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"It's a miracle," said pop star Aviv Geffen when he recently started a concert in Tel Aviv.

An appearance in front of spectators, almost like before Corona times.

This is possible because Israel is the quickest to vaccinate and is finally giving freedom back to its citizens.

However, there is a very earthly explanation for this: vaccination logistics that are worth their name.

Countries that fail should learn that.

Above all Germany.

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In this respect, Austria's Chancellor Sebastian Kurz has only done what has been obvious for weeks.

He got on the plane with a team of experts to learn from the Israelis on the ground.

That made waves, however.

His trip is purely a PR campaign, should distract from his own failure and aim to undermine European solidarity.

So many critics behind closed doors.

But the question is: why hasn't EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen been there long ago?

Or Chancellor Angela Merkel?

Or Health Minister Jens Spahn?

There is no greater task these days than vaccinating.

How it works can only be seen four and a half hours by plane from Berlin.

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Instead: concerns, objections, relativizations.

Israel is very different from Germany, it is said tellingly everywhere.

The criticism of the allegedly lax data protection of Israeli health insurance companies is all the louder.

Nevertheless, the federal government is happy to accept their studies, recently on the low risk of infection for vaccinated people.

And often withholds the fact that our health system is left behind when it comes to digitization.

Israel is a small country with short distances.

His recipe for success cannot even be copied.

But the criticism of Kurz's trip makes it clear: Instead of curious searches for details of the

best practice

in the

Vaccination races

,

too often

outweigh resentment

and fixation on outdated rules.

It is good that Austria's Chancellor Kurz and the Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen who are traveling with them are now sending a signal of departure.

And did not wait for approval from Brussels.