Join Sivan's newsletter!

Get updates & news via Email

Have You Heard of David Magerman?

דר דיוויד מגרמן וסיון רהב-מאיר

* Translated by Janine Muller Sherr

The person you see in the photo is Dr. David Magerman. He is deeply deserving of our gratitude.

David is a highly successful businessman and philanthropist and one of the first donors to announce that he will cease supporting the University of Pennsylvania. Following the shameful hearing before Congress in which the president of the university, Liz Magill, could not bring herself to condemn the calls for Jewish genocide on her campus, David decided to withdraw his support from the university (which is also his alma mater). Furthermore, he called on all other self-respecting Jewish donors to follow his lead. It takes great courage to sound a voice of such moral clarity in our confused world of today. It is worth noting that Liz Magill has since resigned her post.

Last weekend, we both participated in a panel discussion at the Project Inspire Convention in Connecticut. There David recalled a second brave step that he has taken. Like so many of our brothers and sisters in the diaspora, he did not receive a Jewish education.

“I was a “twice-a-year Jew”— on Yom Kippur and Pesach,” he explained, “but Judaism didn’t mean anything to me. I also didn’t understand anything about it. I had completed my doctorate and achieved great financial success. One day, I received an invitation from my relative in Israel to come to his son’s bar mitzvah. And so, several years ago, I found myself on Shabbat in the Har Nof neighborhood of Jerusalem. And I fell in love. So many people live such an isolated existence today and there I saw a community coming together to celebrate with a bar mitzvah boy, and it was pure joy. And in an era of ignorance, I met little children who knew much more Torah than I did. This experience moved me greatly. When I returned to the US, I arranged a study partner (chavruta) for myself. I started to learn Torah. My life was transformed. My children are now learning in a Jewish day school.”

And then came his third brave move.

In front of about 1,000 people who were in attendance at the Project Inspire Shabbaton, David announced:

“The time has come for us to make Aliyah. I’ve already purchased a home in Israel. I did not merit for my children to be born there, but I do hope that my grandchildren will. This is the direction our history is headed and it is the right place to be. Not only because of antisemitism but because it is our home.”

Three courageous moves and so much for us to think about. What can we learn from this?

Thank you, David.

Share!

We use cookies to ensure the best experience for you. Please, accept the usage of cookies.