President Reuven Rivlin and the Ruderman Family Foundation on Wednesday hosted the "Keeping it in the Family" forum on the Israel-Diaspora relationship. The event, held in Jerusalem, included a wide range of speakers from across the Jewish world, such as author Nicole Krauss, former vice president of the Supreme Court Eliyakim Rubenstein, Olympic medalist Arik Ze'evi, actress Moran Atias, singer Ayala Indgedashet, Rabbi Julie Schonfeld, LGBTQ activist Tyler Gregory, environmentalist Erin Scrod, and many others.
The conference, coordinated in partnership with the Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and Gesher, sought to widen the boundaries of discourse between Israel and the global Jewish community in a wide range of areas, including literature, identity, Judaism, law, and culture.
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President Reuven Rivlin opened discussions stating that a "shared mission" to create a positive definition is in order.
The conversation begins "with an uncompromising commitment to fight anti-Semitism in all its forms and encompasses ensuring the existence of the State of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state. But it also entails a relationship that exists in all other fields of life: literature and philosophy, in science and research, in tikkun olam, in business and philanthropy. Judaism cannot and must not be the product only of crises, of disasters and of moments of calamity. It must celebrate the spectrum of Jewish communities in Israel and across the world and flourish through cross-pollination," he said.
Despite concern expressed over a growing gap between the two communities, a recent Ruderman Family Foundation survey revealed that 80% of American Jews consider themselves pro-Israel and 67% feel an emotional attachment to Israel. Moreover, more than 70% of Jews in the United States feel that their personal relationship with Israel is equal or stronger than it was five years ago.
To that end, Shira Ruderman, director of the Ruderman Family Foundation, said: "After many years in which Israel's conversation with the American Jewish community took place in a small circle of professionals, without a real interest from the public, we are bringing it back to center stage.
"The tensions felt in recent years between the sides stem, among other reasons, from the tendency of this closed group to gravitate to issues in dispute and problems, rather than the many places in which the relationship is mutually beneficial. The 'Civil Forum' is a first step in changing the public's perception, by bringing opinion leaders from all fields of life – sport, law, economy, literature, and others – into the conversation. This will diversify and widen our discourse, and make it relevant to the public."
Rivlin concurred, "These are different times. These are times that call out for a positive definition, a definition that builds from within us what binds us together and addresses our shared mission."
The Ruderman Family Foundation states that it "believes that inclusion and understanding of all people is essential to a fair and flourishing community."
According to its website, the foundation's mission statement is to "advocate for and advance the inclusion of people with disabilities throughout our society; strengthen the relationship between Israel and the American Jewish Community; and model the practice of strategic philanthropy worldwide. We operate as a non-partisan strategic catalyst in cooperation with government, private sectors, civil society, and philanthropies."