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Home Magazine

A full-time philanthropist ‎

by  Erez Linn
Published on  06-08-2018 00:00
Last modified: 06-08-2018 00:00
A full-time philanthropist ‎

Israel is thriving against all odds

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‎"He came to see me in my office in Manhattan – he was a 25-year-old ‎young man who looked like he was 16. 'I want to give you a present,' he ‎said. He reached into his knapsack and he took his dog tag and he ‎started to put it around my neck, and I said, no, no, I can't take it, it's too ‎valuable, and he was insisted, 'this is for you.' And I finally took it ‎because it meant so much to him, and I have it sitting on my desk ever ‎since," attorney Sandor Frankel said, recalling the moment a young man ‎he had never met arrived at his office to thank him for a scholarship he ‎received from the Helmsley Charitable Trust, which sponsors combat ‎veterans from economically disadvantaged circumstances.‎

The former soldier told Frankel that thanks to the scholarship, he has ‎been able to improve his position in life and exit the cycle of poverty. ‎

‎"On the one hand we had given an $18 million grant that will help many ‎people's lives in ways that we cannot imagine right now, but on the ‎other hand it all boils down to a single individual and when you help a ‎single person's life it really helps you feel good," he said this week, ‎during a visit to Israel in which he got a first-hand look at the project to ‎which the Helmsley Charitable Trust contributes. ‎

Frankel is one of the three trustees of the renowned Helmsley Charitable ‎Trust, which funds philanthropic projects around the world, including a ‎large part of projects in Israel. While the foundations is not well-known ‎to the general public in Israel, it is difficult to find a health-care, research or Zionist institution ‎in Israel or in the Jewish world that has not received a grant from the ‎HCT – from hospitals and universities (including scholarships) to projects ‎promoting the connection between Diaspora Jews and Israel, such as ‎Taglit-Birthright and Friends of the IDF.‎

In some cases, the foundation's support goes far beyond its original ‎purpose and helps Israel's international images. For example, many ‎Syrians who have been wounded in the civil war are able to receive first-rate care in hospitals in northern Israel thanks to the HCT's support of ‎these facilities. ‎
Another example is the support given to the Volcani Center for ‎agricultural research and other technological institutions that have led to ‎Third World countries benefiting from Israeli innovations, which assist ‎them help them eradicate poverty and hunger. ‎

But above all, the Helmsley Charitable Trust‏ ‏makes sure that the money ‎reaches the exact right places rather than ending up as another line in a ‎particular institution's budget. Frankel and his small team carefully ‎scrutinize where the money is going. He is also assisted by his wife, ‎Ruth, who grew up in the central Israeli city of Petach Tikvah and can ‎offer a unique understanding of Israeli society and business sectors. ‎

Last will and testament come alive ‎

The Helmsley Charitable Trust was founded by Leona and Harry ‎Helmsley, who owned a hotel and real estate empire in U.S., which at ‎some point even included the Empire State Building. After Harry's ‎passing in 1997, Leona ran their empire on her own, until she died in ‎‎2007. She left nearly their entire estate – billions of dollars – to the ‎Helmsley Charitable Trust, with one clear, albeit vague instruction: to do ‎good.‎

Frankel, who was her personal lawyer, was appointed one of the HCT's ‎trustees, along with two others. As a Jew and avid Zionist, he saw her ‎amorphous will as a true Zionist mission.‎

"We have given projects in Israel over $239 million, roughly 12% of the ‎giving of the trust – overall we have given over $2 billion. … We are close ‎to the 10-year mark of active grant-making and I think the Israeli ‎program will continue as it has been continuing with the same scope," he ‎said. ‎

Q: Do you think American Jews are primarily associated with ‎philanthropy in Israel, perhaps unjustifiably so?‎

‎"That's a pretty large question. A little bit too big for me. What we try to ‎do is just help where we can give help. Americans obviously help Israel in ‎a lot of ways but we just try to be specific and particular and focused on ‎what we try to do, finding areas where the trust can be helpful and just ‎doing it. ‎

‎"We don't really look at comparative philanthropies or whether ‎Americans in general as a society or as a Jewish community give more ‎help to Israel politically than philanthropically. Our focus is on giving ‎money where it can be best used by the Israeli people, where we can be ‎most helpful. It is really focused on helping particular institutions help ‎people," he said.‎

Q: Why have you focused on emergency services and health care in ‎Israel's northern and southern peripheries? ‎‏ ‏

‏"‏You have to pick and choose where you have the biggest impact. That is ‎what we try to do, to have an impact, to help people's lives. Help in the ‎areas of health seems like a better place where we can have impact than, ‎for example, sports. There is a difference. You feel the difference when ‎you go to hospitals in the periphery and you can help save lives."‎

Q: Have you encountered any problems by anti-Israel elements that ‎tried to stop you from donating to Israel?‎

‏"‏I don't know if there are forces out there that we don't know about but ‎we are pretty focused, we do what we have to do. We don't have ‎corporate bloat, so there is no palace intrigue, we just look at potential ‎projects that have potential for real impact. We don't have a ‎representative in Israel and we run across instances where people try to ‎give the impression that they are responsible for things that we do."‎

Q: Some say American Jews should stop supporting Israel because it ‎allows the government to shed responsibility from issues like ‎health care and education. ‎

‏"‏That American Jews shouldn't donate money to Israel is a silly ‎proposition. Israel is surrounded by people who are committed to its ‎destruction, it is constantly at war, some would say, and yet it flourishes ‎and survives," he said, ‎

‎"If you look at the percentage of Israel's GDP, that is dedicated to ‎defense and compare it to other countries you see how it sucks so much ‎of the economic wherewithal of Israelis into the defense of the country, ‎because it is surrounded by people who don't want it there. But it is not ‎just the percentage of the GDP that devoted to defense – take a look at ‎the areas where we are involved. Look at the hospitals – we help fortify ‎institutions that shouldn't have to be fortified. … So every dollar that is ‎spent doing what should be unnecessary but is life-saving is not spent on ‎other things."‎

Q: When you make a donation, do you think there should be any ‎strings attached, politically ‎speaking?‎‏

‏"‏No. The Helmsley Trust has no political agenda whatsoever. We are ‎‎completely apolitical. Period, full stop. My own view is that the ‎people ‎who should be expressing political views about what ‎Israel should do ‎about the security problems it is confronted ‎with – the people who have ‎a right to do that are the people ‎whose sons and daughters serve in the ‎IDF. The people whose ‎blood is literally on the line, in a my personal ‎view, are the ‎people who should have the right to decide what risks ‎Israel ‎should take, how it should deal with some of the intractable ‎‎problems that have been thrust on them."‎‏

Q: What do you think of Israel's international political standing ‎following Donald Trump's election as president of the United States? ‎‏

‎"‎‏You have to blind not to recognize that the Trump ‎administration has ‎been very friendly toward Israel, for good ‎reason‏‎."‎

Q:‎‏ ‏Ten, 20 years from now, what would your legacy be?‎

‎"Peace. That's what Israelis want, peace. Let the country and ‎the people ‎go about their business of flourishing and thriving ‎without having to ‎worry about rockets landing on their ‎kindergartens and hospitals and ‎communities. And in the ‎meantime we try to do what we can to help the ‎country, the ‎people of the country." ‎

Frankel, 74, grew up in New York City and visited Israel for the first time ‎in 1961, just as he was finishing high school. The visit coincided with the ‎trail of Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann, which left a strong impression ‎on Frankel. In 1990 he became Leona Helmsley's personal attorney and ‎saw her through her legal troubles until her death. ‎

Helmsley was a controversial figure, who was accused of abusing the ‎staff at the hotel she owed, and many took her decision to leave her ‎huge estate to a philanthropic trust as an attempt to atone for her ‎actions. Today, Frankel tries to make her vision come to life. ‎

It is no coincidence that Frankel, who feels a close bond to Israel, is the ‎one that encourages the HCT to repeatedly invest in Israel (the two other ‎trustees focus on other projects worldwide). He believes that even ‎though Helmsley never visited Israel, she would want him to do so. ‎

Q: Do you think this is what Mrs. Helmsley had in mind, that you are ‎fulfilling her vision?‎

‎"‎‏I hope she would be proud of what we are doing. She gave us ‎the ‎discretion to do what we thought was right and good for the ‎world. And ‎both the Israel program and the other programs do that," he said. ‎‏

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