Forty years ago, on November 10, 1975, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) adopted
resolution 3379, which declared the Jewish people’s national aspirations to live in their ancient homeland to be a form of racism.
On that day, 104 UN delegates acted shamefully. But two ambassadors—one from the United States, the other from Israel—joined together to speak the “
conscience of the world” and condemn the blatant expression of bigotry.
By all accounts, they made a good tag team.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the U.S. Ambassador, was an Irish-Catholic who was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma but moved to New York City as a young child, growing up on the rough and tumble streets of Harlem and eventually serving in the United States Navy.
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Daniel Patrick Moynihan[/caption]
Chaim Herzog, the son of Ireland’s Chief Rabbi, was raised in Dublin but migrated to Palestine in 1935 where he fought for the
Haganah, Mandatory Palestine’s Jewish paramilitary force, the British Army, and later the Israel Defense Forces.