Startseite  


   News aus/zu Israel  


   DIG-Termine  


   Termin-Tipps  


   Pressemitteilungen  


   DIG in der Presse  


   DIG-Berichte  


   Wir über uns  


   DIG bundesweit  


   Jugendforum  


   Friedenspreis 2005  


   Gedenkkonzert 2008  


   DIG-Israel-Reisen  


   Links  


   Impressum  


   Kontakt  


   Israelfest 2008  


   ... neu ... Kunst  

Lesen Sie einen Artikel in der Jerusalem Post vom 1. Februar anläßlich des Abschieds von Dr. Johannes Gerster als Leiter der Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung in Jerusalem nach 9 Jahren Tätigkeit in Israel:

 

Greer Fay Cashman, THE JERUSALEM POST  Feb. 1, 2006 

In the strange and sometimes strained relationship between Germany and

Israel, the shadow of the Holocaust never disappears.

 

It is thus that Johannes Gerster, who returned to Germany last week after

spending nine years in Israel as the Konrad Adenauer Foundation's

representative, said his most enduring impression will be Jerusalem Mayor

Uri Lupoliansky attending his farewell reception.

 

Lupoliansky's family comes from Karlsruhe, and many of his relatives

perished in the Holocaust, Gerster told The Jerusalem Post o­n the eve of his

departure. Yet Lupoliansky, "an ultra-Orthodox Jew," came - not for the

first time - to pay his respects to "a German Christian who is a member of a

nation that destroyed his family. This is a special honor for me. It's a

miracle and it contributes to the good relations between Germany and

Israel."

 

The KAF not o­nly encourages and sponsors dialogue between Israel and

Germany - with large-scale bilateral conferences of jurists, politicians,

intellectuals and journalists - but is also active in helping Israelis and

Palestinians develop projects with the aim of laying the foundations for

future coexistence.

 

It is o­ne of several German foundations operating o­n a regular basis in

Israel - prominent among them the Friedrich Ebert Foundation, the Heinrich

Boll Foundation, the Hans Seidel Foundation and the Friedrich Neumann

Foundation. Some of their work overlaps, but in general, they have separate

programs. Representatives of all the foundations come together four times a

year with the German ambassador to review their activities and to share

common problems.

 

Far from resenting what could be perceived as interference in internal

affairs, Israeli government bodies and NGOs turn to these foundations for

assistance. The KAF gets more than 200 requests per year from both

governmental and non-governmental organizations, and all the foundations put

together handle around 1,000 requests.

 

"We're not imposing ourselves," said Gerster. "We're o­nly facilitators."

 

GERSTER, 65, said he's had a pro-Israel attitude for as long as he can

remember.

 

A former parliamentarian, he chaired the German-Israeli Parliamentary Group,

and for 16 years prior to taking up his post in Israel, he was vice

president of the German-Israeli Society. In Israel he became vice-president

of the Israeli-German Society.

 

Working until almost the last minute before his departure, Gerster escorted

Konrad Adenauer Foundation Chairman Dr. Bernhard Vogel, who came to Israel

to oversee the changing of the guard at KAF, o­n a visit to Yad Vashem.

 

Gerster estimates that he has been to Yad Vashem at least 150 times. "After

every visit I'm ill," he said, explaining that it is always a painful

experience to confront the inhumanity of his people, even though his own

family was different. It is a matter of public record that his parents,

Gottfried and Elisabeth Gerster, were members of a group brought together by

the Bishop of Mainz to help Jews escape from Nazi Germany.

 

However, Gerster said, his father never dwelled o­n the subject. "He said it

was a normal thing to do. But the more I go to Yad Vashem, the prouder I am

of my family. They were ordinary, working-class people, not academics, but

because of them I have been involved in German-Israel friendship

organizations for 45 years. The history of Israel and Germany and the Shoah

is always uppermost in my mind."

 

As a German, Gerster said, he carries a special responsibility for Israel's

well-being. "I don't feel guilty, but I feel responsible. It's like wearing

a second skin."

 

Although he helped to arrange it, Gerster missed out o­n the state visit this

week of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who is not o­nly the chief political

leader of his country but also of the party of which he has been a member

since 1960, the center-right Christian Democratic Union.

Prior to joining the KAF, Gerster spent 20 years as a member of parliament.

His most recent position was as chairman of the CDU National Faction of

Rhineland-Palatinate. Before that he was deputy chairman of the CDU/CSU

Parliamentary Faction.

 

Since 1996, he has served o­n the CDU executive committee, in which capacity

he assisted in the preparations for Merkel's visit o­n Sunday. Though he is

not returning formally to politics, he said, he will act as an adviser to

Merkel.

 

A lawyer by profession, Gerster will return to his practice in Wiesbaden,

but he won't have very much time to attend to cases. He has more than 60

speaking engagements lined up throughout Germany for the next several

months, which is in keeping with his belief that the most effective way to

combat anti-Semitism is to present a true picture of Israel from the

perspective of a German who has spent a long time living in the country.

 

In addition, he has been asked by The Jerusalem Foundation and Tel Aviv

University to represent them in Germany in a voluntary capacity - something

he said he is pleased to do, along with advancing KAF projects for

Israeli-Palestinian cooperation.

 

LOOKING BACK o­n his period of service in Israel, Gerster said that what

amazed him most was the readiness with which Israelis accepted him. He had

not anticipated, he said, being showered with such hospitality.

 

He also expressed pride in the Konrad Adenauer Conference Center that was

built during his tenure, as it has become an integral part of Jerusalem's

cultural scene and a venue for national and international events.

 

Among his favorite projects, said Gerster is an integration program - in

conjunction with the Education Ministry, Ben-Gurion University, the IDF and

Bank Leumi - for Beduins and development town youth to improve their

competence in Hebrew, English and math in order to be at a level at which

they can hope to go o­n to higher education. The program operates in 29

schools throughout the Negev. Gerster said that whereas in 1999, there were

only 53 Beduin students at BGU, today there are around 600.

 

Yet, Gerster said, the KAF works with all of Israel's universities. Together

with Tel Aviv University, for example, the KAF produced a data bank with

what Gerster described as "the most comprehensive information about Arabs in

Israel."

He also gave the KAF credit for behind behind the free trade zone between

Jordan, Israel and the US. Jordan was losing out in sending exports to the

US, explained Gerster, because shipping took 37 days, compared to 19 days

from Haifa. The KAF organized annual conferences between Israeli and

Jordanian business people, he said, and set up two huge tents along both

sides of the border.

 

Contacts established not o­nly enabled Jordanian companies to send their

exports to the US via Israel, but also resulted in a number of joint

ventures. The volume of trade grew from $29 million in 1999, he claimed, to

more than $1 billion in 2004, and continued to grow in 2005. Israel, he

added, earns eight percent gross o­n the export costs.

 

The advancement of the status of Jewish and Arab women is another area

Gerster pointed to with pride.

 

Sometimes, Gerster asserted, the KAF has succeeded where all other channels

have failed. He cited as an example the o­ngoing "unofficial"

Israeli-Palestinian dialogue during the height of the intifada.

 

"There were official representatives from both governments," Gerster said,

assessing that the economic working group was the most regular. "And Prime

Minister Ariel Sharon was always kept informed about these meetings, even

though he had stopped official negotiations between Israel and the

Palestinians."

 

"It's better to talk to each other," said Gerster of such dialogue, "than

shoot each other."

Gerster left Israel with the strong conviction that regardless of how

difficult conditions may be, "this country will have a stable future. I'm

more optimistic than 80% of Israelis."

 

Promising that he will have a lot to do with Israel in general and Jerusalem

in particular, Gerster pledged that he would return to Israel several times

a year.

 

So, even though he has already been succeeded at KAF by his former

assistant, Lars Hansel, those who bid him farewell know that it is not

really goodbye, but simply Auf Wiedersehen.

nach oben