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"One day India may discover that her one-sided orientation in the Middle East is neither moral nor expedient.
She may yet adopt a truly independent policy between the Arab states and Israel; only then will she be able to become a factor working for peace in the area which Indians call 'West Africa."
- Dr. S. Levenberg, January 4, 1957, Jewish Observer and ME Review, p.14
Indian Prime minister Indira Gandhi meets with Australian businessman and vice-president of the World Jewish Congress Isi Leibler in December 1981. (photo credit:Courtesy)
Despite the optimism of this hope expressed by  Jewish Agency representative Dr. S. Levenberg, it took 35 years before it was  realized.
On  Monday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomed India's external affairs  minister Sushma Swaraj, and the two discussed increasing the already lucrative  ties between the two countries. But the road to cooperation between the two  democracies was not without struggle.
Until  1992, India refused to grant full diplomatic relations to Israel. Even though  the two nations shared much in common, and despite efforts made by Jewish  leaders, including key Australian figure Isi Leibler, there seemed to be no  chance of change.
However,  in 1991, a number of factors led to a dramatic change. Leibler and Australia's  role in India's granting full diplomatic statues to Israel has been largely  forgotten. With the full realization of Levenberg's hope - thanks to Indian  Prime Minister Narendra Modi - it is worthwhile recalling this  history.
IN  1947, Jawaharlal Nehru became India's first prime minister. He was concerned  with maintaining India's neutrality in relation to the Cold War and with  building the block of Third World nations. In November 1947, India voted against  the partition of Palestine, but in 1950 Nehru granted de facto and de jure  recognition to Israel. Yet, for reasons of expediency, he left the question of  diplomatic recognition unresolved due to concerns about the Arab world, India's  40-million- strong Muslim minority and the conflict in Kashmir.
Nehru  maintained an ambiguous position. In 1958 he stated: "Israel is a fact and I am  not one to deny facts… I am not one to say it is altogether a negative  fact."
But  he did not change his policy.
After  Nehru's death in 1964, his daughter, Indira Gandhi, became the dominant figure  until her assassination in 1984. She sought to strengthen India's connections  with the Arab world and remained very antagonistic to Israel.
During  the Six Day War, India supported Egypt, Russia and the Arab world. Commenting  later, US B'nai B'rith leader William Korey wrote in The New Leader that the war  "unmask[ed] India's posture of Olympian morality and neutrality - so carefully  cultivated among liberals through the world - as sheer pretense.
From  the start of the crisis on May 18 [1967], the Indian government has parroted the  Cairo-Moscow arguments, however contradictory..."
Similarly,  during the Yom Kippur War, India continued to maintain its anti-Israel policies,  largely due to its dependence on Arab oil and trade.
In  1978, Isi Leibler was elected as president of Australian Jewry. He had founded  Jetset Travel, the largest travel agency in the Southeast Asia/Pacific region,  and was keen to build links between Israel and the Asian countries. At the same  time, the World Jewish Congress was becoming more aware of the importance of the  region and Leibler was appointed as vice-president of the World Jewish Congress,  Asia Region.
During  a business trip in December 1981, Leibler managed to meet with Indira. After a  five-minute presentation, when he spoke about Jewish concerns, she responded:  "You are politically on dangerous ground here in India. I am under enormous  pressure. It is not only Pakistan. I have a potential catastrophe with  Muslims."
She  then said: "Tell me why the American Jewish dominated press hates me… [and why]  Jews concentrate their spite on me as if I were their worst enemy."
She  ended by saying that she felt that Israel "hated" her and stressed that she  liked Jews.
INDIAN  AND Israeli relationships continued to deteriorate, particularly after the 1982  Lebanon War. In 1984 the Indian government rejected visa applications of former  Indian Jews, now Israeli citizens, wishing to visit relatives.
After  his mother's assassination, Rajiv Gandhi continued his mother's anti-Israel  policies. He was concerned about ensuring Muslim support, as Muslims constituted  12 percent of the population. Until his assassination in 1989, no change was in  sight.
However,  in 1991 there was a major international paradigm change, sparked by the collapse  of the Soviet Union, the 1991 Gulf War, and the Madrid Conference about the  Israeli-Palestinian conflict. A more positive attitude to Israel  emerged.
Policies  were influenced by the commonalities between the two countries, both emerging  from British rule and being young democracies building their own institutions.  As well, there were no conflicting interests in trade or politics, and mutual  benefits in economic co-operation.
In  November 1991, at the request of Israel's Foreign Affairs Ministry, Leibler  visited India, in the hope of meeting with Indian prime minister Narasimha Rao,  who had been elected in June 1990. Leibler worked closely with Dr. Moshe Yegar,  deputy director general of the Foreign Affairs Ministry, in charge of Asian,  African and Pacific affairs. Yegar himself visited India in July 1991, following  the kidnapping of Israeli tourists in Kashmir, but was lectured on Palestinian  rights.
Just  before Leibler's visit, Rao enjoyed a resounding by-election victory. There were  other foreign dignitaries in New Delhi, so Leibler was unsure if the meeting  would take place.
However,  an appointment was organized through the Australian ambassador, David Evans,  assisted by two pro-Israel MPs and especially Steven Solarz of the US Asian  sub-committee.
They  met on November 21, the first such meeting at this level with a Jewish leader  and an Indian prime minister for many years. Evans and the head of the Indian  Jewish Congress accompanied him. Leibler raised a number of specific issues in  relation to Israel and India's Jewish community.
Roa  was much more positive than his predecessors, as Leibler later reported:  "Situation in India much more promising… no personal, irrational impediment to  improved ties with Israel... The fact that Rao agreed to the meeting at a highly  inconvenient time for himself… appear[s] to indicate the seriousness he attaches  to improved ties with world Jewry as an important element in India's  re-orientation in the post-Cold War era. This in itself is highly encouraging  and augurs well for the future."
AT  FIRST it appeared that there would only be minor changes. India agreed to expand  the Israeli consulate in Kerala, as well as Bombay, but on November 25, the  deputy foreign minister stressed that India refused to grant full recognition  until there was progress regarding the peace process with the  Palestinians.
As  late as January 1992 it seemed as though there would be no substantial change.  In early February, Leibler again met with Rao, and they had a massive  confrontation. Leibler told Rao that if he continued to reject recognition of  Israel, his forthcoming visit to the US would be disastrous and he would be  accorded similar treatment to Saddam Hussein.
The  announcement of full diplomatic relations two weeks later was a surprise and the  Indian Foreign Ministry had no advance notice. Obviously Leibler's message  played a role in Rao's sudden change of heart.
Leibler  flew to New Delhi to convey to Rao the gratitude of prime minister Yitzhak  Shamir for India's UN vote against the anti-Zionist Resolution 3379 in December  1991. He also expressed the appreciation of the World Jewish Congress for the  move and India's granting full diplomatic relations to Israel.
Reflecting  on these developments many years later, Moshe Yegar stressed that Leibler's  efforts in India were "at our request and undoubtedly were of great importance.  The fact that he was accompanied by the Australian ambassador gave the visit a  completely different dimension… Australia is well known for its decent  international politics and it carries weight."
Leibler's  second visit in February 1992 was also very important, because it made clear to  the Indian government that world Jewry really appreciated Rao's  actions.
They  also did not suffer any backlash.
Now,  13 years later, the full flowering can be seen with the current Indian  government under Modi, marked by the present visit of the Indian external  affairs minister Sushma Swaraj.  
The  writer is Professor Emerita in the department of Hebrew, Biblical and Jewish  Studies at the University of Sydney. She is the co-author, with Sam Lipski, of  Let My People Go: The untold story of Australia and the Soviet Jews 1959-89,  Gefen Publishing House.
Original piece is http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/A-roving-ambassador-442314