Saturday, April 20th | 12 Nisan 5784

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The Top 100 People Positively Influencing Jewish Life, 2019

In honor of The Algemeiner’s sixth annual gala, we are delighted to unveil our sixth ‘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. 

It’s no secret that the Jewish community has seen significant and rising challenges over the past 12 months, from shooting attacks in synagogues to antisemitism in the halls of the United States Congress. In Europe, nearly every major survey shows double digit growth in antisemitic attacks, while the rise of Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour party has put British Jews on edge. Israel also faces growing threats on its borders, even as it struggles to overcome unprecedented political turmoil internally.

It’s for these reasons that we found the compilation of this year’s ‘J100’ list to be a particularly inspiring exercise. Contained within the list are many individuals whose efforts are vital to pushing back the tide of hate and charting a path to a brighter Jewish future. We hope you find it as encouraging as we did.

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! 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, 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 positively influencing 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 NGOs. 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 New York 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

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Adam Kirsch

Poet and literary critic

Esteemed poet and literary critic Adam Kirsch, called “one of today’s keenest critics” and “the hope for Jewish literature,” is the author of 10 books, including his recently published collection of essays Who Wants to be a Jewish Writer? In this work, he explores the intersection of poetry and religion, with a particular focus on Jewish literature and whether it can even be defined. He also serves as poetry editor of the New Criterion, and regularly contributes to the Atlantic, New Yorker, and Tablet, among other publications. (Photo: Courtesy)

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Andrei Piontkovsky

Political analyst

Andrei Piontkovsky is considered one of the most pro-Israel Russian political analysts, observers say, and doesn’t shy away from criticizing the motives of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Piontkovsky, also a mathematician, recently suggested that Putin’s decision to sell air defense missiles to Iran would actually destabilize the region and drive up the price of oil, which may be his goal. The analyst reportedly said that Israel would likely feel compelled to launch a military strike at Iranian facilities in the near future before the Russian systems go operational, which could trigger a broader regional conflict. He also said that “if Israel does not act now, the world is likely to confront a nuclear-armed Iran in the near term, something that could lead other countries in the oil-rich region to try to go nuclear and compel them to raise prices.” (Photo: Dmitry Rozhkov / CC BY-SA 3.0)

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Ariel Burger

Author

Witness: Lessons from Elie’s Wiesel’s Classroom, Ariel Burger’s latest book, won the National Jewish Book Award for biography. Burger, a protégé of the late Holocaust survivor and Nobel Peace Prize recipient, said he was driven to write the book because he wanted readers "to feel the experience of being in class with Professor Wiesel, to hear his voice and imagine his face." Witness deftly explores the works Wiesel taught, which include biblical texts, the teachings of Chasidic rebbes and classics of Western literature. An Orthodox rabbi, Burger received his doctorate in Jewish Studies and Conflict Resolution under Wiesel at Boston University. (Photo: Courtesy)

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Bill Maher

Television host

The American comedian, political commentator, and television host is known for the HBO political talk show Real Time with Bill Maher and the late-night show called Politically Incorrect, originally on Comedy Central and later on ABC. In 2019, Maher aimed his abrasive satirical style against the controversial boycott, divestment, and sanctions campaign targeting Israel. To the warm applause of his studio audience, Maher denounced the campaign to isolate the Jewish state as "a b***s*** purity test by people who want to appear woke but actually slept through history class.” Not quite done, he also criticized the antisemitic comments of Democratic lawmaker Ilhan Omar, saying her words meant that “it’s out there: Jews control the world, control the money.” (Photo: Angela George / CC BY 3.0)

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Dominic Green

Life and Arts editor, Spectator USA

Dominic Green, a critic, historian, and the Life and Arts editor of Spectator USA, writes widely about current affairs that include antisemitism and Israel. He has an international audience and also contributes regularly to the Wall Street Journal. He has a nuanced approach to President Donald Trump, writing in a recent column, “It isn’t accurate to characterize the Democrats the way Trump did last March, as ‘totally anti-Israel’ and ‘anti-Jewish.’It would be more accurate to say that the Democratic left, the party of Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, and Keith Ellison, harbors an obsessional loathing of Israel that frequently shades into antisemitism.” His forthcoming book is The Religious Revolution, a history of modern spirituality. (Photo: Courtesy)

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Edward L. Greenstein

Professor, Bar-Ilan University

A professor emeritus of Bible at Bar-Ilan University who has spent years studying the Book of Job, Edward L. Greenstein’s recently-published Job: A New Translation has been praised by Publishers Weekly as an “excellent, accessible translation that supports his new interpretation of the famous text.” The book, according to its publisher, relies on Greenstein's "decades of intensive research and painstaking philological and literary analysis," and offers a fresh perspective -- that Job "was defiant of God until the end." (Photo: barilanuniversity / Screenshot)

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Franz-Olivier Giesbert, a French journalist, author, and television host, is a vocal defender of Israel in French media. Earlier this year, Giesbert commended French President Emmanuel Macron’s remarks to leaders of the Jewish community that the government would take steps to define “anti-Zionism as a modern-day form of antisemitism.” Giesbert also has supported the United States’ decision to move its embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. His latest book, Le Schmock (The Schmuck), explores through its fictional characters why Nazism was able to take hold in Germany. (Photo: Thesupermat / CC BY-SA 3.0)

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Gisèle Littman, an Egyptian-born British author who writes under the pen name Bat Ye’or -- Hebrew for “Daughter of the Nile” -- has focused much of her writing on European politics and the conditions faced by non-Muslim minorities in the Middle East, including in her most well-known work, The Dhimmi. Littman’s writing initially was seen as controversial because she was not affiliated with an institution of higher learning. Scholar Robert Wistrich once noted, “Up until the 1980s, she was not accepted at all. In academic circles they scorned her publications. Only when Bernard Lewis published the book 'Jews of Islam' with quotations from Bat Ye'or did they begin to pay any attention to her. A real change toward her emerged in the 1990s, and especially in recent years.” She is the author of eight books. (Photo: Courtesy)

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Jake Tapper

Journalist

Jake Tapper, an award-winning journalist for CNN, has forcefully responded to some of his detractors, including Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and former Women's March co-chair Linda Sarsour. In August 2019, in the wake of the mass shooting in El Paso, Texas, Tlaib criticized Tapper for “comparing Palestinian human rights advocates to terrorist white nationalists,” calling it “fundamentally a lie.” In response, Tapper said that “those who believe Palestinian leaders bear responsibility for the incitement of terrorism cannot then let US leaders off the hook and act as if words don’t matter.” Tapper, a practicing Jew, is also the author of The Outpost: An Untold Story of American Valor, a bestselling book about US troops in Afghanistan. (Photo: Chad J. McNeeley)

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Julian Reichelt

Editor-in-chief, Bild

The editor-in-chief of Germany’s leading tabloid newspaper Bild, Julian Reichelt has been a powerful voice in the fight this year against rising antisemitism in his country. In May, after Germany’s top official for combating antisemitism warned that it was not safe for Jews to wear a kippah “everywhere, all the time,” Reichelt published a cut-out-and-keep kippah on the front page of Bild, alongside an editorial headlined, “The kippah belongs in Germany.” If Jews were scared to wear visible symbols of their identity, “then we have failed in the face of our history,” Reichelt wrote. “Wear it, so that your friends and neighbors can see it. Explain to your children what the kippah is. Post a photograph with the kippah on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter. Go out onto the streets with it.” (Photo: © Superbass / CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons)

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Lachlan Murdoch

Chairman and CEO, Fox Corporation

Lachlan Murdoch, the eldest son of media mogul Rupert Murdoch, became chairman and CEO of the Fox Corporation after it was acquired by Disney in March 2019, cementing his status as heir to the Murdoch business empire. The entity’s flagship Fox News channel has by and large provided fair coverage of the State of Israel. Lachlan Murdoch, who previously served as executive chairman of 21st Century Fox, is also co-chairman of the mass media company News Corp. (Photo: Eva Rinaldi / CC BY-SA 2.0)

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Matti Friedman

Journalist

Author and journalist Matti Friedman, a op-ed contributor at the New York Times, has used his platform to hold the publication accountable for its coverage of Israel. Earlier this year, he wrote a piece critical of the Times’ reporting that West Bank settlers are to blame for Israel’s problem. Friedman earlier made headlines by writing a scathing criticism in an extended Facebook post of the report from NGO Breaking the Silence on the conduct of Israeli soldiers during the 2014 Gaza war. A former reporter for the Associated Press, Friedman also has drawn attention for an extensive critique, published by Tablet magazine, of the agency’s coverage of Israel. His latest book, Spies of No Country: Secret Lives at the Birth of Israel, chronicles the story of four Arabic-speaking Jews who operated an Israeli, pre-independence Zionist intelligence unit. It won the 2018 Natan Book Award. (Photo: Arielinson / CC BY-SA 4.0)

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Nicole Krauss

Author

Internationally bestselling Jewish-American author Nicole Krauss said she wrote her fourth and most recent work, Forest Dark, "out of the depths of lifelong reflections on Israel," according to the Times of Israel. The Financial Times praised the novel, which features two Jewish protagonists who travel to Israel from New York, as "a richly layered masterpiece … [that] does what only the very best fiction can do – startles, challenges and enlightens the reader, while showing the familiar world anew.” Krauss’ third novel, Great House, won an Anisfield-Wolf Book award and was shortlisted for the prestigious Orange Prize, as was her second novel, The History of Love, which was awarded the William Saroyan International Prize for Writing. (Photo: Amrei-Marie / CC BY-SA 4.0)

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Paul Gigot

Editorial page editor and vice president, The Wall Street Journal

Paul Gigot, editorial page editor and vice president of the Wall Street Journal, arguably oversees one of the most pro-Israel editorial pages among US mainstream news publications. A Pulitzer Prize winner, Gigot also moderates the television series Journal Editorial Report, which is broadcast on Fox News. A March 2019 editorial on the Golan Heights, for instance, took a measured approach to the US recognition, by way of a tweet from President Donald Trump, of Israeli sovereignty over the region. “This time his tweet was based on more than personal impulse and makes sense for American and Israeli interests,” it argued. (Photo: Preston Keres)

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Ronen Bergman

Journalist

Israeli journalist and author Ronen Bergman is known around the world for his astute political and military analyses. He has most recently made headlines for his book Rise and Kill First: The Secret History of Israel’s Targeted Assassinations, which received international acclaim and was just released in paperback. Based on hundreds of interviews and thousands of documents, the book “traces, from statehood to the present, the gripping events and thorny ethical questions underlying Israel’s targeted killing campaign and special operations, which have profoundly affected the Israeli nation, the Middle East, and the entire world,” Bergman said. Inspiration for the book’s title came from the Talmudic verse, “If someone comes to kill you, rise up and kill him first.” (Photo: Dor Malka / CC BY-SA 4.0)

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Sarah Hurwitz

Speechwriter

Sarah Hurwitz, a former speechwriter for Hillary Clinton and Michelle and Barack Obama, aimed to show others that “Judaism is worth choosing” in her recent book Here All Along: Finding Meaning, Spirituality, and a Deeper Connection to Life -- in Judaism. Hurwitz’s sources for the book are a politically and religiously diverse group that includes Joseph Telushkin, Dennis Prager, Jonathan Sacks, Lawrence Hoffman, Ze’ev Maghen, Yoram Hazony, Shai Held, Avi Weiss, Shaye Cohen, Adam Kirsch, Jonathan Rosen, Art Green, Elliot Dorff, Donniel Hartman, Judith Shulevitz, and Elie Kaunfer. She draws from them in chapters about the Torah, prayer, the Sabbath, Jewish holidays, and death. Hurwitz is also a member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council. (Photo: Thor Brødreskift / Nordiske Mediedager / CC BY-SA 2.0)

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William Jacobson

Professor, Cornell University

An American lawyer and scholar who is an expert in securities arbitration, William Jacobson is a leading critic of the academic boycott of Israel and the anti-Zionist boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) campaign as a whole. Jacobson, who is on the faculty of Cornell University’s law school, is also the founder and publisher of Legal Insurrection, a conservative news blog. He frequently makes media appearances and speaks at events across the nation. Earlier this year at Cornell, the student government rejected a BDS resolution by a vote of 15-14, with one abstention. Jacobson responded, “The point of BDS on campuses is not actually the boycott, divestment or sanction itself. BDS is just a tactic to dominate campus life and energy in the cause of demonizing Israel.” (Photo: C-SPAN / Screenshot)

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One of Israel’s leading authors and commentators, Yossi Klein-Halevi’s celebrated collection of books includes 2013’s Like Dreamers: The Story of the Israeli Paratroopers who Reunited Jerusalem and Divided A Nation. Halevi's most recent book, titled Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor, was published in 2018. In that volume, Halevi set out the case for Zionism and an independent Jewish state to his interlocutor, Palestinian academic Mohammed Dajani. Despite the novel nature of the project, Klein-Halevi does not believe that his book is sufficient to bring about a peaceful settlement, as that is a task for politicians. “I’m only a writer, not a politician,” he said in an interview this year. “My writer’s responsibility is to try to model what a respectful disagreement over irreconcilable narratives would sound like.” (Photo: Rachelgr713 / CC BY-SA 3.0)

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