So they say theyre in charge
By Simon Rocker
The Jewish Chronicle, 12/05/2006
[underlines and highlighted quote below added by Radio Islam for sake of emphasis]
"As for ensuring that British Jews have access to government, the same person observed: 'Every prime minister seems to have his Jewish fellow, whispering in his ear. Some Jewish person will be close to the centre of power.' "Three years after it was set up, it is still not clear what the Jewish Leadership Council does, where it is going, or why its needed. Simon Rocker reports
The vultures may be circling over Prime Minister Tony Blair and Labours chief-fundraiser, Lord Levy, amid continuing parliamentary inquiries into whether Labour sold honours for cash. But next Monday, Blair will make what will possibly be his last appearance as prime minister at an Anglo-Jewish function when he attends the Jewish Care dinner, one of the premier events in the communitys fundraising calendar. His presence has guaranteed a lucrative return for the charity, of which Lord Levy is president, with 1,000 guests among them many of the communitys financial big hitters.
Ennobled in 1997, Michael Levy, the Prime Ministers special envoy to the Middle East, is a modern version of the old grandees, Anglo-Jews who rose to positions of national prominence but could bend an ear on behalf of their people. If there were a competition to find the Jewish communitys top mover and shaker, he would be a prime candidate. His only serious rivals would come from a relatively new Jewish body to which he, too, belongs the Jewish Leadership Council.
Ever since its creation in 2003, the JLC has been a source of expectation and apprehension in equal measure: expectation from those who want it to become the prime lay organisation directing communal affairs in years ahead, apprehension from those who fear it represents an over-centralised concentration of power in too few hands. But above all, its existence still prompts puzzled looks from many people who are unsure what it is really up to, and even many of its own members seem unclear about its exact role within the larger Jewish communal world.
Chaired by the president of the Board, Henry Grunwald QC, the JLC brings together 20 elected heads of synagogue movements, leaders of the main charities and a number of Jewish VIPs such as former Board president and veteran politician Lord Janner (see box). Reunited round the top table are most of the philanthropic power brokers who made the Joint Israel Appeal (now UJIA) the pre-eminent Jewish charity in the 1980s Lord Levy, Gerald Ronson and Sir Trevor Chinn.
Some communal activists see only a limited role for the JLC in the future, primarily as a talking-shop, sponsoring the occasional project such as its current pilot scheme to help charities cut overheads through greater collaboration. But others believe it is destined to become the communitys master organisation and main representative voice, even if that means superseding the Board of Deputies, viewed by many as beyond redemption.
The Board is a dinosaur, its not the future, one charity chief executive told the JC. A former communal professional predicted that the Board would be destroyed in five or 10 years. You cant have 18th-century institutions setting strategies for the 21st century.
But Grunwald insists he has not created a monster to ultimately devour the deputies.
A few still say that the JLC is a threat to the Board; they are wrong, he says, adding that the Boards role as the communitys sole democratic representative body is recognised by the JLC, which intends to play a broader, more strategic role in communal life.
That prospective role ought to become clearer later this year when the JLC, under its new director Jeremy Newmark, publishes a strategic plan. (Cynics might observe that the more Jewish organisations use words such as strategy, the more opaque they seem to become.) Not everyone, however, sees the need for it to bother.
I dont know much about the JLC other than it is a dining club for people who consider themselves very important, says one fund-raiser. I dont see its purpose. The Jewish community is multi-stranded; it is not unified enough to justify the need for a single body.
As for ensuring that British Jews have access to government, the same person observed: Every prime minister seems to have his Jewish fellow, whispering in his ear. Some Jewish person will be close to the centre of power. One JLC member, Sir Ronald Cohen, for example, is regarded as close to Chancellor Gordon Brown and Brown is an admirer of Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks. David Camerons campaign to be Tory leader was initially bankrolled by rising businessman Andrew Feldman.
Still, there are some who believe that the JLC is essential to strengthen British Jewrys political backbone in an unfriendly climate.
I feel the Jewish communities in this country and in Israel have never been under so much attack and pressure since the Second World War, says Brian Kerner, chair of the UJIA from 1994 to 1999.
The need for a body able to orchestrate British Jewrys political and public relations became apparent to Kerner following the outbreak of the second intifada in September 2000, with its disastrous impact on Israels image. The day after the intifada began, some 50 leading Jews were summoned to a briefing with the then Israeli ambassador.
That evening a group of them raised an initial £250,000 fund for pro-Israel lobbying and public relations. First to wave his chequebook was Poju Zabludowicz, a little-known name at the time but now an emerging figure who recently entered the Sunday Times Rich List with an estimated £2 billion, and who owns 40 per cent of downtown Las Vegas.
As Middle Eastern peace prospects sank beneath the continuing violence, the emergency campaign for Israel morphed into a permanent new body, the British-Israel Research and Communications Centre (Bicom). While a debate goes on in the communitys upper echelons over whether Bicom should remain a mainly-behind-the-scenes player focussing on media or a more upfront pro-Israel lobby similar to the American Aipac, it has become a potential recruitment ground for a new generation of lay leaders, among them Bicoms chairman, Zabludowicz, and deputy chairman Michael Lewis one of a number of South Africans now making his mark.
More recent events confirmed to Kerner and others their sense that the Board could not handle all that had to be done.
The JLC, he told the JC, should be overseeing every major issue that concerns the community, ensuring what issue is dealt with by which organisation.
While the council is a meritocratic rather than democratic organisation, he says, that doesnt matter. The JLC needs the strongest, toughest, most respected and most powerful leaders of the community with the authority to tell others, Guys, youve got to do this.
One JLC member, JNF UK president Gail Seal one of the few women to head a major organisation agrees that the council should aim to become a communal supergroup.
She cites the American model of the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organisations, which, she says, works brilliantly (although others say that it is wrong to suggest that the Conference is any more than one among several big players in the diasporas largest community). She also believes that the JLC and Board will have to merge.
Others on the JLC appear more in tune with Grunwalds thinking, including its youngest member, World Jewish Relief chairman Nigel Layton, 43, who believes the Board still has a key role in communal decision-making.
If there are genuine differences over its direction, the JLC has successfully masked them so far.
We all get on well, says Layton. Its a very good forum for all the organisations to sit together and look at ways of achieving the common good.
Others, however, point to underlying tensions between the charity elders the men with the money and some of the younger organisational leaders.
The newly adopted constitution, which provides for an elected executive rather than the previous ad hoc steering group (which included Levy, Ronson and Chinn), apparently met initial resistance from within the old guard. Layton is said to have played an important role in bringing them round.
One informed source, nevertheless, voiced scepticism about the JLCs longer-term prospects.
On major policy issues, such as Israel and antisemitism, there was a broad consensus, he pointed out. But should genuine disagreements emerge over a matter of substance, the JLC could well implode.
At any rate, its composition is unlikely to change for the foreseeable future. No obvious new wave of leaders has surfaced, ready to step in the shoes of someone such as Gerald Ronson, whose influence remains undiminished as the chairman of British Jewrys defence arm, the Community Security Trust.
British Jewrys business elite may be awash with wealth but a younger, emerging generation of philanthropists has, so far, largely been content to confine itself to a few pet causes rather than aim for the top of communal decision-making. There arent too many people willing to take on the task of leadership, Kerner says. Its onerous, time-consuming and youre often under attack.
The JLC, meanwhile, has three years to bed down and declare its hand. Three years, because after that the highly respected Henry Grunwald, shortly to be re-elected for a second and final presidential term at the Board, will step down from office.
Since the president of the Board automatically chairs the JLC, the JLC could be plunged into crisis should the Board elect a leader not to the liking of some of its members.
So not for nothing do many ask: What happens after Henry?
[End of article]
Commentary by Radio Islam
Again we see the Jewish boasting at its prime, using a power drunk terminology that would have been condemned as "anti-Semitic" if it was written by a non-Jewish hand but is 100 per cent OK if it is written by a Kosher Jew - "one of us" - with the aim of boasting and showing off the feathers of this minority.
In this Jewish article published in The Jewish Chronicle of London they talk about "the communitys financial big hitters", "the Jewish communitys top mover and shaker", that "British Jewrys business elite may be awash with wealth" and of "the old grandees, Anglo-Jews who rose to positions of national prominence but could bend an ear on behalf of their people". The latter is - again - proof that Jews in power in a non-Jewish majority society - use this influence for the better of their group. That is, when a Jew has a position influence in a non-Jewish country, it equals a proportional boost of influence for the Jewish community agenda - for which one of the prime concerns is their Jewish state of Israel.
They also love the term "power brokers "and "philantropy" when dissecting their main influential notables, in this case talking about "philanthropic power brokers who made the Joint Israel Appeal (now UJIA) the pre-eminent Jewish charity in the 1980s - Lord Levy, Gerald Ronson and Sir Trevor Chinn". Here the article reveals that Lord Levy is embedded in the pro-Israel agenda with the important Zionist agency of Joint Israel Appeal - and this man was set to be in charge of Britain´s Middle East policies under Tony Blair!
The power language then reaches new heights: "As for ensuring that British Jews have access to government, the same person observed: 'Every prime minister seems to have his Jewish fellow, whispering in his ear. Some Jewish person will be close to the centre of power.' "
The image they draw up is exactly as in the "anti-Semitic cartoons" and writings that they are so keen to condemn and surpress; how leading non-Jewish premiers have their private court-Jews telling them what to do and acting as their eyes and ears. As a fact, almost a natural law, The Jewish Chronicle source states that "some Jewish person will be close to the centre of power". As if the question is not if a Jew will have this magnificient position of influence on a "democratically" elected leader, but just as if the question that lingers is who - from their cabinet of so-called power brokers - will take the mantle and head the operation.
The Jewish Chronicle then contines with some name dropping: "One JLC member, Sir Ronald Cohen, for example, is regarded as close to Chancellor Gordon Brown and Brown is an admirer of Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks. David Camerons campaign to be Tory leader was initially bankrolled by rising businessman Andrew Feldman" - just to prove the point.
Radio Islam is constantly bashed as the most evil of Web sites for concluding that the Jewish communities in the Diaspora, in their respective non-Jewish majority countries, work for the benefit of the racist state of Apartheid, Israel. But anybody who has read the material on this site has seen that the proof of this conclusion are the writings of the Jews themselves, and their acts in real life.
So it comes to no suprise that The Jewish Chronicle describes that British Jewry´s main concern during the Intifada was not the massacre caused by their brethren on the indigenous Palestinians, but the image of Israel: "The need for a body able to orchestrate British Jewrys political and public relations became apparent to Kerner following the outbreak of the second intifada in September 2000, with its disastrous impact on Israels image. The day after the intifada began, some 50 leading Jews were summoned to a briefing with the then Israeli ambassador. That evening a group of them raised an initial £250,000 fund for pro-Israel lobbying and public relations".
So when Israel has a public relations problem due to its constant violations of Human Rights, its war crimes and massacres, the "philantropic power brokers" are summoned for a crisis meeting at the Israeli Embassy in London - the embassy of a foreign state - which quickly results in the British Jewish community producing the necessary monetary funds "for pro-Israel lobbying and public relations", i.e. war propaganda.
The British Jews even organized as part of this "emergency campaign" a special pro-Israel propaganda apparatus: "As Middle Eastern peace prospects sank beneath the continuing violence, the emergency campaign for Israel morphed into a permanent new body, the British-Israel Research and Communications Centre (Bicom)".
And this organization is well established in the community, where "a debate goes on in the communitys upper echelons over whether Bicom should remain a mainly-behind-the-scenes player focussing on media or a more upfront pro-Israel lobby similar to the American Aipac".
This British Jewish organization Bicom "has become a potential recruitment ground for a new generation of lay leaders".
So Israel is again proven to be the prime concern for British mainstream Jews. The Jewish Chronicle article also states that Israel is a "major policy issue" of the community and which carries the leading Jews´ "broad consensus".
These quotes also prove that the British Jews and their synagogues stand 100 per cent firmly behind Israel, that mainstream Judaism is synchronized with Zionism and Israel. Important to keep in mind when one hears the Diaspora Jews saying - when they are critisized during Israel´s massacres; "Why do yo attack us as a community because of what Israel does, Israel is a country far away. We are just peacefully excerting our religious rights, Israel´s policies are not our deeds".