Subscribe to Print Edition | Wed., April 29, 2009 Iyyar 5, 5769 | | Israel Time: 21:07 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
Haaretz Toolbar
Diplomacy
Defense Jewish World Opinion National
Print Edition
Car Rental Books Haaretz Magazine Business Real Estate Focus U.S.A. Travel Week's End Anglo File TLV 100
Last update - 11:11 26/04/2009
Sharansky, the Jewish Agency's worst nightmare and best hope
By Anshel Pfeffer, Haaretz Correspondent
Tags: Olmert, Israel News 

"If they had chosen me as the Jewish Agency chairman," mused Natan Sharansky in his new office at the Adelson Institute, "I would have closed down 90 percent of the Agency and moved most of the activity over to independent organizations such as Birthright and Nefesh B'Nefesh. They are much more efficient."

It was a disappointed and slightly bitter Sharansky talking. A few months earlier, he had lost the candidacy for the leadership of the largest international Jewish organization to a virtually unknown mayor of a medium-sized town. Sharansky certainly didn't lack the necessary credentials. The former prisoner of Zion and a hero to millions, his ministerial resume included the Diaspora portfolio.

At the time he was also at the height of his international popularity, receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom from then president George W. Bush, who had recommended his book, "The Case for Democracy," as compulsory reading.
Advertisement
He had the necessary support of the leaders of the major American federations, but lacked only one crucial element to secure the job. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert hadn't forgotten Sharansky's rebellion against his predecessor Ariel Sharon and his resignation in protest over the disengagement from Gaza.

On a personal level, Olmert admired Sharansky. For the key political post, though, he wanted someone who he could depend on. So mild-mannered, slavishly loyal Zeev Bielsky from Ra'anana got the job.

Now that Bielsky has chosen to escape the Agency for the back-benches of the Knesset (his term as chairman can be summed up in one phrase - financial decline and institutional demoralization), and a new prime minister has persuaded Sharansky to accept the candidacy he lost the last time around, it remains to be seen whether the new chairman will carry out the plan he envisaged a few years ago.

There are huge obstacles in his path. Dismantling a large bureaucratic apparatus is never an easy task, and the Jewish Agency has one of the most powerful and entrenched employee unions, which will fight him every step of the way. In addition, throughout his career, Sharansky has proven himself a poor politician; he is the first person to admit this. He isn't much of a manager either, he's a visionary. But visionaries have their limitations.

Sharansky understands the Agency's fundamental weakness. That despite all it has accomplished over the decades in encouraging immigration and working with communities in the Diaspora and Israel, it has always suffered from the lack of a clear mission.

The Jewish Agency should have closed down in 1948, on the day its chairman, David Ben-Gurion, became prime minister of the new state of Israel. From then on, the leadership of the Agency, which had served as the de-facto government of the Jewish community in Palestine, was destined to be no more than the B-Team, a repository for failed third-rate politicians.

For various financial, political and diplomatic reasons, it was convenient for successive governments to leave the Agency with the task of organizing immigration and low-level relations with the Diaspora. But in this role, the Agency has become obsolete. It is steadily being muscled out of the former Soviet Union by the better financed and organized Nativ agency, the apple of Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman's eye, on the one hand, and the pervasive efforts of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, on the other.

In the main immigration markets of North America, France and Britain, it has been almost totally replaced by the private organizations, Nefesh B'Nefesh and AMI. At the same time, its once-impressive fundraising capabilities have been severely eroded, even before the current financial crisis, by violent currency fluctuations and a growing reluctance by private donors and large federations to foot the bill.

The Agency is finding it impossible to maintain its network of emmissaries around the world, while the effectiveness of many of them is rapidly coming under question in a world where everyone communicates and gets information through the internet.

This could be the big opportunity for Sharansky, and the Agency. Get out of the immigration business, leave it to the government and the private organizations. Transform into the biggest foundation in the Jewish world, working with grassroots movements on educational programs.

Jettison the hierarchy, close down departments, buy out the pen pushers and bean counters.

All of a sudden, you will have a budget of hundreds of millions, with which to enable local networks and initiatives. Sharansky's Agency could be a lean outfit, offering guidance, coordination, money and an overall strategy.

It will mean a painful restructuring process, especially for the hundreds of veteran employees who will be shown the door. But it is either that or continuing the long and inevitable descent into irrelevance. If anyone can be assured of the backing from the prime minister and the powerful federations overseas, necessary for facing down the unions and other vested interests, it is Sharansky. All he needs is a clear plan and a small and dedicated team to assist him. And to make it clear from Day One, when he sits down in Ben-Gurion's old office on King George Street, that he means business.
Bookmark to del.icio.us  
 
Memorial Day 2009
Israel honors its fallen soldiers and victims of terror attacks.
Making swine flu kosher
Mexico Flu - a symptom of the disease of Israeli politics.
  1.   Who will assist third world countries? 05:08  |  Daniel 24/04/09
  2.   JEWISH AGENCA FOR REEMIGRATION 12:23  |  Alks Seltzer 26/04/09
  3.   Sharansky and selective memory 12:29  |  Ussishkin 26/04/09
  4.   Getting ride of inefficent peopleat is the key 13:40  |  Natan 26/04/09
  5.   from Australia 15:33  |  Australian Jew 26/04/09
  6.   #5 ill trade my citizenship for yours 20:14  |  Chaim 29/04/09
 Read & React
Independence Day / I am a Zionist and I am proud
Responses: 120
Barak: Israel can and must make peace within three years
Responses: 133
Bradley Burston: Could the Taliban get the bomb before Iran does?
Responses: 63
'Every step that strengthens Hamas only distances peace'
Responses: 112


More Headlines
20:20 Lieberman: Israel has worked to achieve peace since its establishment
17:37 6th Israeli hospitalized with possible swine flu; 2 cases confirmed
13:51 Obama congratulates Israel on turning 61
13:32 Netanyahu: Israel to do all in its power to bring Shalit home
18:33 How Gideon Levy's first scoop got buried
15:40 'Israel's response to drill with Syria doesn't concern us'
20:55 IN PICTURES / Israel celebrates 61st Independence Day
21:43 WATCH: Daily news round-up from Israel
19:30 German confesses to selling rocket material to Iran
14:27 Israeli Arabs mark 61st anniversary of Nakba
18:19 Probe into suspected draft-dodging promoters draws fire
18:46 Egypt orders slaughter of all pigs over swine flu
11:44 Israeli couple found dead after light plane crash in Greece
Previous Editions
Special Offers
Advertisement
Spring Specials-Dan Hotels
Jerusalem from 179$. Tel-Aviv from 223$. Herzliya from 336$
The Meier on Rothschild Tower
Masterpiece Residence in the Heart of Tel Aviv
Dead Sea Skin Care
Quality cosmetics from the Dead Sea. Coupon code HAARETZ for 12% off!
Camp Kimama Israel 2009
The best place for your children this summer
Eldan Rent a Car
Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on online reservations
Jewish Singles Personal Ads
Find the love of your life on JDate.com
Junkyard
Junk a car - get free towing nationwide and a tax-deductible receipt
Home | TV | Print Edition | Diplomacy | Opinion | Arts & Leisure | Sports | Jewish World | | Israel 2009 election results
Site rules | Makom: Engaging on Israel | Search engine marketing
Haaretz.com, the online edition of Haaretz Newspaper in Israel, offers real-time breaking news, opinions and analysis from Israel and the Middle East. Haaretz.com provides extensive and in-depth coverage of Israel, the Jewish World and the Middle East, including defense, diplomacy, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the peace process, Israeli politics, Jerusalem affairs, international relations, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the Israeli business world and Jewish life in Israel and the Diaspora.
© Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved