Yad Kennedy, a magnificent monument honoring JFK, is
located on an isolated mountaintop in the Mateh Yehuda Region near Jerusalem.
The Kennedy Memorial symbolizes the enduring friendship between Israel and the
United States of America.
by Rivkah Lambert Adler
by Rivkah Lambert Adler
What
was it about President John F. Kennedy that touched the hearts of ordinary
Israelis? It was already Shabbat in Israel when President Kennedy was
assassinated on November 22, 1963. The mood in Israel was somber. Just as
Israelis remember where they were when they heard that Prime Minister Yitzchak
Rabin had been assassinated in 1995, those who lived in Israel 50 years ago
recall a similar mood of shock and sadness. Children were sent home early from
youth group activities, mothers cried in the streets and the country’s citizens
walked around dazed, as news of the assassination in Dallas, Texas spread.
“I remember the
day Kennedy was assassinated; it was if the world had stopped,” shared Dr.
Irving Taylor of Baltimore, Maryland, staunch supporter of JNF whose donation
recently funded the renovation of Yad Kennedy memorial. “Everybody was in shock
for three days and stayed glued to their black and white television sets. No
music or commercials played during this tragic time. JFK was a special human
being who was so revered, not because he was the United States President, but
he was truly a genuinely good man.”
The State of
Israel, just 15 years old when Kennedy was gunned down, recognized a singular
promise of friendship and support in the words and actions of America’s
youngest president. In a speech to the Zionists of America Convention in 1960,
Kennedy said, "Israel was not created in order to disappear—Israel will
endure and flourish. It is the child of hope and home of the brave. It can
neither be broken by adversity nor demoralized by success. It carries the
shield of democracy and it honors the sword of freedom." In 1962, Kennedy
was the first American president to sell arms to the fledgling State, backing
up his words with meaningful foreign policy actions.
In 1958, when JFK
was still a junior Senator from Massachusetts, he spoke prophetically at a
Jewish National Fund (JNF) meeting about the importance of planting trees in
Israel. "What work could be more heartwarming or more enduring than the
great forest at Jerusalem? Your children and grandchildren, when they visit
Israel, will find your monument." Just weeks after the assassination,
Menahem-Max Bressler, then-President of Jewish National Fund in the United
States, introduced the idea of establishing a memorial dedicated to President
Kennedy in the very forest Kennedy had spoken of so warmly. Today, thanks to
Bressler’s foresight, those who were alive in 1958, along with their children
and grandchildren, can visit a stunning memorial honoring President Kennedy
built and maintained by JNF.
The
distinctive Kennedy Memorial sits high amidst the verdant green of the
Jerusalem Forest, where every tree was planted by hand. A unique memorial to a
foreign president, the dramatic structure was meant to evoke the stump of a
felled tree, symbolizing a life cut short. The main circular hall is supported
by 51 gracefully curved columns, each bearing the golden medallion of the
official seal of one of the 50 states, along with Washington DC. Each column
was endowed by American Jews, often residents of the state whose seal is
affixed to the column. The circular stone hall shields a Ner Zikaron, an
eternal memorial candle. Forty years after it was inaugurated, the Kennedy
Memorial was renovated through a generous donation by Dr. Irving Taylor of
Baltimore whose parents, Isaac and Rose Taylor, funded the original Maryland
column.
“When I was asked
to restore Kennedy Memorial, this was something I couldn’t refuse, especially
since my father donated the original Maryland column,” said Dr. Irving Taylor.
“Recognizing that it needed updating, it was the least I could do out of
respect to my parents and President Kennedy.”
The spacious
outdoor plaza provides a panoramic view of the Jerusalem Forest, suggesting a
meaningful and scenic place to hold a Bar or Bat Mitzvah or wedding ceremony.
On the grounds of the Kennedy Memorial lies the Kennedy Family Planting Circle,
where a dozen members of the Kennedy family, including Jackie Kennedy Onassis
and Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, came to plant trees. Each year, the JNF site
hosts 200,000 visitors, including foreign dignitaries and Israeli families who
take advantage of the hiking trails and picnic areas surrounding the monument.
Israeli school children also tour the site on official school visits, learning
about the legacy of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy and his exceptional
support of the State of Israel.
“It was important for Jewish National Fund to
build a memorial that honored a great man like JFK,” shared JNF CEO Russell F.
Robinson. “Just like we honored the victims of September 11th at JNF’s 9/11
Living Memorial, it is important for JNF to remember the great people of our
past who have always supported Israel. Yad Kennedy shows the connection that
JNF has with great Americans who stand by Israel, and we must pay tribute to
that.”
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