Saturday, April 20th | 12 Nisan 5784

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The Top 100 People Positively Influencing Jewish Life, 2018

In honor of The Algemeiner’s fifth annual gala, we are delighted to unveil our fifth Algemeiner ‘J100’ list of the top one hundred individuals who have positively influenced Jewish life this past year. Before you work your way through this exciting list, we wanted to first share some of the thoughts that we discussed as we developed it. If we could group these ideas together, the first would be about creating lists, in general; then, what’s unique about lists and Judaism; some finer points differentiating our honorees from the organizations they lead; and important reflections on all those every day and anonymous-to-us heroes we also want to celebrate without ever knowing their names. And, of course, to thank everyone who helped create the list and worked hard to put together our J100 gala.

On Lists

There are lists, and there are lists. From the Forbes 400 to the Time 100, we are witness today to a proliferation of many lists in various magazines and newspapers. The New Yorker even made a list of The Hundred Best Lists of All Time! Lists have begun spreading in the Jewish media as well. It seems that in the feeding frenzy of our information overloaded society, categorizations and listings get our attention by presumably helping us make sense of the data flooding our psyches. Lists also carry an element of sensationalism – who made the list, who didn’t – feeding the hunger for competition – yet another staple of our superficial times. No wonder we don’t find such popularity contests waged in earlier centuries; living as desert nomads or inside of a shtetl, where everyone knew virtually no one else but their neighbors by name (for good or for bad), did not exactly lend itself to creating a top ten list of favorites. This is an exclusive product of the communications revolution and the global village it created.

Jewish Lists

Jewish sages, in particular, did not create such lists. Indeed, some actually dismissed the categorization of lists (even of the 13 Principles of Faith of Maimonides, let alone of a list of the “best” one thing or another…) It begs the uneasy question of how one can even attempt to measure the value of a person? Isn’t everyone a hero in some way? On what grounds can we presume to judge who is more valuable then the next? With the J100 list we tried to create something more meaningful, a list aligned with our core mission: the 100 people who have the most positive impact on Jewish life and Israel – men and women, Jew or non-Jew, who have lifted the quality of Jewish life in the past year. Think of it this way: Without these J100 – either the individuals or the organizations they represent – Jewish life would not be at the caliber it is today. Despite the artificial, superficial, and sensational nature of any list, we sought to transform the information deluge of our times by using the list to shine a spotlight on those gems in our midst, those people who are making a real difference in others’ lives.

We also seek to inspire and motivate our young and the next generation, our future emerging leaders, in rising to the occasion and perpetuating the highest standards of our proud tradition and legacy – in serving and championing the cause of Jews and Israel. Because, as we know, when the quality of Jewish life is raised, the quality of all lives is raised. However, the most exciting part of our work in choosing the J100, frankly, was sifting through hundreds of candidates and nominees to discover some surprising finalists. It was a joy to see the breadth of all those who merited a mention, to understand some of the great work being performed around the world on behalf of the Jewish people, and to celebrate their victories by bringing this great work to renewed public attention via this endeavor.

Individual vs. Organization

Inevitably, any list recognizing those that have positively influenced Jewish life will include the “usual suspects,” well-known leaders and officials of governments, organizations, and institutions. Like it or not, bureaucracy is part of the fabric of our society, feeding and supporting Jewish life around the globe, and it is that fabric that provides strength and cohesion to our disparate Jewish population.

Not all the names on the J100 were included for the same reason. Some are being honored for their personal contributions, others for their work at the organizations or nations they head. Some on the J100 are long established stars, others newcomers.

Like in any dynamic entity and living organism, we included both stalwart leaders with deep roots holding the foundation, while also introducing new branches that will lead us into the future.

This type of list – “The top 100 people who have positively influenced Jewish life” – has its inherent challenges. First, what defines “positive”? What some consider positive, others consider destructive. Jews notoriously disagree on what positive impact means. Fully cognizant of the controversy such a list could stir, we approached the creation of this list with a particular strategy, infused with a sense of humility and respect, to be as all-inclusive as possible while maintaining our integrity. This list should not be seen as an endorsement of anyone or any entity and way of thinking; rather, the people on this list are a reflection of the rich and broad spectrum of Jewish life – those who have positively contributed and helped shape the Jewish future.

We want this list to not be a definitive one, but a type of snapshot and perspective of the Jewish world today. The J100 is far from perfect – but which list of this type would not be? Rather, we want it to serve as a provocateur, challenging us all to think about what we value and consider precious; what we honor as being a positive influence on Jewish life and on Israel.

Anonymous Heroes

Jewish life, now and throughout history, is fraught with innumerable heroes – mostly unsung. A mother unceremoniously bringing up a beautiful family. A quiet nurse attending to the ill. An anonymous philanthropist sending food packages to the needy. The unobtrusive kindergarten teacher lovingly attending to and shaping young lives. Positive influences abound, yet few are called out.

Moreover, the Jewish community is decentralized. A leader in one city or town who has a major impact on their community may be completely irrelevant in another city. No list – not of 100, not of 1,000 – could capture and do justice to the countless daily acts of heroism and nobility impacting Jews and Israel.

There are innumerable rabbis, lay leaders, educators, and administrators who are beloved and are transforming their Jewish communities. As important as these individuals may be – and they certainly deserve their own list – the J100 does not include these heroes. Instead it focuses on individuals that have global and international impact, and that come from diverse groups – such as writers, teachers, government officials, and organizations. In some ways, the J100 should be looked at not as a bunch of disjointed individuals, but as a mosaic – a confluence of many different colors and hues that create a diverse painting.

Thank You

In the spirit of The Algemeiner, we want this list to lift the quality of our discourse and standards in seeking out the best within and among us. We hope you enjoy reviewing and studying this list, and we welcome all your feedback, critiques, and suggestions to be included next year, in what has become a tradition at our annual gala event.

We extend our deep gratitude to our J100 honorees and special guests, to those who support this great institution, and ultimately to our readers, the Jewish people, and friends of the Jewish people whom we serve.

Disclosure: Algemeiner staff and their immediate families were disqualified for inclusion on the list. Some of the J100 finalists are friends and associates of The Algemeiner. As a media entity with many relationships, The Algemeiner inevitably has many friends and supporters; yet we didn’t feel it fair to disqualify highly qualified candidates simply due to their connection with us. Instead, fully cognizant of that reality, we placed special emphasis on impartiality and objectivity to choose only those who fit the criteria.

— The Algemeiner editors

1 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Alicia Svigals

Founder, The Klezmatics

Violinist and composer Alicia Svigals is the world's foremost klezmer musician and founder of the Grammy award-winning group The Klezmatics. Having developed a love of klezmer during her travels in Europe and Israel, Svigals has taught this beloved Jewish musical style to hundreds of students, among them the renowned Israeli violinist Yitzhak Perlman. Other top artists and celebrities to have worked with Svigals over the years include famed writer Allen Ginsberg, Israeli singer Chava Alberstein and playwright Tony Kushner. Svigals more recent projects include the composition of a brand new musical score for a 1923 German-Jewish silent film about a rabbi’s son in an Eastern European shtetl who dreams of becoming an actor. (Photo: Runs With Scissors.)

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2 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Former NBA legend Amar'e Stoudemire has been getting more in touch with his Jewish roots since he moved to Israel in 2016, under a two-year deal that saw the former New York Knicks star playing for Hapoel Jerusalem. On a visit in August 2018 to New York, Stoudemire told interviewers during a visit to the Jewish Museum that when he's not training, "I study Torah. Study, train, study, train, study, train, study. That’s life.” He added, “I study with elders, with rabbis, with everyone. I don’t limit myself.” Stoudemire calls his growing, private collection of art the Melech Collection, which makes use of the Hebrew word for “king,” and his latest acquisition is a 45-foot mural depicting the siege of Jerusalem’s Second Temple. Stoudemire also has a wine label, Stoudemire Cellars, that released a line of three kosher-for-Passover wines this year. (Photo: Instagram.)

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3 .

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Ben Kingsley

Actor

British actor Sir Ben Kingsley has been a household name ever since his unforgettable, Oscar-winning performance in the title-role of Gandhi (1982). In a dinstinguished screen career spanning five decades, Kingsley has often taken on Jewish roles – most memorably as Itzhak Stern in Schindler's List (1993). Other Jewish heroes he has played include Simon Wiesenthal in a 1989 HBO biopic – a role his close friend Wiesenthal urged him to take on – and Otto Frank in a 2002 television adaptation of Anne Frank's diary. But in his latest film Operation Finale (2018), Kingsley depicts the infamous SS officer, Adolf Eichmann, one of the principle architects of the Nazi Holocaust. "The torturer doesn’t have the last word," Kingsley said of playing Eichmann in a recent interview. "To quote Elie Wiesel, the last word belongs to the victim." (Photo: Wikimedia Commons.)

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4 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Israeli literary giant David Grossman was born in Jerusalem. He is the author of numerous works of fiction, nonfiction, and children's literature, including his most recent novel, A Horse Walks into a Bar, which was awarded the 2017 Man Booker International Prize. Grossman's work has has been translated into thirty languages around the world. He is the recipient of many additional prizes, including the French Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, the Buxtehuder Bulle in Germany, Rome's Premio per la Pace e l'Azione Umitaria, the Premio Ischia -- International Award for Journalism, Israel's Emet Prize, and the Albatross Prize given by the Günter Grass Foundation. (Photo: REUTERS / Gonzalo Fuentes / File Photo.)

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5 .

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Dean Kremer

Athlete

In 2015, Dean Kremer became the first Israeli to be drafted by a Major League Baseball (MLB) team. Then just 19, the starting pitcher began his professional career with the San Diego Padres organization. In July 2018, Kremer was traded to the Baltimore Orioles organization. Kremer has also represented Israel at the national level, most famously as starting pitcher in the 2017 World Baseball Classic. Despite being ranked by ESPN as the tournament's biggest underdog, Israel finished in third place – and Kremer remains determined to boost the sport's popularity in the Jewish state. "What I'd love to get out of the game is be a role model for kids in Israel along with kids in the Jewish community here," Kremer says. (Photo: Robbie Bullough / Ogden Raptors.)

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6 .

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Joan Nathan

Author

One of the best-loved exponents of Jewish cuisine, food writer Joan Nathan is the author of eleven cookbooks. Her latest work, King Solomon’s Table: a Culinary Exploration of Jewish Cooking from Around the World, was released by Alfred P. Knopf in April 2017. Her previous cookbook, Quiches, Kugels and Couscous: My Search for Jewish Cooking in France (Knopf), was named one of the 10 best cookbooks of 2010 by NPR, Food and Wine, and Bon Appétit magazines. She is a regular contributor to The New York Times. Her PBS television series, Jewish Cooking in America with Joan Nathan, was nominated in 2000 for the James Beard Award for Best National Television Food Show. Nathan has appeared as a guest on numerous radio and television programs including "The Today Show," "Good Morning America," "The Martha Stewart Show" and National Public Radio. (Photo: Twitter.)

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7 .

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Linoy Ashram

Athlete

19 year-old Israeli athlete Linoy Ashram is one of the world's top rhythmic gymnasts. Since 2014, she has won bronze and silver medals at major international competitions and twice been crowned Israeli Junior national champion. In 2018 alone, her achievements have sky-rocketed, with gold medal victories at an international competition in Spain as well as in the World Cup series that took Ashram to Sofia, Pesaro and Tashkent. She even has a move – the "Ashram" – named after her, in which the gymnast executes a back-bend turn on the floor. Meanwhile, the Olympic Games in Tokyo in 2020 are beckoning. Israel's Olympic Committee is clearly excited, duly noting in August that Ashram was the first athlete to win two gold medals in a single season in the Rhythmic Gymnastics World Challenge Cup. (Photo: Ayelet Zussman / Wikimedia Commons.)

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8 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Lior Raz

Screenwriter and actor

Israeli screenwriter and actor Lior Raz has almost become a household name in the US with this portrait of Doron Kavillio in the political thriller television series Fauda. 2018 has seen Raz return to directing, with the release of his eagerly-awaited movie Operation Finale, starring Ben Kingsley as the fugitive Nazi Adolf Eichmann, who was captured by the Mossad in Argentina in 1960. Interviewed about the film, Raz – who also plays a starring role as then Mossad chief Isser Harel – spoke candidly about the challenges of depicting Eichmann, one of the principal architects of the Holocaust. “We’re not dealing with a villain like a superhero movie,” Raz explained. “The bad guy is just a bad guy, a flat-out bad guy. You don’t care about him. But in real life, very kind people can do awful things.” (Photo: Wikimedia Commons.)

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9 .

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Michael Solomonov

Chef and restaurateur

Israeli-born, US-raised chef Solomonov is one of the leading ambassadors' for the modern Israeli cuisine that has set foodie palates alight in recent years. A proud advocate of the delights of Jewish and Israeli kitchens, Solomonov's Philadelphia restaurant, Zahav, has become a place of pilgrimage for lovers of inventive Israeli cooking. Solomonov's 2015 bestselling cookbook Zahav: A World of Israeli Cuisine was nominated for a James Beard Foundation Book Award. Israeli street food like hummus, falafel and shwarma, Solomonov told NPR in 2017, "is absolutely an inspiration" for him when he's in the kitchen. "I think it's almost what I crave the most when I go back there." (Photo: Michael Persico.)

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10 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Naomi Firestone-Teeter

Executive director, Jewish Book Council

Naomi Firestone-Teeter is the executive director of the Jewish Book Council (JBC) – an organization whose origins stretch back to the first ever "Jewish Book Week" mounted by librarian Fanny Goldstein in 1925. Originally from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, Naomi joined the JBC staff in 2006. She graduated from Emory University with degrees in English and Art History and, in addition, studied at University College London. Naomi has served as the founding editor of the JBC website and blog and managing editor of Jewish Book World. She has also overseen JBC's digital initiatives, and developed the JBC's "Visiting Scribe" series and "Unpacking the Book: Jewish Writers in Conversation." (Photo: Jewish Book Council.)

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11 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Netta Barzilai is an Israeli singer and looping artist who won the Eurovision Song Contest 2018 in Lisbon, Portugal with her solo single, "Toy," a hymn to female empowerment. Hailed her as a "worthy winner" by celebrated British author J.K. Rowling, Prime Minister Netanyahu named Netta Israel's greatest ambassador. Her win marked the fourth victory by Israel in Eurovision after 1978, 1979, and 1998. In 2018, Netta won season five of "HaKokhav HaBa," Israel's national selection for the Eurovision Song Contest, with her performance of a mashup of "Gangnam Style" by Psy and "Tik Tok" by Kesha. Born in 1993 in Hod HaSharon, Israel, she and her two brothers were raised in the Tel Aviv area. (Photo: Reuters / Pedro Nunes.)

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12 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Noemie Elicha

Blogger

Noemie Elicha is a kosher food and fashion blogger from France. She is known for her cool-girl, punk-chic aesthetic that she effortlessly integrates with her Jewish faith in her pictorial presentations. Noemie is married to Alexandre Elicha, one in a trio of brothers who founded The Kooples brand, and she often features their designs in her Instagram and blog posts. Noemie and Alexandre and their children are proudly and fashionably Jewish. Her growing Instagram audience, numbering in the tens of thousands, regularly portrays a love of Israel, Judaism, kosher food and fashion through black, punk-chic colored lenses. (Photo: Instagram.)

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13 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Ohad Naharin

Choreographer

Israeli choreographer Ohad Naharin has been one of the most influential figures in the world of dance since the late 1970s, when he made his choreographic debut at the Kazuko Hirabayashi Studio in New York. Appointed as artistic director of Tel Aviv's renowned Batsheva Dance Company in 1990, Naharin in the same year launched the company’s junior division. In the intervening period, he has created and directed more than 30 productions for both companies. Naharin also developed GAGA, an innovative movement language based on research into heightening sensation and imagination. Still unapologetically radical in his ideas and approach, Naharin's World Dance Day message of 2018 urged his fellow choreographers to "let go of old ideas for new, better ones." And, he added, "We must always remember to dance a little every day." (Photo: Screenshot.)

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14 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Saïd Ben Saïd

Producer

Few cultural figures in the Arab world have been as courageous in opposing the boycott of Israel as Saïd Ben Saïd. In 2017, the distinguished Franco-Tunisian film producer was disinvited from the Carthage International Film Festival in Tunisia because of his work with Israeli director Nadav Lapid. In recognition of his commitment to cultural cooperation, dialogue and understanding between Jews and Muslims, Ben Saïd received the 2018 Pomegranate Award for Lifetime Achievement from the American Sephardi Federation. In an interview with The Algemeiner earlier this year, Ben Saïd remarked that the Arab boycott of Israel "has had terrible consequences on the region." Describing Zionism as "a humanist movement, not a colonial one," Ben Saïd recognized that his viewpoint is a minority one, but insisted nonetheless, “I’m talking as an Arab and as a Muslim, and that’s what I am." (Photo: SBS Productions.)

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15 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Sharon Stone

Actress

One of the legends of the American screen, Oscar-nominated and Emmy Award-winning actress Sharon Stone has captivated audiences across the world with her leading roles in movie classics that include Total Recall, Basic Instinct, Casino and Catwoman. Her more recent roles in film and television have received critical acclaim. Variety magazine praised Stone's appearance in Steven Soderbergh's 2017 drama Mosaic for its "terrific range and depth" and her "effortless charisma," while the Daily Beast deemed that "Stone's turn is something close to masterful." Among the many social justice causes Stone has championed are improved treatment for AIDS/HIV sufferers and peace in the Middle East. Stone has often declared her love for Israel, and has described Israel's late president, Shimon Peres, as her "mentor." (Photo: Algemeiner.)

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16 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Siggy Flicker

TV personality

Siggy Flicker has never been one to follow the crowd. The Jewish relationship expert, motivational speaker, TV personality, author and Israel advocate inspires others simply by having created a life doing what she loves to do, surrounded by the people that she loves to be around. Her professional opinion has been sought out by a variety of TV programs including "The Today Show," "Dr. Phil," "The Wendy Williams Show," "The Steve Harvey Show," "Access Hollywood," "Fox & Friends," and many more. Flicker also had her own reality show on VH1 called “Why Am I Still Single” and in 2016 joined "The Real Housewives of New Jersey for 2 seasons." In 2016, she released her first book, Write Your Own Fairytale: The New Rules for Dating and Relationships, and Finding Love on Your Terms (Penguin Random House). (Photo: Algemeiner.)

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17 .

ARTS AND CULTURE

Zubin Mehta

Conductor

Legendary Indian conductor Zubin Mehta first learned about music from his father, Mehli, a noted concert violinist and the founder of the Bombay Symphony Orchestra. The Mumbai-born Mehta, a member of India's Parsee community, has enjoyed a long and fruitful relationship with Israeli musicians, having performed regularly in the Jewish state since the early 1960s, and then becoming the music director of the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra in 1977. Mehta has often spoken of his "deep kinship" with Israel's musicians as well as the "spirit and tradition of the Jewish people." In 2005, he co-founded the Buchmann-Mehta School of Music at Tel Aviv University. Some 200 concerts, lectures and master classes are held annually at the school, which has become the leading music institution in Israel. (Photo: Flickr.)

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