History of the Jews in Palau

The history of the Jews in Palau is a relatively recent development, beginning with the arrival of the Israeli-born couple Tova and Navot Bornovski, and their children, who moved to Palau in 1993 to operate the Fish 'n Fins diving center and the Barracuda Restaurant. The family expanded and added two children, who were the first recorded Jewish children born on Palau. Both children have native middle names.[1]

The most prominent Jewish citizen was Stuart Beck, a Jewish-American lawyer that helped negotiate the Compact of Free Association which established Palau as an independent nation in 1994, holds honorary citizenship and was named Palau's first Permanent Representative to the United Nations in 2003.[2] Larry Miller was the Associate Justice of the Palau Supreme Court.

Two cyclists from Palau represented the country at the 2009 Maccabiah Games, marking the first time that Palau sent athletes to that international sporting event.[3]

gollark: How awful.
gollark: Prayer... project?
gollark: That would be mean, though.
gollark: How could they not?
gollark: Nope. Their entire system is broken. The security autoturrets on the datacentres fall back to maximum aggression mode if they can't communicate with the control servers, see.

References

  1. Medovoy, George (25 November 2011). "Pacific Paradise, With Gefilte Fish". The Jewish Week. Archived from the original on 28 November 2011. Retrieved 27 November 2010.
  2. http://www.palauun.org/ Palau UN website
  3. Sokolow, Moshe (6 December 2012). "I've Got Friends in Low-lying Places..." Jewish Ideas Daily. Retrieved 7 August 2013.


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