Sheldon Adelson Religion
Sheldon Adelson: Jew Score: 11: I 4: O 5: K 2: August 1, 1933 – January 11, 2021. Today, JONJ is on a quest. We are gonna try to find out who is the world's richest Jew. For that, we will go down the list of the world's richest people, until we hit a Jew. Should be easy enough. Jewish leaders came together Thursday for a global memorial event for business giant and philanthropist Sheldon Adelson. The CEO and chairman of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Died last week at age 87.
Sheldon Adelson, the billionaire casino magnate whose philanthropy had an unparalleled influence on American and Israeli politics and Jewish causes, has died at 87.
Sheldon Adelson Religion Today
One of the world’s richest people and a megadonor who set records for his political giving to Republicans, Adelson Adelson was known for his deep and polarizing involvement in local, national and international politics, especially his support for Israel and the Republican Party.
The extent of Adelson’s giving to causes and institutions he believed in has few equals in American philanthropy. He was the largest donor to Trump’s 2016 presidential bid, chipping in $25 million, and was the nation’s largest political donor in the 2012 election, at nearly $93 million. A newspaper he owns, the Las Vegas Review-Journal, was one of the only newspapers to endorse Trump in 2016.
He also gave enormous sums of money to pro-Israel causes. He has donated $127 million to Jewish identity-building program Birthright Israel since 2007 according to IRS filings cited by the Center for Public Integrity. And he was a major backer of Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial Museum. Earlier in his career, he was a major funder of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, until he shifted his giving to more conservative pro-Israel organizations.
He was a major backer of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with his support of Israel Hayom, a free daily newspaper seen as supportive of the Israeli leader. He was also a major funder of the Israeli-American Council, a group for Israelis in the United States that has also engaged in political advocacy, and the Zionist Organization of America, a staunchly right-wing pro-Israel group.
His aggressive approach resulted in conflict at times: In 2019, a federal judge ordered him to pay millions of dollars in fees to the National Jewish Democratic Council for using what the judge called “legal sadism” to effectively put the group out of business. The NJDC had linked in an ad to an Associated Press report outlining an allegation that Adelson had allowed prostitution at one of his casinos. The courts agreed with the NJDC, which argued that allowing litigants to punish people for linking to verified reporting would have been a dangerous imposition on free expression, but Adelson doggedly pursued the issue through appeals.
Adelson was certain of his moral convictions — sometimes to a fault. In 2012, his resort hosted what was to have been a polite debate between Jewish Republicans and Democrats. Adelson walked into the room, took over the proceedings, and called President Barack Obama a “crybaby” who should “be in diapers,” infuriating the Democrats in the room.
As a major donor to AIPAC, Adelson breached the unofficial custom of its donors of entrusting policy to the lobby’s seasoned professional staff. If Adelson was giving money, he made clear, he got to determine policy to its minutest detail.
In 2007, AIPAC supported an initiative to increase U.S. funding to the Palestinians as a means of accelerating peace talks favored by the Bush administration. That led to an ugly showdown and a split in the relationship just months after Adelson’s name had graced the lobby’s gleaming new headquarters. Adelson likened AIPAC to a friend assisting Israel’s suicide.
“If someone is going to jump off a bridge, it is incumbent upon their friends to dissuade them,” Adelson told JTA at the time. He added, “I love and admire the concept of AIPAC.”
After the fight, Adelson turned to funding IAC because he saw it as a means of filling the vacuum he believed AIPAC had left and would robustly defend Israel’s positions.
His working class Boston roots cropped up in his blunt, some would say offensive, manner. He and his wife, Miriam Adelson, liked to tell young people participating in Birthright, the free trip to Israel organization he funded, that he expected them to procreate.
He also made controversial statements over the years. In 2013, he suggested that the United States drop a nuclear bomb on the Iranian desert as a negotiating tactic. The next year, at a conference of the Israeli-American Council, he said: “The purpose of the existence of Palestinians is to destroy Israel,” and added, “So Israel won’t be a democratic state, so what?”
Adelson admired the Israeli sensibility, interpolating his remarks with Hebrew phrases his wife taught him. He was a major funder of the Israeli scouts movement, Tzofim, in the United States. The Adelsons assumed control of a Las Vegas Jewish school and reshaped it according to the famed Haifa Reali school where Miriam Adelson was educated. What is now called the Adelson Educational Campus emphasizes a Jewish identity that is less religious than in most Jewish day schools — and more nationalistic.
And ahead of last year’s presidential election, Adelson reportedly fell out of favor with Trump over the size of his gifts. In one of his final big purchases, Adelson reportedly paid $67 million for the mansion in Israel that was the American ambassador’s residence until Trump moved the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
During the coronavirus pandemic, Adelson also gained attention for continuing to pay his casino employees long after other Las Vegas casinos cut off paychecks to their workers.
In 2007, Adelson started Israel Hayom to compete with other dailies that are less friendly to the Israeli right. Its popularity — it became Israel’s most-read paper — has been considered instrumental to Netanyahu’s continued success. Netanyahu expressed “deep sorrow and heartbreak” at news of Adelson’s death, lauding his “tremendous efforts to strengthen Israel’s position in the United States and to strengthen the connection between Israel and the Diaspora.”
Adelson’s millions also transformed smaller Israeli projects. In 2014, he gave $16.4 million to SpaceIL, a nonprofit that attempted to land a small spacecraft on the Moon.
Adelson was also a major supporter of drug addiction programs, a speciality of his wife Miriam, a physician who specialized in treating addiction. A drug abuse treatment clinic in Las Vegas is named for the couple.
“Sheldon was the love of my life,” Miriam Adelson said in a statement Tuesday. “He was my partner in romance, philanthropy, political activism and enterprise. He was my soulmate. To me—– as to his children, grandchildren, and his legions of friends and admirers, employees and colleagues — he is utterly irreplaceable.”
Where Does Sheldon Adelson Live
Adelson and Miriam had two children together. He also adopted his first wife’s three children, one of whom predeceased him.