Jason Greenblatt, a legal advisor for Trump’s campaign, told Army Radio shortly after Election Day that Trump disagreed with the United States’ official opposition to the settlements, saying that “Mr. Trump does not view the settlements as being an obstacle for peace.” Greenblatt added that “The two sides are going to have to decide how to deal with that region, but it’s certainly not Mr. Trump’s view that settlement activity should be condemned and that it’s an obstacle for peace — because it is not the obstacle for peace.”
One of the groups that the Kushner Foundation donated to was American Friends of Beit El Yeshiva. Beit El Yeshiva itself is “located in one of the more hard-line, ideological settlements” according to left-leaning Haaretz. The Kushners donated $20,000 in 2013. David Friedman, Trump’s real estate lawyer and senior adviser on Israel affairs, is the president of American Friends of Beit El Yeshiva. He has also shown interest in being appointed U.S. Ambassador to Israel by Trump.
Other settlement organizations gifted money by the Kushner Foundation include:
- Ohr Torah Stone a group of secondary and post-secondary educational programs in both Israel and the United States.
- Od Yosef Chai, a yeshiva that Haaretz says “ has served as a base for launching violent attacks against nearby Palestinians villages and Israeli security forces,” leading to its Israeli government funding drying up.
- Shaare Zedek Medical Center in Jerusalem, which has gotten the vast majority of their spending in Israel at $20 million. It was the largest gift ever given by the Kushner Foundation to any individual medical organization.
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