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The Commission consists of 21 members appointed by the President of the United States. Of these, seven are appointed after consultation with the Speaker of the House of Representatives and seven are appointed after consultation with the President Pro Tempore of the Senate, with three of each seven by tradition recommended by the minority leaders of each house of the Congress. The President designates a Chair from among the Members. Members are appointed for three-year terms but continue to serve until they are replaced. They are not paid for their service.

Commission Chair

  • Lesley Weiss
    Lesley Weiss
    Chair

Commission Members

  • Nancy D. Berman
    Nancy D. Berman
    Commission Member
  • Herbert Block
    Herbert Block
    Commission Member
  • Rabbi Abba Cohen
    Rabbi Abba Cohen
    Commission Member
  • John F. Cordisco
    John F. Cordisco
    Commission Member
  • Joseph Douek
    Joseph Douek
    Commission Member
  • Emil A. Fish
    Emil A. Fish
    Commission Member
  • Rabbi Edgar Gluck
    Rabbi Edgar Gluck
    Commission Member
  • Martin B. Gold
    Martin B. Gold
    Commission Member
  • G. Jonathan Greenwald
    G. Jonathan Greenwald
    Commission Member
  • Will Inboden
    Will Inboden
    Commission Member
  • Thomas Kahn
    Thomas Kahn
    Commission Member
  • Nancy K. Kaufman
    Nancy K. Kaufman
    Commission Member
  • Harley Lippman
    Harley Lippman
    Commission Member
  • Michael T. Marquardt
    Michael T. Marquardt
    Commission Member
  • Elizabeth Hirsh Naftali
    Elizabeth Hirsh Naftali
    Commission Member
  • Maureen C. Pikarski
    Maureen C. Pikarski
    Commission Member
  • Rabbi Yair Robinson
    Rabbi Yair Robinson
    Commission Member
  • Hershel Wein
    Hershel Wein
    Commission Member

Commission Staff

  • Barbi Broadus
    Barbi Broadus
    Executive Director

Last Updated on March 11, 2025 by USCPAHA

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Lesley Weiss
Chair
Lesley Weiss

The current Chair is Lesley L. Weiss of the District of Columbia, having served as Chair and a Member in the Commission under both Democrat and Republican Administrations.

She has worked for over 30 years as a professional in a number of Jewish organizations and is currently at the National Coalition Supporting Eurasian Jewry (NCSEJ). She is a recognized expert in heritage preservation, restitution of Jewish communal property, Holocaust education and awareness, combating antisemitism, and advocating on behalf of Jewish communities in Eastern Europe and Eurasia.

She is also a member of the US Delegation to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. (IHRA)

A graduate of American University with a BA in Jewish Studies, Weiss also received an MA in Modern Jewish History and MSW from the Baltimore Hebrew University and University of Maryland School of Social Work.

A daughter of an Auschwitz survivor, Lesley works with her mother, Irene Weiss, to educate about the Holocaust and antisemitism.

The Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad was established in 1985, by U.S. Public Law 99-83, to ensure that sites important to populations impacted by Nazism, communism, and the Cold War would be preserved for future generations.

As an agency of the Government of the United States of America, the Commission is a bi-partisan, independent agency and was established to identify, protect, and preserve cemeteries, monuments, and historic buildings in Eastern and Central Europe that are associated with U.S. heritage.

The work recognizes that the population of the United States is mostly comprised of immigrants and their descend-ants, and that the United States has an interest in the preservation of sites in other countries related to the heritage of these Americans. In cooperation with the U.S. Department of State, the Commission obtains assurances from the governments of the region that the properties will be protected and preserved.

Nancy D. Berman
Commission Member
Nancy D. Berman

Nancy D. Berman is a community leader with a demonstrated record of service through volunteerism, board and committee memberships, and philanthropic leadership with a variety of affiliations and nonprofit organizations. Berman’s professional background is in marketing and her most recent endeavor is as the CEO and Founder of NANDANIE, a luxury fashion brand whose mission is to inspire confidence, build community, and empower women. Prior to launching NANDANIE, Berman applied her creativity as owner of an artisanal cakery.

Berman has served as the President of Yad Ezra, an organization that provides kosher food to vulnerable Jewish families in Southeast Michigan and was their 2021 dinner honoree along with her three children. She is also involved with Asra Kedisha, an organization for the preservation of Jewish cemeteries and gravesites throughout the world and has travelled to Cairo, Egypt to survey the restoration of the largest Jewish cemetery in the world. She currently serves on the Executive Board of the Frankel Jewish Academy, is a founding member of Kehillat Etz Chayim in Detroit, and is a member of The International Society of Female Professionals, the Accessories Council, BasBlue Detroit, Hadassah, The Women’s Zionist Organization of America, the American Jewish Committee, AIPAC, and FIDF. Berman lives in Huntington Woods, Michigan.

Herbert Block
Commission Member
Herbert Block

Herbert Block is the Executive Director of the American Zionist Movement, a role he has served in since 2017. Block is the former Assistant Executive Vice President of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, where he was responsible for the Government Affairs and Property Restitution portfolios at the world’s leading Jewish humanitarian organization. He has served on boards addressing Holocaust-era assets, property restitution, compensation for Shoah survivors, and the preservation of Jewish heritage sites and cemeteries in Europe and the United States.

He was previously Assistant to the Mayor of the City of New York, Assistant Director of the New York City Independent Budget Office, and a Deputy Director at the Federal Corporation for National and Community Service (AmeriCorps). Block previously served as a Member of the U.S. Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad from 2011 to 2019, to which he was appointed for three terms by President Obama. He received a BA from Columbia University and a JD from Brooklyn Law School.

Rabbi Abba Cohen
Commission Member
Rabbi Abba Cohen

Rabbi Abba Cohen is the Washington Director and Counsel for Agudath Israel of America, positions he has held since 1989.  He has also been Vice President for Federal Government Affairs at Agudath Israel since 2010.  Previously, Rabbi Cohen worked at the Anti-Defamation League as the Assistant Director in the Middle Eastern Affairs Department from 1981 to 1985 and as an Associate in the Latin American Affairs Department from 1979 to 1981.  Rabbi Cohen received a B.S. from The Johns Hopkins University, a B.T.L. and Rabbinic Ordination from the Ner Israel Rabbinical College, an M.I.A. from the Columbia University School of International Affairs, and a J.D. from Georgetown University Law Center.

John F. Cordisco
Commission Member
John F. Cordisco

John F. Cordisco began practicing law in 1987 and has spent the last 37 years representing victim’s rights. He is currently a partner at the law firm of Cordisco & Saile located in Trevose, Pennsylvania. At the age of 24, he was elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. He served three terms and was credited for legislation establishing the Pennsylvania Vietnam Veterans’ Commission, which is still active today assisting veterans exposed to Agent Orange, as well as the construction of a third Veterans’ Home located in southeastern Pennsylvania. For his efforts, Cordisco has been recognized by several Veterans’ Groups, including the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and The National Vietnam Veterans’ Organization.

Since leaving the legislature, Cordisco has chaired and served on several state and local boards and agencies including the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority, Pennsylvania Supreme Court Disciplinary Board, Bucks County Community College Authority, and the Pennsylvania Joint Toll Commission. Beyond politics and law, Cordisco’s humanitarian efforts include the creation of Have a Heart, a charity responsible for financing summer programs and two accessible playgrounds in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Additionally, Cordisco has partnered with charities responsible for the construction of infrastructure, schools, orphanages, feeding centers, and housing throughout Central America. He graduated from Rider University with a B.A. and subsequently earned his J.D. from Temple School of Law. Cordisco is the father of three children and six grandchildren. He currently resides in Newtown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

Joseph Douek
Commission Member
Joseph Douek

In May 2020, Douek was appointed by the President of the United States to serve as a Member of the United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad, and by recommendation of The Speaker of The House was reappointed by the President of the United States in 2023.

A businessman and philanthropist, Joseph Douek was originally appointed to the New York City Planning Commission by Borough President Martin Markowitz in 2012, and was reappointed by Borough President Eric L. Adams in 2017, and by Mayor Bill de Blasio in 2021.

NYC Commissioner Douek, currently serves as the Chairman and CEO of Viceroy Equities, an investment and management firm based in Brooklyn. Among other initiatives, Viceroy Equities has invested in Opportunity Zones, with the goal of spurring development in several areas throughout Brooklyn.

Douek got his start selling wholesale photography supplies and went on to become the owner and CEO of Willoughby’s, New York’s oldest photography retailer. Douek has also served on the Executive Committee and the Board of Directors for the New York City Economic Development Corporation, as well as the Board of Directors for the New York City Industrial Development Agency. Douek has served on the Board of Trustees for several non-profit entities, including the Brooklyn Public Library and the Jewish Children’s Museum. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Emil A. Fish
Commission Member
Emil A. Fish

Emil A. Fish is a Holocaust survivor from the small town of Bardejov in Slovakia. In 1944, as a 9 year-old boy, he and his family were captured and arrested by the Gestapo. His father was sent to Buchenwald Concentration Camp and survived. He, his mother and sister were sent to Bergen Belsen Concentration Camp. In 1945, he, his mother and sister were liberated from Bergen-Belsen by the British Army.

Mr. Fish and his family immigrated to Los Angeles in 1955. He is the founder of Emil Fish Enterprises and Regency Park Senior Living, Inc. He has served as President of Congregation Shaarei Tefila, Hillel Hebrew Academy and the Union of Orthodox Congregations, West Coast Office. Mr. Fish has also served as a member of the Jewish Community Relations Committee of the Los Angeles Jewish Federation.

In 2006 he founded the Bardejov Jewish Preservation Committee – a non-profit organization – with the mission to preserve and document the Jewish heritage in Bardejov and to memorialize and honor its Holocaust victims.

In 2010, Mr. Fish was appointed by President Obama to the United States Commission for the Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad. He currently resides in both Los Angeles and Philadelphia. Among his many achievements, he is most proud of his 3 children and 12 grandchildren.

Rabbi Edgar Gluck
Commission Member
Rabbi Edgar Gluck
Martin B. Gold
Commission Member
Martin B. Gold

Martin B. Gold is a partner with Capitol Counsel, LLC. In service to our clients, he brings over 40 years of legislative and private practice experience. He is a recognized authority and author on matters of congressional rules and parliamentary strategies, and U.S. policy in Asia. He frequently advises senators and their staff and serves on the adjunct faculty at George Washington University. In 2022, he received the College of Professional Studies Faculty Excellence Award. Before domestic business, professional, and academic audiences, he speaks about Congress as well as political and public policy developments.

Gold has been a guest lecturer at Tsinghua University, the Beijing Foreign Studies University, the Beijing International Studies University, Moscow State University, the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, the State Parliament of Ukraine, and the Federation Council of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation.

G. Jonathan Greenwald
Commission Member
G. Jonathan Greenwald

Jonathan (Jon) Greenwald, a Wilkes-Barre, PA native, has spent a half century in public service, including 30 as a senior U.S. diplomat and 17 as Vice President for the International Crisis Group, a prominent non-governmental conflict resolution organization. He has taught diplomacy at Lawrence University, served as the State Department’s nominee on the panel that adjudicated Holocaust-era claims for Austria, authored Berlin Witness: An American Diplomat’s Chronicle of East Germany’s Revolution, and directs and funds an initiative to bring young Israelis and Palestinians to study together at leading university preparatory schools.

A member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs, J Street, and Foreign Policy 4 America, Greenwald serves on the boards of several conflict resolution-related international groups. He speaks German, Hungarian, and French and lives with his wife Gabriele and their cats in McLean, VA.

Will Inboden
Commission Member
Will Inboden

William Inboden is Professor and Director of the Hamilton Center for Classical and Civic Education at the University of Florida. He previously served as William Powers, Jr. Chair and Executive Director of the Clements Center for National Security, Associate Professor at the LBJ School of Public Affairs, and Distinguished Scholar at the Robert S. Strauss Center for International Security and Law, all at the University of Texas-Austin. He also serves as Editor-in-Chief of the Texas National Security Review. Inboden’s other current roles include Associate with the National Intelligence Council, member of the CIA Historical Advisory Panel, member of the State Department’s Historical Advisory Council, and Senior Fellow with the Trinity Forum. Previously he served as Senior Director for Strategic Planning on the National Security Council at the White House, where he worked on a range of foreign policy issues including the National Security Strategy, strategic forecasting, democracy and governance, contingency planning, counter-radicalization, and multilateral institutions and initiatives. Inboden’s other government service includes at the Department of State as a Member of the Policy Planning Staff and a Special Advisor in the Office of International Religious Freedom, and as a staff member in both the United States Senate and the House of Representatives. He also served as head of the London-based Legatum Institute, and as a Civitas Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

Inboden’s newest book is The Peacemaker: Ronald Reagan, The Cold War, and the World on the Brink (Dutton, a Penguin Random House imprint), a synthetic overview of the Reagan Administration’s Cold War strategy and foreign and defense policies. He is also the author of Religion and American Foreign Policy, 1945-1960: The Soul of Containment (Cambridge University Press), co-editor of The Last Card: Inside George W. Bush’s Decision to Surge in Iraq (Cornell University Press), co-editor of Hand-Off: The Foreign Policy That George W. Bush Bequeathed to Barack Obama (Brookings Institution Press), and has published numerous articles and book chapters on American foreign policy, the presidency, and American history.

Inboden is a life member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and his commentary has appeared in numerous outlets including the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, USA Today, Foreign Policy, Politico, National Review, The Hill, World, Weekly Standard, NPR, CNN, and BBC. He has lectured widely in academic and policy settings, testified before the U.S. House Armed Services Committee and the US Congress Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, and received numerous research and professional development fellowships.

Professor Inboden has received multiple teaching awards including recognition as a “Texas 10” by the Texas Exes Alumni Association, selection as “Lecturer of the Year” at the LBJ School, and his classes Presidential Decision-making in National Security and Ethics and International Affairs were voted as “Best Class in the LBJ School” and “Class Most Likely to Challenge Your Assumptions.” Inboden received his Ph.D. and M.A. degrees in history from Yale University, and his A.B. in history with honors from Stanford University. He lives in Gainesville, Florida, with his wife and two sons.

Thomas Kahn
Commission Member
Thomas Kahn
Nancy K. Kaufman
Commission Member
Nancy K. Kaufman

Nancy K. Kaufman has a distinguished career as a public servant, advocate, and non-profit leader. Kaufman runs a strategic consulting and coaching practice and previously served as CEO of National Council of Jewish Women for 8 years. Prior, Kaufman was executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Boston for twenty years. Kaufman has also held a variety of positions related to health and human services delivery in state and local government and in the nonprofit sector. She worked for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts as Deputy Director of the Governor’s Social Policy Office and Assistant Secretary of Health and Human Services as an appointee in the Dukakis Administration.

Kaufman is a graduate of Brandeis University, Boston College School of Social Work, and the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. She is a recipient of an honorary doctorate in public service from Northeastern University. Kaufman lives in NYC and serves as board chair of the NY Jewish Agenda.

Harley Lippman
Commission Member
Harley Lippman

Harley Lippman is the Founder and CEO of Genesis10. Since its inception in 1999, Lippman has grown the company into one of the largest IT consulting firms in the United States and is consistently named among the top 50 “Best CEOs” by USA Today.

A dedicated philanthropist, Lippman has been the sole financial supporter of a Cambodian orphanage for more than 17 years and has funded efforts to explore an overlooked aspect of the Holocaust since 2009. Specifically, he works to find mass graves where Jews were murdered and buried and hosts memorials to honor and preserve their memory throughout the year. Lippman executive-produced Safeguarding Memory, an award-winning documentary on mass graves in Poland, which appeared on PBS. Additionally, Lippman is a regular commentator on national and international television on issues related to the Middle East, workforce development, U.S. politics, and the economy.

Lippman received a MA in International Affairs at Columbia University, studied abroad in Poland on a Fulbright Fellowship, and received a scholarship to study at the Ukrainian Institute at Harvard University.

Michael T. Marquardt
Commission Member
Michael T. Marquardt

Born in Berlin during the Cold War, Michael Marquardt emigrated to the United States in 1991, a year and a half after witnessing the fall of the Berlin Wall, to attend college and graduate school, becoming a U.S. citizen in 2002. He has led several companies in the technology and healthcare sectors as CEO and has served on corporate boards in Indonesia, France, and the United States. As CEO of Global Kompass Strategies, Inc., Marquardt advises clients on global strategy, corporate governance, business development, and emerging technology opportunities.

Following a lifelong commitment to fighting cancer after losing several loved ones to the disease, Marquardt currently serves as Chair of the national Board of Directors of the American Cancer Society.

Elizabeth Hirsh Naftali
Commission Member
Elizabeth Hirsh Naftali

Elizabeth (Liz) Hirsh Naftali runs and owns a commercial real estate company in Los Angeles’ Fashion District. She has served on the board of Oakwood School in North Hollywood since 2002 and was the Board Chair from 2012 to 2015. She also currently serves on the board of the IKAR Shul in Los Angeles and the RAND Corporation Center for Middle East Public Policy.

In 2007, Hirsh Naftali developed BIG Giving, a philanthropic branch of the company she co-founded, BIG Shopping Centers, that primarily supports educational, developmental, and co-existence programs for Jewish and Arab children across Israel. She remains active in her philanthropy in Israel working with the Tel Aviv Foundation and Babylonian Jewry Museum. At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in the spring of 2020, Hirsh Naftali started the Make More Masks Campaign, producing and distributing over 100,000 masks to keep those most vulnerable in our communities safe.

Maureen C. Pikarski
Commission Member
Maureen C. Pikarski

Maureen Pikarski is a partner in the law firm of Gordon & Pikarski. Her practice includes real estate tax objections for commercial, industrial, and residential property owners. Pikarski has extensive experience in matters involving real estate property tax valuations. Prior to joining Gordon & Pikarski, she worked in the White House Executive Office, the Office of the Vice President, and House of Representatives.

Pikarski received her B.A. from Bryn Mawr College, M.A. from Villanova University, and her J.D. from Catholic University of America.

Rabbi Yair Robinson
Commission Member
Rabbi Yair Robinson

As far back as he can remember, Yair Robinson has been committed to making a positive difference in the world. Active in social action causes since he was a teen growing up on Cape Cod, where his father was the rabbi of the local synagogue and his mother the president of Hadassah, Robinson Oberlin College and then received rabbinic ordination from the Hebrew Union College in 2003.

He served Shir Ami in Newtown, Pennsylvania for six years before moving to Wilmington, Delaware, where he has been the Senior Rabbi of Congregation Beth Emeth since 2009. In addition to his pulpit work, preaching, teaching, and providing pastoral care, he has worked with many local organizations, including serving on the boards of Rotary Club of Wilmington, The Anti-Defamation League of Philadelphia, The Ninth Ward Interfaith Coalition, The Siegel JCC and Jewish Family Services, Planned Parenthood of Delaware and Clergy for Choice, and the ACLU of Delaware, always striving for a sacred, just, and loving community. He is married to Dr. Marisa Robinson and they have one son, Elishai, who graduates from Mount Pleasant High School in Wilmington in 2025.

Hershel Wein
Commission Member
Hershel Wein

Hershel Wein, an active member of the New York Jewish community, is an attorney who has practiced law for over 36 years. He is currently a partner and member of the Energy and Infrastructure group of Wilson Sonsini, with a specialty in tax law and renewable energy.

Previously, he was a partner and member of the Washington National Tax practice of KPMG and a partner at the law firm Dewey Ballantine. Among his communal activities, Wein is a founder of one of the largest Jewish religious private schools in Long Island, NY, where he served on the board of directors. Wein graduated from the Columbia Law School in 1985 after attending Brooklyn College for his undergraduate studies. He currently resides in Long Island with his wife and children.

Barbi Broadus
Executive Director
Barbi Broadus