Venezuela welcomes former Israeli chief rabbi in ‘peace diplomacy’ bid

Troubled South American nation downgraded diplomatic relations with Israel following wars with Hezbollah and Hamas

File: Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on election day in Venezuela, on May 20, 2018. (AFP Photo/Juan Barreto)
File: Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on election day in Venezuela, on May 20, 2018. (AFP Photo/Juan Barreto)

JTA — Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, a far-left leader who has likened harassment of his country’s government officials and their families living abroad to the treatment of Jews under the Nazis, welcomed a senior Israeli rabbi in Caracas with an eye toward “strengthening peace diplomacy.”

Maduro met Sunday with Rabbi Shlomo Amar, the chief Sephardic rabbi in Israel from 2003 to 2013 and currently the chief rabbi of Jerusalem.

In 2017, Venezuela’s foreign minister expressed to his country’s chief rabbi “the desire to establish full relations with the State of Israel,” eight years after the South American nation expelled its Israeli ambassador.

“I had a pleasant and cordial encounter with Shlomo Moshe Amar Shlita, Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Israel, who gave me his blessing and expressed good wishes for the people of Venezuela,” Maduro tweeted.

Several other Venezuelan officials attended the meeting at the Miraflores Palace, including Vice President Delcy Rodriguez and Communications Minister Jorge Rodríguez. Maduro awarded the Libertadoras y Libertadores medal to Rabbi Isaac Cohen, the spiritual leader of the Venezuelan Israelite Association, who has been living in the country for over 40 years.

Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem Shlomo Amar speaks at the 15th annual Jerusalem Conference of the ‘Besheva’ group, on February 12, 2018. (Hadas Parush/Flash90)

In 2017, Cohen told the AJN News website, speaking about possible renewed ties between Israel and Venezuela: “We suggested to start with a period of courtship, which means a beginning through consular relations, so that later it will become a marriage, which would be Israel’s own embassy again in Venezuela, as we have always had here.

“I am an Orthodox and Zionist rabbi, and for me it is Jewish pride to have the flag of the State of Israel hoisted here in Venezuela, as in any country where there is a Jewish community. That gives us peace and tranquility, it’s fundamental.”

In 2006, the Venezuelan government downgraded its relations with Israel in the wake of Israel’s war with Hezbollah. The late president Hugo Chavez recalled his ambassador after criticizing Israel for employing “Hitler’s methods” against Lebanese civilians.

Chavez, Maduro’s political godfather, often employed anti-Semitic rhetoric to deflect criticism from the country’s deep financial crisis and charges of corruption.

Maduro said earlier this year that opposition rallies in Caracas were reminiscent of rallies during the rise of Nazism and fascism in pre-World War II Europe.

Illustrative: A young Jewish boy reads from the Torah at his bar mitzvah in Magen David Synagogue in Caracas, Venezuela, January 1, 2005. (Serge Attal/Flash90)

“We are the new Jews of the 21st century that Hitler pursued,” he said. “We don’t carry the yellow Star of David, we carry red hearts that are filled with desire to fight for human dignity. And we are going to defeat them, these 21st century Nazis.”

Venezuela is home to some 9,000 Jews, down from about 25,000 in 1999. Many Jews left, mainly for Florida and Israel, due to a deteriorating financial and social climate, along with a growing anti-Semitic environment established under the Chavez and Maduro regimes.

The ultra-Orthodox Amar has stoked controversy in Israel, saying last year that Reform Jews were worse than Holocaust deniers for defying Orthodox Jewish law on gender separation and insisting on the right to mixed-gender prayer at the Western Wall. In 2016, he called homosexuality an “abomination.”

Ten years earlier, Amar urged the removal of the conversion clause from Israel’s Law of Return, a step that would have prevented any Jew by choice from having automatic citizenship rights in Israel.

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