Cameron Kerry, left, brother of Democratic presidential can- didate John Kerry, receives an explanation from an AIPAC representative about the route taken by Israel's security fence. Photos by Brian Hendler/JTA ",!C Cam Kerry Tours Israel Visit moves candidate's Jewish brother and campaign adviser. SHARON LUCKERMAN Staff Writer 1 31 ews visiting Israel these days receive an exceptionally warm welcome, but not everyone has the ear of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and past prime ministers Shimon Peres, Ehud Barak and Benjamin Netanyahu. An exception is Cameron "Cam" Kerry, the younger brother of John Kerry, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, who spent five days in Israel this month on a trip spon- sored by the American Israel Education Foundation, an AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) affiliate. While Cam Kerry maintains his visit was personal and not political, he says, "I did receive a lot of high-level atten- tion from the government and the media there. The-American election is very important to the Israelis — and they were interested in informing me [about Israeli matters] as somebody close . 7/23 2004 26 to John." Kerry, who is taking a leave of absence from his Boston law firm, is an adviser to his brother's presidential campaign, which has him very involved in Jewish affairs, he says. He will also be a delegate from Massachusetts to the Democratic convention next week. Though raised Catholic, Cam Kerry converted to Judaism more than 20. years ago when he married former Detroiter Kathy Weinman, also an attor- ney in the Boston area. "I wanted to share my first trip to Israel with Kathy. It was especially meaningful to be there together," he says, noting that she first saw Israel in 1976, after graduating from college. Cam toured Tel Aviv and Jerusalem —'where he traveled along the security fence — and went north to the Lebanese border where he saw security systems and Hezbollah outposts. He also visited a center for new Jewish immigrants, mostly from Ethiopia. "More than anything, seeing Israel brings the history alive," says Cam, who was especially impressed by the Kotel and surrounding excavations. He was particularly moved by Yad Vashem. "It brings home the Holocaust — but also it was very personal to me," he says. Cam's family learned a few months ago about a great-uncle and great-aunt, Otto and Jenny Lowe, both siblings of his paternal grandmother, who perished during the Holocaust. Both deaths are documented in Yad Vashem's archives. One died at the Theresienstadt concen- tration camp, the other at Treblinka. Cam is taking copies of the list with their names, addresses, occupation and deportation dates to his brother and other relatives. Echoes Of Kennedys Though he says it is too early to say if he would play a formal Middle East role if his brother were elected, Cam Kerry's influence is not lost on Israeli leadership. He is reported to play a pivotal role in older brother John's inner circle of advis- ers, much like the late Robert E Kennedy did with his older brother President John E Kennedy. In candid moments with government officials before his meeting with Sharon, Cam says, "They understood when America is isolated, Israel is isolated. There are threats to world and to Israeli security;- and Iran, not Iraq, is the great- est threat. "And we've taken our eyes off that ball," says Cam in a not-so-veiled criti- cism of the Bush administration. "There are greater threats from Iran and Syria, and with money coming through Saudi Arabia that supports this feeling of hatred toward Israel and toward the United States." When asked what John Kerry would do differently in Israel than the current administration, Cam says, "He'd deal