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The Eulogizer: Human Rights Activist Yelena Bonner And Charlotte Blo

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  • The Eulogizer: Human Rights Activist Yelena Bonner And Charlotte Blo

    THE EULOGIZER: HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVIST YELENA BONNER AND CHARLOTTE BLOOMBERG, NEW YORK MAYOR'S MOM
    By Alan D. Abbey

    JTA
    June 20, 2011

    JERUSALEM (JTA) -- The Eulogizer is a new column (soon-to-be blog)
    that highlights the life accomplishments of famous and not-so-famous
    Jews who have passed away recently. Learn about their achievements,
    honor their memories and celebrate Jewish lives well lived with The
    Eulogizer. Write to the Eulogizer at [email protected]. Read previous
    columns here.

    Yelena Bonner, 88, human rights activist

    Yelena Bonner's death in Boston on June 18 at 88 has been covered
    widely, and JTA's first-day news coverage provided the basics of her
    life as wife of Nobel Prize-winning dissident Soviet nuclear physicist
    Andrei Sakharov and as an activist on her own.

    But there are additional fascinating aspects to her long life worth
    a second look, especially regarding her Jewishness and Israel.

    Throughout her life Bonner attempted to balance the priorities and
    needs of her diverse heritage. Her father was an Armenian Bolshevik
    revolutionary and one-time Communist Party chief in Armenia. Her
    mother was the daughter of a Jewish family born into Siberian exile.

    "I hope to live out my life until the end worthy of the
    Russian culture in which I've spent my life, of the Jewish
    and Armenian nationalities, and I am proud that mine has been
    the difficult lot and happy fate to be the wife and friend
    of academic Andrei Dmitrievich Sakharov," Bonner wrote in her 1988
    http://www.amazon.com/Together-Bonner-Andrei-Sakharovs-internal/dp/0394755383/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1308570117&sr=8-1">memoir
    "Alone Together: Story of Elena Bonner and Andrei Sakharov's internal
    exile in the Soviet Union."

    Bonner was "at heart a (Russian) patriot" and was wounded twice while
    serving as a nurse in World War II. After the war she enrolled in
    the Leningrad Medical Institute, but was expelled during a Stalin-era
    campaign against Jews.

    In the years after the Soviet Union fell, not only did Bonner continue
    to speak out against corruption and anti-democratic rule in Russia,
    she spoke and wrote eloquently about anti-Semitism and Israel.

    Fellow former dissident and activist Natan Sharansky, now chairman of
    the Jewish Agency, said that "The Jewish world and the State of Israel
    have lost one of their most passionate champions. At the same time,
    the global community of democratic dissidents, political prisoners
    and human rights activists has lost one of its greatest leaders and
    advocates. Whereas Andrei Sakharov was the heart of our struggle to
    defeat the great evil of the Soviet system, Yelena Bonner was the
    engine that encouraged us to act."

    In a 2002 essay titled "An Appeal to World Society," Bonner wrote
    with horror and prescience of the suicide terrorism initially directed
    against Israel:

    "The suicide bombers have introduced a new weapon -- cheap and easily
    transported -- into the business of terrorism. And without a doubt,
    it will spread around the world, not only to promote the political
    aims of various extremist groups, but also as a way for tens and
    hundreds of mentally disturbed persons to solve their problems. Anyone
    tacitly sympathizing with the suicide-terrorists who thinks that this
    new weapon of murder-on-command can be kept localized is mistaken. If
    there is no attempt to fight back against them, very soon the suicide
    bombers' attacks will spread beyond Jerusalem. Their bombs will explode
    on the Champs-Elysees, on Red Square ... and Damascus, depending on
    who orders and pays for the explosion and what are his goals.

    "Despite all this, in Europe and America there is a growing
    anti-Israeli hysteria whose battle-cry is the defense of the
    Palestinian people, even though Israel is conducting a necessary
    and just war not against the Palestinian people but against world
    terrorism, against the terrorism syndicate linking Al Qaeda, Hamas,
    Fatah, Islamic Jihad, et al."

    Bonner also saw clearly the growing threat against Israel now labeled
    delegitimization:

    "The extent of this hysteria is impressive ... it has infected
    American students, Hollywood stars, European scholars, members of
    the Norwegian parliament and human rights organizations. Scientists
    have been considering a boycott of their Israeli colleagues. Two
    hundred and sixty-nine members of the European Parliament voted for
    an anti-Israeli resolution. ...

    "Politicians have a short memory. They have forgotten how Arafat's
    Black September almost destroyed Jordan, the murder of Israeli athletes
    at the 1972 Munich Olympics, and much else. The hysteria has tragically
    isolated Israel, but it is also dangerous for Europe and America,
    where it has stirred up a troubling wave of anti-Semitism."

    Click here to read the entire essay, which offers a striking scenario
    for a demilitarized Palestinian state.

    In a 2009 speech titled "About Israel and the World," given at the
    Freedom Forum in Oslo, Bonner said that many laid the blame for
    suicide terrorism and bombing at the feet of former President Bush
    "and as always, the Jews" and Israel, giving as examples the United
    Nations anti-racism gatherings in Durban.

    Bonner said she focused on Israel and Jews "not just because I'm
    Jewish, but primarily because the Middle East conflict during the time
    that has elapsed since the end of World War II has been a springboard
    for political games and gambling by the big powers, the Arab countries
    and some politicians who want the so-called 'peace' process to renew
    their political name, and maybe even win a Nobel Peace Prize."

    Bonner said she continued to be shocked that her late husband and
    Yasser Arafat were members of the club of Nobel Prize winners. She
    spoke of Sakharov's views of Israel and how many would be surprised
    "at how sharp they look" compared to the views of those at odds with
    Israel, and that Sakharov believed in Israel's "absolute right to
    exist," and that the wars Israel fought were imposed by "irresponsible
    Arab leaders."

    Charlotte Bloomberg, 102, mother of New York mayor

    Charlotte Bloomberg, the mother of New York City Mayor Michael
    Bloomberg and a "constant source of encouragement and wisdom for him,"
    died June 19 at her home in Medford, Mass., at 102.

    "As the center of our family, our mother's unimpeachable integrity,
    fierce independence, and constant love were gifts that profoundly
    shaped our lives and the lives of so many who knew her," Michael
    Bloomberg said.

    Charlotte Bloomberg was born in Jersey City, N.J., received a
    bachelor's degree in accounting from New York University, married
    William Bloomberg in 1934, and moved to Massachusetts in 1945, where
    she lived in the same house until her death, even as her son became
    a billionaire media mogul and then New York mayor.

    The New York Times noted that she "was co-president of her synagogue,
    Temple Shalom," which is also home to the William and Charlotte
    Bloomberg Jewish Community Center, in her 90s.

    She traveled to Jerusalem with Bloomberg in 2003, when he dedicated
    a wing at Hadassah-University Hospital in honor of her 95th birthday.




    From: A. Papazian
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