the first people to receive a written message about impending deportations. Stiller was furious and made the information public. He contacted his good friend, then Minister Väinö Tanner, who in turn contacted other members of the government. This created a government crisis. In order to solve the crisis, Prime Minister Rangell had to give in to the pro-German Minister of Interiors ́ claims that those to be deported were spies and criminals. Members of the Finnish and Swedish press promoted public awareness of the deportations, and the changed atmosphere in Finland toward the end of 1942 helped to improve the situation for Jewish refugees.

Jews at the time were afraid that this small deportation might be part of a much larger one. Some were even convinced that the German cargo ships that frequently were in the port of Helsinki were ready to transport them out of Finland. In fact, the cargo ships were arriving frequently because the Germans brought in arms, ammunition, equipment, and food.

Fifty-eight years later, at the unveiling ceremony of a monument in the memory of these eight deportees, the Finnish Prime Minister asked for forgiveness from the Jewish community on behalf of Finland and Finnish people. It was “a moment of shame” in the country’s history, he said. The Church of Finland, which during the war had kept quiet about the fate of the Jews in Finland, asked for forgiveness.

Jews have been living in Finland for the past 150 years. Many of them had fled from Czarist Russia, avoiding the sons being conscripted into the Russian Army for up to 25 years. Both my grandfathers came to Finland before the Russian Revolution of 1917. The Jews of those times were observant, spoke only Russian and Yiddish, and were skilled mainly in manual work and in dealing with secondhand clothing.

One of the first tasks was to build prayer rooms close to their residences or workplaces. In 1906, they had collected money to build the main synagogue in Helsinki that still exists and is now a tourist attraction. Our forefathers founded burial societies, various social aid organizations, and the Sport Club Maccabi, the oldest (uninterrupted) existing Jewish sports club in the world. Then came the Yiddish theater groups, literature clubs, the Jewish choir, and many other cultural activities that are a large part of modern Jewish Finnish life.

Helsinki today with a kosher delicatessen. (photo credit: Matt Siegel )

Since Jews were granted full civil rights immediately after the independence of Finland in 1917, they have been an essential part of the Finnish society. Jews are active in politics; in culture; and in various professions, such as doctors, lawyers, engineers, and accountants. Today, there are only about 1,300 Jews in Finland, but the main congregation in Helsinki is able to provide all the services that the community requires.

In  multicultural Finland today, we see ourselves as Finns of Jewish faith. Outsiders – among them the prime minister of Finland – have described the Finnish Jews as “the soul of Finnish society”. What a striking description about a small community that has managed to survive and provide hope and guidance to newcomers!


Finnish Jews talk about fighting alongside Nazi Germany during WWII



About the Writer:

Born in Helsinki, Rony Smolar is an editor, news correspondent, author, lecturer and historian who has worked as a correspondent covering the Middle East for the Broadcasting Company of Finland as well as for Finnish newspapers. He has authored a number of books on Finland’s Jewish community and is currently working on a folklore history about Finnish Jewry. He also host a weekly radio program “Newsweek in Israel”. He is a past President of the Jewish congregation in Helsinki,  a past President of the Central Council of Jewish Communities in Finland and a past Vice-President of the European Jewish Congress.






While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

The Israel Brief- 13-16 February 2023

The Israel Brief – 13 February 2023 Protests against judicial reforms. Operation Olive Branch updates. Weekend of violence. Lawyer files against SARU for discriminating against TLV Hear.



The Israel Brief – 14 February 2023 Operation Olive Branch ends. Two terror attacks by 13 year olds. Former PM Bennett weighs in on judicial reforms. Direct flights to Turkey to resume Thursday. 



The Israel Brief – 15 February 2023 Foreign Ministers visit to Turkey. Palestinian Mission to UN write resolution for Security Council. Breakthrough in judicial reforms? Rare lemur escapes Ramat Gan Safari Park.



The Israel Brief – 16 February 2023 FM Cohen in Kyiv. Former Military and Security personnel object to judicial reforms. Medical teams return from Turkey. United Hatzalah launch medevac unit.






While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).