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Posts Tagged ‘lev-leviev’

Lev Leviev, Philanthropist

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Lev Leviev talks a good game when it comes to his philanthropic largess.  Of course, there is a traditional Jewish obligation to give tzedakah.  And as an ardent supporter of Chabad, Leviev would certainly make an effort to observe such a mitzvah.  He himself confirms this:

 ”I am a believer; I believe in G-d. I believe that we, as people, have to do good acts.”

But how well does he observe it?  The NY Times Magazine’s profile of him throws out the figure $50-million per year.  Most people would sound oohs and aahs to hear such a large number.  But if you calculate Leviev’s net worth at $8-billion, which is the number mentioned in the NYT article, then $50-million is roughly 0.625% of his overall worth.  That’s less than 1%!  Most Americans give roughly 3.5% of their annual income to charity each year.  Of course, it’s hard to know Leviev’s annual income and it’s surely less than $8-billion.  But still $50-million is much less impressive when seen in this context.

It also appears that Leviev is passing off fraudulent claims about his charitable giving to reporters who write about him.  He claimed in this Lifestyles Magazine profile, that he donated to Oxfam America:

Leviev’s philanthropic activities have also touched U.S. cultural institutions, such as the Museum of the City of New York, and U.S. charities, such as the annual Angel Ball (which raises money for cancer research; the Carousel of Hop Ball (one of the most prominent and influential charitable events of its kind), and Oxfam America.

Problem is, Oxfam can’t seem to find any evidence to support the claim.  In fact, it’s against Oxfam’s guidelines to accept gifts from anyone whose business dealings violate international law, as Leviev’s building of settlements would.  If this aspect of Leviev’s PR puffery is fake imagine how much else might be?

There is even more questionable material in the Lifestyles story:

Leviev prefers to keep a low profile even as he is so active, attending global roundtables, like the World Economic Forum last year in Davos. He grants few interviews and though he circulates among world leaders like Russian president Vladimir Putin – whom he calls a “true friend”- he stays close to his home in Israel, where he lives in a modest house with his wife, Olga, and nearby their nine children and several grandchildren.

Apparently, Leviev has contradicted the author by agreeing to the NYT profile and this interview.  In addition, Leviev has just moved his headquarters to London and moved into a $70 million home.  Not such a low profile after all.

Leviev likes to compare himself favorably to Bill Gates in terms of his charitable giving.  There was a time when Gates was younger that his charitable giving was much less impressive than it is now.  But Lev Leviev has a long way to go before he’s in Bill Gates’ league.  In fact, given the depth and breadth of the Gates Foundation philanthropic program it’s safe to say that Lev Leviev will never make anywhere near the impact.  Not to mention that Leviev’s giving is narrowly focused on supporting right-wing Jewish causes like Chabad and the Israeli settler movement.

Lev Leviev: Lion of Judah

Friday, January 11th, 2008

lev leviev lion of judah portrait
Artists have been known from time immemorial as boot lickers of the wealthy and powerful. In the old days, art worked by patronage and you needed to curry favor with your patron. Today, things aren’t so clear. But some artists still know where their bread is buttered. Witness this portrait of Lev Leviev by Michael Khundiashvili. Some of you may know that the Yiddish word for lion is leib or lev, hence the pride of lions that surrounds him (the lions may also be his enforcers and security detail). The artist’s website features many Chabad-related portraits including one of the deceased Lubavitcher rebbe. It can be no accident that Leviev is Chabad’s most important patron in Russia.

My reader Todd turned me on to the portrait, which he first saw at Jews Sans Frontieres. Thanks to both of them for ennobling our artistic purpose with such fine portraiture. Todd points out that the portrait would look especially lovely hanging over the mantlepiece of the $200,000 hand-carved stone fireplace in Leviev’s new $70 million Hampstead home.

Leviev’s $70 Million Digs: Most Expensive New Mansion Ever in Britain

Thursday, January 10th, 2008
leviev $70 million london homeLeviev’s $70-million new Hampstead home (Reuters)

No doubt about it. Lev Leviev wants to make a big splash in his new pond, London.

What does $70 million buy you in the way of a London house? If you’re a pal of Russian mobsters and the 210th richest man in the world, it buys you a 17,000 sqaure foot home and $100,000 bulletproof door, for one. And that’s not all:

The seven-bedroom house in the exclusive north London district of Hampstead boasts a $1.5 million stone staircase constructed using 150-year-old carving techniques and an indoor swimming pool with gold-plated mosaic tiles.

The Palladian-style home also features a gym, sauna, ballroom and cinema, a private hair salon and a one-tone bathroom basin carved from a single piece of white Iranian onyx…

Once installed in his new home, Leviev will be protected not only by the bullet-proof front door but by 25 security cameras and a high-tech alarm system that can be controlled remotely – from a yacht in the Caribbean if necessary.

In his front garden is a topiary bush that cost $40,000 to shape, and should he get cold there is a $200,000 hand-carved stone fireplace in the living room.

Lev leviev’s indoor poolLeviev’s gold-plated indoor pool–fit for an Israeli emperor

This will be the new home of Lev Leviev, a former Uzbek immigrant to Israel who learned the diamond trade from the ground up and eventually figured out, with the help of the repressive Angolan government, how to break the DeBeer’s monopoly. Ze’ev Chafets says in a NY Times profile that Leviev is worth as much as $8-billion. Leviev has just announced that he’s moving his business operations from Israel to London. His new digs have to be the most expensive coming out party anyone’s ever conceived.

It appears he’s leaving Israel because it taxes its citizens’ income wherever it is earned while Britain does not tax a foreigner’s income earned outside the country. Several other Israeli tycoons have moved for the same reason and into the same London neighborhood reports the Jerusalem Post:

His new neighborhood in Hampstead is home to a number of wealthy Israelis like himself, who were drawn to live there due to British law, which does not require foreigners to pay taxes on income earned abroad. Among them are Zvi Meitar, the founder of one of Israel’s biggest law firms; Benny Steinmitz, a diamond dealer and property tycoon; Yigal Zilka, head of Queenco Leisure International; and the real estate developer, Sammy Shimon.

Like his friend and former Russian mobster, Roman Abramovich (he’s too rich and powerful now to be a mere mobster), who owns the Chelsea football club, Leviev owns an Israeli football club. But this isn’t what’s most interesting about Leviev.

Leviev is an ardent supporter of the settler enterprise. Not just an ideological supporter, but a financial backer and major investor in West Bank settlements. We’re not talking about illegal outposts and a few shipping containers on a hilltop here. We’re talking about full-blown towns worth hundreds of millions of dollars as real estate investment opportunities. And Leviev is a key financial backer of the Land Redemption Fund, a front for settler land purchases which uses Arab buyers to convince reluctant Palestinians to sell their farmland. He and Abramovich were honorees at an Elad fundraiser two years ago. Its purpose is to Judaize East Jerusalem.

You’ll also recall that the diamond czar just opened a glittering new emporium on Madison Avenue and invited lots of New York celebrities to the opening. Ruth Westheimer, Susan Sarandon and Isabella Rosselini are among those who crossed an Adalah picket line to view the baubles. Jewish Voice for Peace and Palestinian villagers whose land was expropriated for a Leviev settlement project wrote to Sarandon asking her to repudiate Leviev, but she refused. I’m sorry but I’ll never view a Susan Sarandon movie the same now that she’s been morally tone deaf in this situation.

When Leviev came to Israel as a teenager he enrolled in a yeshiva but found it wasn’t for him. But he’s embraced Chabad with gusto and is the single largest funder of its Russian operation, which controls the state sponsored Jewish communal organization.

And can someone tell me why he needs a bulletproof door? Is he afraid that a poor Palestinian farmer is going ride his donkey all the way from Bilin to London to spray his home with bullets? Or is he afraid one of Roman Abramovich’s enemies might try to pop him? Isn’t it a pity that that farmer from Bilin can’t expropriate LEVIEV’S mansion instead of the other way around?

For more images of Leviev’s obscenely ostentacious new digs visit this Telegraph photo spread.

What Do Susan Sarandon, Alan Dershowitz and the Russian Mob Have in Common?

Thursday, December 27th, 2007
Susan sarandon denise rich isabella rosseliniSusan Sarandon, Denise Rich & Isabella Rosselini at Leviev opening (Scott Wintrow/Getty Images)

I hope that title grabbed your attention. They shouldn’t have anything in common, right? The first a progressive, the second a troglodyte. Well, unfortunately they do. They both like diamonds. Nothing wrong with that you might say. Unless the diamonds come from African conflict zones and unless their proceeds are used to build West Bank settlements on confiscated Palestinian land. All of which is true.

Susan Sarandon has a taste for diamonds and the high life and so attended the glittering opening of Lev Leviev’s new Madison Avenue jewelry emporium. She was joined in the crowd by other celebrities like Isabella Rosselini, Dr. Ruth Westheimer and Denise Rich (maybe she was there to arrange a “pardon” for Leviev as she did for her ex, Marc Rich). Problem was that to enter the store Sarandon had to cross a picket line established by Adala NY, a group of human rights adherents who oppose the Israeli Occupation. Despite the cause, Sarandon crossed. Not only that. Jewish Voice for Peace wrote a subsequent letter asking her to voice her opposition to Leviev’s pro-settlement activities. The response–silence. Well, not exactly. The NY Post’s Page Six quotes a representative saying that Sarandon has no “tie” to Leviev and thus nothing to renounce. Which is basically a casuistic non-answer.

lev leviev & roman abramovichRoman Abramovich & Lev Leviev, Tel Aviv (Nir Keidar/Getty Images)

Lev Leviev grew up in Tashkent as a member of the Bukharan community. He came to Israel as a teenager and eventually joined the Israeli diamond industry producing polished diamonds. He has become wealthy in his chosen profession by trafficking in Angolan diamonds. Walter Ruby, writing in Jewish Week, notes that Forbes lists him as the 210th richest person in the world worth $4.1 billion (Zev Chafets says that Leviev’s associates estimate his real worth as closer to $8 billion). He also funds the Chabad-dominated Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia.

Also disturbing is Leviev’s participation in the Land Redemption Fund, which purchases land under false pretenses from Palestinian owners in order to transfer them to settlement ownership. Leviev’s development company is also building several settlements including a $230 million project on land confiscated from the Palestinian village of Bilin, which is in the international news because of weekly protests there against the Apartheid Wall. Leviev and the LRF use Palestinian stooges to approach Palestinian farmers, many of whom can no longer farm their land anyway due either to the Wall or settler intimidation, offering to pay many times what the land is worth. As far as the farmers know the land is being purchased by a fellow Palestinian. Instead, the land reverts to LRF and then becomes land that Leviev can build settlements on, further increasing his empire after selling the homes to settlers.

The residents of Bilin and Jayyous recently wrote to Sarandon asking her to take up their cause against settlements encroaching on their land.

I should amend my post title by acknowledging that Lev Leviev is not a member of the Russian mob. He’s way beyond that. His money has bought him respectability that every shady character craves, even as he continues pillaging poor Palestinian farmers as he makes hundreds of millions of dollars and perverts the chances for peace between Israel and the Palestinians.

Recently, Leviev decided to expand his diamond and real estate business to New York, where he owns property worth well over $1 billion including the Plaza Hotel and New York Times building ($525 million). The store opening and accompanying protest was covered by The Forward and JTA, which indicates a rapidly changing political climate in the American Jewish community. Until recently, such a story would’ve been met with skepticism or derision by much of the Jewish community and press. It also indicates that Adalah NY had created dramatic protest imagery that would appeal to New York’s mass media.

As the photo above indicates, Leviev is linked with former Russian mobster and now oligarch, Roman Abramovich in the diamond business. Abramovich, in attempting to smooth his path into international business and social circles also purchased the Chelsea football club. Leviev, not to be outdone, also owns an Israeli football club. According to Haaretz, Leviev and Abramovich are among the two largest donors to Elad, whose goal is the “Judaize” East Jerusalem by buying up Arab property and transferring it to Jewish ownership. Elad refused to disclose its donor list publicly and is in danger of being dissolved by the government.

Surprisingly, the NY Post’s Page Six has kept the story alive with periodic updates–probably because the right-wing paper seeks to embarrass the progressive Sarandon. What is a shame is that with a short note to the public Sarandon could reaffirm her commitment to support ending the Occupation and tell the world she knew nothing about Leviev’s right-wing agenda and had no intention of shopping in his store again. Instead, she’s trying to fudge the issue.

As for Dershowitz, ever the entertaining clown, Dersh must’ve seen the brouhaha and decided he needed to get a slice of Sarandon’s PR. So he went down to the Leviev showroom and came out swinging his shopping bag as if it contained Norman Finkelstein’s head. All of which is quite interesting when you consider that during his Democracy Now debate with the latter he said that he opposed Israeli settlements. How quickly they forget. After watching Dershowitz’s pathetic primping performance in this video you realize that he’s nothing more than an ambulance chaser for political notoriety, a Jewish Ann Coulter.

Ringworks Studio: Exquisite Seattle Wedding Rings

Tuesday, September 21st, 2004

Ringworks Studio banner

In 1998, when Janis and I were about to get married, she noticed a wonderful jewelry store in Madison Park, Ringworks Studio. It was in a small and simple storefront, but it housed the most exquisite rings you’ve ever seen. We promptly decided to buy both our rings there.wedding ring Ever since I’ve been so proud of Joseph Hall’s beautiful handiwork in creating these works of art. That’s my ring in the photo to the left (though my band, unlike in the photo, is rose-gold). It’s called a tantalum ring and he has a fascinating description of how he creates them on his site. Joseph pioneered this style of ringmaking after he graduated with a 1980 Master of Fine Arts degree in metalsmithing from the University of Washington.
Ringworks_ring

Ringworks also believes in being socially responsible in the production of its products:

We support all efforts towards environmental responsibility (see sustainble gold) and social equity of the jewelry trade, such as the newly formed industry group, Council for Responsible Jewellery Practices.

If you’re getting married and looking for a custom made work of art (at reasonable prices considering the values of the materials being used), I strongly urge you to give a visit to their site. The store, alas, is no more. It’s been closed so the owners can devote more time to their environmental interests on Vashon Island where they live. But they’re still in business from Vashon producing these gorgeous works of art. Their phone number is 206 463-7711.

The Madison Park Times ran a story on the store’s closing which also detailed what their future plans were for activities on Vashon Island.