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Third Annual Israel Video Contest Announced

May 23, 2018/in Press Release /by Elena Yacov
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https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/inspired_by_israel_video_contest_email_banner_2018.png 328 1180 Elena Yacov https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/logo-300x73.png Elena Yacov2018-05-23 19:39:022021-03-30 16:03:29Third Annual Israel Video Contest Announced

Why Americans Are Celebrating Israel’s 70th

May 10, 2018/in News /by Elena Yacov

Both the US and Israel have withstood existential threats through courage and patriotism of their people.

Israel’s 70th birthday on May 14th has brought a surge of pride across America, as we #Celebrate70.

From the halls of Congress to hundreds of college campuses, to more than 16 Celebrate Israel Festivals in major cities from coast to coast, people across the country are sharing videos, images, words and melodies to rejoice in the miracle of the modern Jewish state and marvel at its unbelievable accomplishments.

The events this month have put on display the deep well of support that Israel enjoys in America, a sentiment that goes back throughout our country’s history. America’s second president, John Adams, once wrote, “The Jews are the most glorious Nation that ever inhabited this Earth” and “I really wish the Jews again in Judea an independent nation.” On May 14, 1948, a few hours after Israel announced its independence, president Harry Truman ignored strategic advice from the secretary of state because of his moral imperative to recognize the new Israeli government led by David Ben-Gurion.

The Jerusalem Embassy Act of 1995, which recognized Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Israel, called for the relocation of the United States Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. This year Jews around the world celebrated President Donald Trump’s official recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and the opening of the US Embassy there.

These decisions have been rooted in our common values and common experience. Both America and Israel were established by people in search of religious freedom and tolerance. Both were founded on the Western values of democracy, Judeo-Christian values, free speech and freedom of the press.

The American Dream is much like the Zionist Dream, rooted in the principle that everyone should have the right to self-determination and the opportunity to achieve success through hard work and determination.

Somehow, thousands of miles away and surrounded by enemies and with no natural resources, Israel has achieved just that.

Both the US and Israel have withstood existential threats through courage and patriotism of their people.

When I was born, Israel was less than four years old. My parents immigrated to Israel in 1948 from Latin America and joined a long line of Zionists who fought for the right of Jewish self-determination. My father fought in the 1948 War of Independence and in the 1956 war. When I was serving in the army in 1973, I fought in the Yom Kippur War that changed the history of the Jewish people – and strengthened Israel’s reputation as a country that would not back down.

America also fought a war for its independence, and it was not until Andrew Jackson’s decisive victory in the Battle of New Orleans during the War of 1812, that foreign nations recognized that America was an independent power with the right to exist. Now America is the strongest country in the world and Israel is a powerful nation standing strong against all odds.

The US and Israel are both deeply committed to helping the world. The US government works to spread democracy. American businesses bring life-changing inventions to countries who need it most and US-based charities aid people and support causes around the world. Israel follows America’s lead in helping make the world a better place. Israel established the first stable and successful democracy in the Middle East. After 70 years of growth, it has developed into the start-up nation – bringing innovations to the world – and is a light unto nations, providing aid to people in countries such as Nepal, Sierra Leone, Syria, Mexico and Haiti.

Cultural diversity is at the center of both of our thriving democracies. America is of course, the original melting pot, bringing together immigrants from virtually every other country on earth, and Israel does the same. Over millennia, the Jewish people spread to every corner of the planet – Ethiopia, Iraq, Iran, the USSR, Morocco, Brazil, the US and more – and the dispersion collectively became known as the Diaspora.

Israel is where we have come together again. Israeli Jews have taken their traditions from Austria and Zimbabwe, from Berlin and from Bangalore and brought them together in the Jewish homeland, creating a rich melting pot of cultures.

Israeli society takes the “melting pot” phenomenon a step further with its mandatory army conscription, which gives citizens of all backgrounds the opportunity to succeed and develop national pride. I witnessed it first-hand during my mandatory IDF service. People from different countries, who practice different religions, who have different skin colors, who were born to different family circumstances, all start at the same humbling place. And all – Mizrahi, Ashkenazi, Sephardi, Druze, Bedouin, Coptic, Arab Muslim, Assyrian and more – can be part of the Israeli army.

When we #Celebrate70, we don’t honor only Israel’s incredible accomplishments, but Israel’s shared values and strong alliance with America. From partnerships in business, innovation, technology and academia to celebrating history and culture, Israel and America are great allies. Our shared dreams, our shared values and our shared commitment mean that this year, Americans across the country are proud to say, “Happy Birthday Israel, and many more.”

The author is an Israeli-American philanthropist, national chairman of the Israeli-American Council, real estate entrepreneur and president of the Adam and Gila Milstein Family Foundation.

Original post on The Jerusalem Post

https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Capture-2.png 797 1196 Elena Yacov https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/logo-300x73.png Elena Yacov2018-05-10 20:32:382022-02-11 15:11:50Why Americans Are Celebrating Israel's 70th

Adam Milstein: Promoter of Israeliness

April 11, 2018/in Uncategorized /by Elena Yacov
BY RYAN TOROK | PUBLISHED APR 11, 2018 | JUST ASKING

Photo by Ryan Torok.

Adam Milstein is a managing partner at Hager Pacific Properties but is probably best known as the co-founder and chairman of the Israeli-American Council (IAC), a national organization that engages Israeli Americans through a variety of programming, including annual Yom HaAtzmaut celebrations, young adult groups, and children’s educational communities.

He and his wife, Gila, run the Adam and Gila Milstein Foundation, which, among other activities, provides subsidies for high school students to attend the annual AIPAC (America Israel Public Affairs Committee) Policy Conference.

Born in Haifa, Milstein, who is in his mid-60s, arrived in the United States 37 years ago to pursue an MBA at USC, and he never left. After finding success in real estate, he has devoted himself to various charitable causes, the majority of which are focused on support for Israel.

Milstein met with the Journal to discuss why charity plays an important part in his life; how the IAC has nurtured a culture of philanthropy among Israeli Americans, “Israeliness,” and the dangers facing Israel today on the eve of its 70th anniversary.

Jewish Journal: What have been the IAC’s greatest successes since its launch in 2007?

Adam Milstein: Before we started the IAC, you did not have any Israeli philanthropy. The Jewish community said, “If you are a philanthropist, then you are a Jewish philanthropist, and if you are not a philanthropist, you are Israeli.” Eleven years later, at [the IAC galas], we raised millions of dollars. In March, we [had] a gala here in Los Angeles, and not counting contributions from Haim Saban and Sheldon Adelson, we raised $2.5 million.

Today, the Israeli-American community is considered a very philanthropic community. So, we created a culture of giving. We took a small idea and became a nationwide movement.

JJ: Why is engaging Israeli Americans important to the greater mission of supporting Israel?

AM: There is nobody better than an Israeli American to be an advocate for the State of Israel. We have the information; we have been there; we have fought in the army; we know it is a very dangerous neighborhood. We are Americans, and we think like Americans, and I think there is nobody that can be better spokespeople for Israel than people who are Israeli Americans.

Milstein served in the IDF from 1971-1974.

The Yom Kippur war was in October of 1973, the last year of his service.

JJ: What are the biggest threats facing Israel today?

AM: I think the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions) movement against Israel is growing. Anti-Semitism is growing, and the fact we are passive and defensive is not helping us because it is intensifying.

JJ: Do you mean on college campuses specifically?

AM: Every place. BDS and anti-Semitism are related. Maybe on campus, you call it BDS. Outside, it is anti-Semitism.

JJ: There are those who argue that BDS is not anti-Semitic.

AM: I understand you care about human rights and social justice, but if the only country in the world you have a problem with is the State of Israel, or the Jewish people, then it is related to the Jews and the State of Israel. If you have a problem with [Syrian President Bashar] Assad killing people with chemical weapons, if you have a problem with Iran hanging gays and lesbians from cranes, then I agree, it has nothing to do with Israel. But if every second resolution in the U.N. is about Israel, if in UNESCO every resolution is about Israel, then you understand there is anti-Semitism behind it.

And even though we say it is about the occupation, or the policies of the government, or it’s about Israel shooting someone who is trying to penetrate Israel from the outside, it is about Israel, and it is about the Jews, because we don’t hear any complaints about North Korea or China or Russia or anywhere else.

So, anti-Semitism is growing in the United States. I think, again, it is mostly growing — it is growing from the white supremacists — but mostly from the radical left and radical Muslims. And we need to think out of the box and come up with new strategies, because we clearly are not winning.

JJ: To what extent is Jewish identity connected to support of Israel?

AM: In the Israeli-American community, we don’t say you have to go to synagogue every day, pray and put on teffilin. We say you can connect to Israel and to your Jewish heritage through what we call “Israeliness.” Israeliness has to do with the culture, the food, the dancing, the fact that I met you one time and the next time I say, “You’re in town? I have an empty room. Come stay with me.”

JJ: What role do you see the IAC playing 10 years from now?

AM: I believe that we will become more and more the pro-Israel community in the U.S. This is in our mission, and we made it clear our support for Israel is unwavering, unconditional. And I think that this will separate us from the other organizations that are unsure if they need to criticize Israel or support Israel. They don’t see what we see. This is the only country we have. If you look at Israel, at the 70 years that have passed since independence, there are no other countries in the world that have accomplished so much.

Originally posted in the Jewish Journal

https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/asking-milstein2-1144x858.jpg 858 1144 Elena Yacov https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/logo-300x73.png Elena Yacov2018-04-11 21:00:152021-04-05 16:22:22Adam Milstein: Promoter of Israeliness

Milstein Fellows – Their AIPAC Story: Part 3

April 6, 2018/in News /by Elena Yacov

By attending the AIPAC conference, it gave me an insight into Israel of which I was never exposed. For the first time in my life, I became involved in politics. Now that I have experienced the Policy conference, I will now act differently in a way that will help strengthen the United States – Israel relationship. This conference showed me all of the wonderful things that Israel has to offer, and the power we can have when so many people come together to advocate for Israel.

My intentions are simplistic, yet will be very effective. I learned at a young age that each of us can make a difference in the world. One person’s involvement can have a domino effect on the involvement of other people. Next year I intend to become involved in campus pro – Israel organizations that will promote a better relationship between America and Israel. I would like to reach out to many of the congressmen and congresswomen who were at the conference and talk with them about the concerns involving the different policies and also ask general questions related to Israel and advocacy. I will also become an activist towards Israel while sharing what I have learned and being passionate about my love for Israel.

Becoming involved in campus pro – Israel organizations will help me to improve the relationship between Israel and the United States of America. I plan to become involved with groups such as Students Supporting Israel, Israel on Campus Coalition, and Zionist Alliance. Each of these groups has at least one thing in common. They all support and love Israel.

I will reach out to many of the Congressmen or congresswoman who were at the Policy Conference. I hope that when I reach out to the congressmen or congresswomen, they will take what I say into consideration and be able to make a difference in the world. One of my personal favorite speakers was Ron Dermer. He spoke about the situation between Iran and Syria and how it is very volatile right now. A number of their positions is being targeted. The red lines will continue to be enforced. Nobody knows where the red lines are because it gives a certain amount of flexibility. We don’t want Iran to know where the red line is because we want them to be in a constant state of fear.

Written by a student from Southern NCSY

https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/transparent-MFF-Fellow-300x254.png 254 300 Elena Yacov https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/logo-300x73.png Elena Yacov2018-04-06 18:43:582018-04-06 18:44:41Milstein Fellows - Their AIPAC Story: Part 3

Milstein Fellow – Their AIPAC Story: Part 2

April 6, 2018/in News /by Elena Yacov

AIPAC is more than just a conference. To me, AIPAC stands for passion, for life-long friendships, and for leadership. Having attended the conference last year, I was inspired to become a more active pro-Israel advocate on my campus, UC Berkeley. After attending several protests and standing up for Israel in many different ways, I decided to attend the conference again this year in order to learn more- as there is always more to learn about this beautiful country.

Having this incredible opportunity to attend the AIPAC conference this year thanks to the Milstein Foundation made me realize that being pro-Israel is easy only thanks to the many people who care about Israel and incentivize college students to attend. The conference was very enriching for me; I heard beautiful speeches from Nikki Hailey, Chuck Schumer, Marco Rubio, and my role model- Benjamin Netanyahu. I attended eye opening breakout sessions that taught me new affective ways to defend Israel on my campus and convince others to do the same. I even learned about Israel’s innovative technology that is used not only in the Israeli Defense Force, but also throughout the country civilly—such as the desalination project for sea water to drinking water. I learned many remarkable things during the conference, but the most impactful aspect of the conference to me was not the things I learned—but the people I met.

The conference brought together different people from different places with different political views—all thanks to Israel. I met many interesting people from diverse backgrounds, enriching not only my knowledge but also my social network. I met like-minded students from universities all over the U.S., some I could even possibly visit in the future.

To me, AIPAC is more than just a conference—it is a family.

Written by a UC Berkeley Student

https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/transparent-MFF-Fellow-300x254.png 254 300 Elena Yacov https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/logo-300x73.png Elena Yacov2018-04-06 18:32:152018-04-06 18:32:15Milstein Fellow - Their AIPAC Story: Part 2

Milstein Fellow – Their AIPAC Story: Part 1

April 6, 2018/in News /by Elena Yacov

This was my first time being at the AIPAC Policy Conference, and to me, it was one of the most significant experiences in my life. The reason being is my family history, and how I grew up. My parents and older sister are from the former Soviet Union, specifically Minsk in Belarus. They left to Israel in 1989, shortly after my sister was born. They were the first ones in our family to go to Israel. In 1996 I was born, making me the first child born in Israel in my family. Sadly they left a few months before the turn of the century to come to the United States. But since then I have always gone back to visit my family. Growing up, my parents raised my sister and me in a very Zionist household. Along with our beliefs on Israel, my father also installed the appreciation of our political freedom in the United States, and from there spawned my appreciation of American Politics. My current career goal is to eventually become a United States Senator. For those reasons, I wanted to come to the AIPAC policy conference.

When I first arrived, I was in awe of how beautiful the area that Washington D.C. is. This being my first time seeing the Washington Monument, a sight that represents freedom in our country, something no one in my family had been able to experience for thousands of years. It inspired me to take full advantage of the conference. The first morning we left to explore the National Mall, just so I can see it in person for the first time. Afterward, we went to go explore the conference. We sat through all the speakers and listened to what they had to say. In the evenings we enjoyed networking with others at each of the reception events. I even had the pleasure of running into an old family friend that I haven’t been able to see in the past 5 years. Even with all the great things I had the pleasure of experiencing, there would be a few more things I would have liked to experience.

Being a business student, specifically in finance, I would have liked to see more about how organizations are providing students a chance to work with Israeli companies or Jewish ones here in the states. I think it would be more beneficial to target the students in State schools and community colleges, as it would help them see Israel in a better light. It would also undermine the BDS movement as it would take minority groups a new connection to Israel and swaying their opinion on being a part of the Anti-Israel movement. I would have also liked to see a chance for college students to speak to more industry leaders on social issues and how to inspire more people to be Pro-Israel through social media. But without all these changes, I still was excited and enjoyed my time at AIPAC. I can’t thank you enough for giving me this chance.

Written by an AEPi Brother

https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/transparent-MFF-Fellow-300x254.png 254 300 Elena Yacov https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/logo-300x73.png Elena Yacov2018-04-06 18:31:112018-04-06 18:31:11Milstein Fellow - Their AIPAC Story: Part 1

Diaspora Jews Will Rise to Meet Our Challenges With Israel in Our Hearts

April 5, 2018/in News /by Elena Yacov

Jewish history teaches us that it takes great leaders to overcome major challenges.

At the turn of the century, Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, founder of Revisionist Zionism Ze’ev Jabotinsky, World Zionist Organization president Chaim Weizmann, Israel’s first female prime minister Golda Meir, and Hadassah founder Henrietta Szold saw growing antisemitism and acted to lay the foundations for an independent Jewish state.

During World War II, Mordechai Anielewicz led Jews to fight Nazis in the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, at the same time that Peter Bergson (a disciple of Jabotinsky) managed a heroic campaign to form a Jewish army to fight for the allies, while raising awareness about the destruction of European Jewry.

A few years later, Col. Mickey Marcus, a tough Brooklyn street kid who built a strong reputation as an American military leader in WWII, left his home in America to help save Israel in 1948 and become its first modern general.

Today, the Jewish people face a new set of challenges.

The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign, which seeks to eradicate the State of Israel, is being waged around the world. It is working to divide the State of Israel from the Jewish family around the world, transforming from the glue that unites the Jewish American community into a wedge that separates it.

These extreme challenges demand action. They demand great leadership from us the Jewish people in the Diaspora.

The Jewish American community needs to identify, encourage and support heroes of our time: our Mordechai Anielewicz, our Ben-Gurion, our Henrietta Szold, our Mickey Marcus and our Golda Meir. We need leaders who will ensure the Jewish future in America by engaging and inspiring the next generation to be courageous Zionist leaders, fight antisemitism and support the Jewish people in America and the Jewish homeland, which will always be in Israel.

I have great hope and optimism that these high-caliber leaders will emerge. This is because I meet them every day.

In my work as a pro-Israel philanthropist and activist, I meet with the next generation of pro-Israel activists – passionate, innovative and incredibly hard-working leaders – who are rising to meet the challenges of our time.

I see these leaders in the young people who return home from Birthright, energized by their new connection to Israel, with a new understanding about the necessity of instilling a strong Jewish identity in their children.

I see them in Israeli-American Council, where young Israeli-Americans are being activated as a living bridge between America and Israel, as they work to strengthen our American Jewish community.

I see them in the teenagers participating in the Tzofim and B’nei Akiva youth groups – many of whom eventually make aliya and serve in the IDF.

I see them around the U.S. and around the world, fighting against antisemitism and for the global Jewish community.

These are the people who will shape the Jewish future.

Our job is to give them the platform to develop and the tools to succeed. All of us must support and empower the next generation of leaders with pride, courage, and resources. Why? If you are proud of your Jewish identity and heritage, you will be willing to fight and defend it. When you understand the history of your people, then you understand why it is so important for us to defend your community.

The task of being a great leader is not easy: leaders face isolation, ridicule and tough decisions. For instance, Jabotinsky was often condemned for his efforts to create a separate Jewish nation. But great leaders are necessary. We must invest in them, cultivate them and support them. This is how we support the next Ben-Gurion, Golda Meir and Henrietta Szold. This is how the next generation will be stronger than the last. And this is how the Jewish future will be secured.

Featured in the Times of Israel

https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Capture.png 495 1195 Elena Yacov https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/logo-300x73.png Elena Yacov2018-04-05 18:58:362022-02-14 18:06:30Diaspora Jews Will Rise to Meet Our Challenges With Israel in Our Hearts

Toronto day school students place second in AIPAC contest

March 16, 2018/in News /by Elena Yacov
By Lila Sarick, Staff Reporter
 March 16, 2018
From left, David Roizenman, Zach Weisleder and Ryan Render pitch their idea for a game at the AIPAC Policy Conference in Washington, D.C.

A team of students from TanenbaumCHAT took second place in a contest to design innovative approaches to pro-Israel advocacy, beating 30 university teams.

The Toronto Jewish day school was the only Canadian team, and the only high school, to enter the competition, which was sponsored by the Adam and Gila Milstein Family Foundation. The final round of judging took place at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) Policy Conference, which was held in Washington, D.C., earlier this month.

Grade 12 students David Roizenman, Ryan Render, Zach Weisleder and Aaron Hirshberg designed a social media game modeled after the popular online trivia game, HQ. The students’ prototype, called ILQ (which stands for Israel Quiz), tests players’ knowledge of general trivia and then moves on to questions about Israeli innovators, sports figures, and culture.

READ: DOV LIPMAN – WHAT CAN WE LEARN ABOUT ISRAEL

“ILQ can change people’s perceptions of Israel,” said Weisleder. “When people see something linked to Israel, if they are anti-Israel, they’re not going to want to open it. This teaches them something about Israel.”

The game has not been developed yet, but the students and their staff advisors, Avital Aharon and Aviva Polonsky, hope to turn it into a reality. They envision a game that will offer prizes and feature entertaining guest hosts.

One of the contest requirements was that students partner with a non-profit organization. The TanenbaumCHAT students worked with Hasbara Fellowships Canada to develop the content for the game and hope to launch a test version in several Toronto schools. Once the concept is fine-tuned, they will apply for funding to develop the app, Roizenman said.

Robert Walker, the national director of Hasbara Fellowships Canada, said the project makes sense in a world in which people are glued to their smartphones.

“Gamification is a very popular trend in business these days. If that can work in the business world, there’s no reason it won’t work when we’re selling Israel,” he said.

This was the first time TanenbaumCHAT has entered the contest. Developing the project was an intensive endeavor, with the students working down to the wire to meet the deadlines. They learned they were finalists only two days before the conference started and hastily booked tickets to arrive in time for the AIPAC Shabbaton.

Gamification is a very popular trend in business these days. If that can work in the business world, there’s no reason it won’t work when we’re selling Israel.
– Robert Walker

Participating in the massive annual policy conference, which attracted 18,000 people, was an eye-opening experience for the students and staff, who heard talks from notable public figures, including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli Education Minister Naftali Bennett and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley.

Many speakers specifically mentioned the 4,000 students attending the conference. “You could see how impactful the youth are. We’re going to shape pro-Israel culture in North America,” Render said.

The students and staff were also surprised by the number of TanenbaumCHAT alumni they ran into at the conference, many of whom were working as rabbis and community leaders in the United States and Canada. “You can see the foundation CHAT builds in Israeli advocacy and leadership,” Render said.

While it was the school’s first time entering the competition, it won’t be its last. The students say they hope to come back to work with younger students on next year’s entry and to continue developing the app.

TanenbaumCHAT’s strong showing and the AIPAC conference has created a buzz on campus and, ideally, the school will take more students next year, said Polonsky, who teaches Jewish history.

“CHAT is very pro-Israel and the idea there’s another place we can educate students is definitely in the conversation,” she said.

And while it would have been nice to win the contest, that was not the school’s only intention. “We had a goal of promoting pro-Israel thinking outside of the box and getting students and parents excited about Israel. We reached our goal,” said Aharon, the director of educational technology at the school.

Original post: http://www.cjnews.com/news/canada/toronto-day-school-students-place-second-in-aipac-contest

https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/aipac-sstudnets.jpg 480 640 Elena Yacov https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/logo-300x73.png Elena Yacov2018-03-16 20:46:312021-03-17 16:34:04Toronto day school students place second in AIPAC contest
Who we support

Why I’m Optimistic About the Jewish Future in America

February 28, 2018/in News /by Elena Yacov

Jewish history teaches us that it takes great leaders to overcome major challenges.

At the turn of the century, Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, founder of Revisionist Zionism Ze’ev Jabotinsky, World Zionist Organization president Chaim Weizmann, Israel’s first female prime minister Golda Meir, and Hadassah founder Henrietta Szold saw growing antisemitism and acted to lay the foundations for an independent Jewish state.

During World War II, Mordechai Anielewicz led Jews to fight Nazis in the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, at the same time that Peter Bergson (a disciple of Jabotinsky) managed a heroic campaign to form a Jewish army to fight for the allies while raising awareness about the destruction of European Jewry.

A few years later, Col. Mickey Marcus, a tough Brooklyn street kid who built a strong reputation as an American military leader in WWII, left his home in America to help save Israel in 1948 and become its first modern general.
Today, the Jewish people face a new set of challenges.

Antisemitism is on the rise on the Right and on the Left. In the US alone, antisemitic incidents rose 67% in 2017 compared to 2016 – and in Europe, increases in antisemitic messages in media and social media has fostered a reality in which only half of Jews feel safe wearing visible signs of their Jewishness. A poll released in February 2017 by the Jewish Federation of San Francisco found that only 21% of millennials in their community are very emotionally attached to Israel, and only 26% think it is very important to be Jewish, reflecting disturbing trends we saw in the 2013 Pew Survey of Jewish Americans and other research studies.

The Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) campaign, which seeks to eradicate the State of Israel, is being waged around the world. It is working to divide the State of Israel from the Jewish family around the world, transforming from the glue that unites the Jewish American community into a wedge that separates it.

These extreme challenges demand action. They demand great leadership from us the Jewish people in the Diaspora.

The Jewish American community needs to identify, encourage and support heroes of our time: our Mordechai Anielewicz, our Ben-Gurion, our Henrietta Szold, our Mickey Marcus and our Golda Meir. We need leaders who will ensure the Jewish future in America by engaging and inspiring the next generation to be courageous Zionist leaders, fight antisemitism and support the Jewish people in America and the Jewish homeland, which will always be in Israel.

I have great hope and optimism that these high-caliber leaders will emerge. This is because I meet them every day.
In my work as a pro-Israel philanthropist and activist, I meet with the next generation of pro-Israel activists – passionate, innovative and incredibly hard-working leaders – who are rising to meet the challenges of our time.

I see these leaders in the young people who return home from Birthright, energized by their new connection to Israel, with a new understanding about the necessity of instilling a strong Jewish identity in their children.

I see them in Israeli-American Council, where young Israeli-Americans are being activated as a living bridge between America and Israel, as they work to strengthen our American Jewish community.

I see them in the teenagers participating in the Tzofim and B’nei Akiva youth groups – many of whom eventually make aliya and serve in the IDF.

This month, I will see them in Washington among the hundreds of college students that the Milstein Family Foundation brings to the AIPAC Policy Conference.

These are the people who will shape the Jewish future.

Our job is to give them the platform to develop and the tools to succeed. All of us must support and empower the next generation of leaders with pride, courage, and resources. Why? If you are proud of your Jewish identity and heritage, you will be willing to fight and defend it. When you understand the history of your people, then you understand why it is so important for us to defend your community.

The task of being a great leader is not easy: leaders face isolation, ridicule and tough decisions. For instance, Jabotinsky was often condemned for his efforts to create a separate Jewish nation. But great leaders are necessary. We must invest in them, cultivate them and support them. This is how we support the next Ben-Gurion, Golda Meir, and Henrietta Szold. This is how the next generation will be stronger than the last. And this is how the Jewish future will be secured.

The author is an Israeli-American philanthropist, national chairman of the Israeli-American Council, real estate entrepreneur and president of the Adam and Gila Milstein Family Foundation.

Original Article published in The Jerusalem Post

https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Capture-6.png 675 1188 Elena Yacov https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/logo-300x73.png Elena Yacov2018-02-28 21:26:522022-02-11 15:13:04Why I'm Optimistic About the Jewish Future in America

You Can Now Experience Israeli Tour Spots On Virtual Reality

January 31, 2018/in News /by Elena Yacov

If you haven’t had the opportunity to visit major Israeli tour spots, you can now experience some of them through virtual reality tours on the Virtually Israel 2.0 website.

A project of the Adam and Gila Milstein Family Foundation and the MERONA Leadership Foundation, Virtually Israel 2.0 features the following videos:

  • Beaches
  • Bible Land Museums
  • Dead Sea Scrolls
  • Independence Hall
  • Jerusalem & the Dead Sea
  • Sarona Market
  • Startup Market
  • Taglit Innovation
  • Tel Aviv & Jaffa
  • Tel Aviv Balloon Ride
  • Tower of David Museum

Philanthropist Adam Milstein told the Journal in a phone interview that the idea for virtual reality videos came about three years ago, when virtual reality was becoming “very, very popular” and was clearly where the future is headed. They initially produced two virtual reality videos two years ago and they were very well-received among various Jewish organizations.

“We wanted to give people a much wider variety,” said Milstein. “We wanted to give them all the different things in Israel that will interest Jews and non-Jews, so we’re giving them a lot of tourist attractions.”

Milstein explained that they had a team of volunteers that went to those specific areas in Israel that took footage and pictures of the tourist sites from different angles in order to create the virtual reality videos. He added that more videos could be on the way.

“Based on our success, we’ll do more things that people feel we didn’t cover in the first ones,” said Milstein.

Milstein hopes that the videos cause people to understand the truth about Israel.

“Israel is not a war zone. It’s not a place of the conflict between the Palestinian and the Israeli,” said Milstein. “It’s a place of peace and prosperity and happiness and innovation, a place that anybody should go and enjoy. We’re showing Israel the way it is, the real colors, we don’t let the media contaminate the image that we have on Israel.”

“The main takeaway is we’re using innovation to tell the truth about Israel.”

The videos are all available on 2D and can be seen in 3D on platforms like Google Cardboard.

Original post: Jewish Journal

BY AARON BANDLER | PUBLISHED JAN 31, 2018

https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/virtually-Israel.png 150 150 Elena Yacov https://www.milsteinff.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/logo-300x73.png Elena Yacov2018-01-31 16:09:092021-04-05 16:22:10You Can Now Experience Israeli Tour Spots On Virtual Reality
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