My Rehovot ( ISSN 1817-101X )

Apolitical journal on every aspect of life in Rehovot, Israel

Home | Archive | Rehovot.org | BizDir | rBB | rForum | Rentals | Property | Jobs | Makolet | Flowers | Car for Sale | TV | Photo Albums | Arts | Events | Obituaries/Guest Books | Sport | Bulletin Board (Rus) | Dating (Rus) | Advertise | Contacts
_ _Press go button to proceed with your subscription request          This is a link to MyRehovot.Info in Russian  This is a link to MyRehovot.Info in Hebrew  This is a link to MyRehovot.Info home in English
Visit Google Scholar, new search of quality scholar literature by Google   _

Fresh'n'tasty bread at Rehovot's authentic Brand New Berad house. Come in today for a degustation or a cup of coffee

Friday, August 31, 2007

24 Years of the Rehovot Reporter

"The Rehovot Reporter began in 1983. At that time, I was the local chairman of a branch of the AACI and I felt there was a need to have some means to inform the many olim from English-speaking countries of the various events, meeting, lectures, etc. that were held in Rehovot, in English. Until then, we had to pay to get notices into local newspapers or on billboards. Futhermore, with so many different clubs and organizations in operation, one not knowing what the other was doing, it seemed logical to compile all the sundry events and post them in one organ.

Over the years, the Reporter improved in style, form and content. At Purim in 1990, a special issue was publish to commemorate the 100th birthday of Rehovot with sundry pictures from around town. Another special issue came out the following June, when RESO and the municipality hosted a group of young adults from our US sister city, Rochester, NY.

To recall how the English speaking community of Rehovot shared and participated in the growth and development of our town, back issues of the Rehovot Reporter were recently compiled into book form - actually four books - and this sole copy is now available in the Rehovot public library. Everyone can now take a look and read about the history of our town and what we English speakers did, wrote and shared in the events of our adopted country and community. To all who helped make this possible a hearty thank you!"

Source: David Froehlich. 20 years of the Rehovot Reporter. Jerusalem Post: Metro-Israel Edition (14 May 2004) [FullText]

Labels:

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Two Detained As Police Uncover Rehovot-based Unemployment Fraud

"Investigators from the National Economic Crimes Unit detained two employees of the Rehovot Unemployment Office early Tuesday morning on suspicion that they helped defraud the office by stamping applicants who were not present.

A recent police investigation raised suspicions that the two, both in their 50s, had stamped "unemployed" peoples' documents as "unfit to work," thereby entitling them to benefits without requiring them to find employment.

The people in question were allegedly working without reporting their income to the authorities, simultaneously drawing unemployment benefits from the National Insurance Institute. Although they were required to report once a week to the Unemployment Office to re-approve their unemployed status, police believe the clerks okayed the stamps without the people coming in.

Instead, police suspect, a fixer, or "macher," intervened in the process and would take the forms to be stamped by the clerks. The macher would also allegedly stamp a booklet for his own wife, who was listed as "searching for employment."

The investigation began approximately a year ago based on intelligence that police received. Police said that during the undercover probe, they carried out "a number of different checks" and gathered evidence that supported and even increased the suspicions against those involved.

On Tuesday morning, the undercover part of the investigation ended with the detention of five suspects: the two clerks, the fixer and his wife, and one of the people who allegedly filed themselves as unemployed.

The suspects will be questioned by investigators in the coming days, and police are likely to request that some of the suspects be formally arrested and remanded in order prevent evidence tampering.

The suspects could face charges including receipt of bribes, fraud and breach of trust, as well as forging financial statements."

[Similar charges could be appropriate for a corrupted Academic and Grants office of the Weizmann Institute (Mr. Boaz Avron, current Academic Office and Projects head; Dr. Yoram Groner, former Weizmann's Vice-President for research), should the police further investigate criminal practices by Weizmann's academic leadership, as reported earlier, "Criminality or Irregularity? Israel State Comptroller Finds Weizmann Institute Fools Funding Bodies: Weizmann Institute Corruption Empire Downs The Integrity of Israel Science and Its International Image, an International Funding Body Must Know, MyRehovot 4 February 2007]

Source: Rebecca Anna Stoil. Rehovot: 2 detained as police uncover unemployment fraud. JPost.com (28 August 2007) [FullText]

Labels: ,

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Rehovot at the Crossroads of the Pre Independence War Battles: Wounded in Battle

by Yehuda Lapidot. Besiege. Part one. In the underground. Wounded in Battle.

"Once the Anglo-American Commission of Inquiry, appointed in November 1945 by the British and Americans to recommend a solution to the Palestine problem, had completed its work, the Irgun High Command gave the go-ahead for wide-scale action.

Several months previously, my commanding officers had decided that I should attend a Commanders' Course. First, I was asked to report to Shuni (near Benyamina), where the central courses were held. Fortunately, as it turned out, I was unable to leave home, since the British discovered the course I was scheduled to attend and all the trainees were sent to goal. After that, the central courses were discontinued, and training was carried out at the regional level. The course I attended was held in Ramat Gan, with trainees from Petah Tikva also taking part. We met in the evenings in a large packing-shed in an orange grove in Ramat Yitzhak, known by the code name 'Arlozorov' . Saturday meetings were held outdoors in the orange groves. We learned weapon handling and drill, did field training and studied leadership theory. The training was intensive and the course lasted for several months. At the end we sat examinations, and, in line with Irgun tradition, took part in a military operation against the British. At our graduation party, held at the home of Amnon (Yoel Friedler), I was proclaimed the top cadet in my class. Several days later, we set out for the south.

On April 2, 1946, I reported for duty at Rehovot to take part in an operation about which I knew nothing as yet. Following orders, I met with a young couple at a designated bus stop. We exchanged passwords, and they took me to a large packing-shed in a nearby orange grove. I was happy to see some old friends: lanky Baruch Toprover, Yoel Kalfus and Yoel Friedler from Ramat Gan, Ozer Simcha and Hayim Golovsky from Petah Tikva, and of course my commanding officer and friend Ilan (Shmulik Kroshnevsky). More and more people arrived, and by midday 60 of us were assembled. It was clear that a large-scale operation was being planned. After being given sandwiches and drinks, we were summoned into the packing-shed for a briefing. Eitan (the Irgun's Operations Officer) was the first to address us, and we soon grasped that the objective was to bring railway lines in the north and south to a standstill. However, to avoid disrupting the export of Shamouti oranges by Jewish growers, it had been decided to sabotage the railway track south of Rehovot and north of Haifa. Three independent Irgun groups would operate in the south; in the north, a Lehi unit would blow up the railway bridge over the Naaman river estuary. One of the Irgun groups, led by Zeev (Menahem Shiff), was to blow up the two railway bridges near the Arab village of Yibne, a repetition of an operation carried out a year previously. Menahem Schiff's group, numbering 30 fighters, was assembled at another packing-shed, also in Rehovot. The second group, commanded by Gad (Eliezer Podhazour), was assigned the mission of sabotaging bridges and tracks south of Yibne. The third group, under Shimshon (Dov Cohen) was to attack the Ashdod railway station and blow up the nearby bridge. The two latter groups received a joint briefing and they covered part of the route together.

After Eitan's general remarks, each officer assembled his men for a detailed briefing. Maps were spread out on improvised tables, the force was divided into sections, each memorizing its orders. This was the largest field operation the Irgun had conducted so far, and the weapons had been selected accordingly. The main weapons were rifles, machine-guns and submachine-guns, with only a few pistols. This was a great change to previous operations, which had largely taken place in urban settings. Our withdrawal was also planned differently; since the British were expected to impose a curfew on all southern settlements, it was decided to withdraw on foot to Bat Yam and to slip into Tel Aviv from there. This meant that we were obliged to trek through sand dunes for some 25 kilometers (or 35 kilometers for the southernmost force).

After the briefing I understood the reason for the bustling activity in the orange groves between Petah Tikva and Ramat Gan in the weeks before the operation. Dozens of Irgun members had undergone intensive training and target practice. Shimson had introduced the rifle for operational use, and was in charge of all the training. He added field training to rifle handling. The fighters practiced marching and crawling in order to get into shape, but the two to three weeks' training period was insufficient for the task ahead. And the boots we wore were not suitable for long treks in the sand.

Once the questions and answers were behind us, we were free until the trucks arrived. Spirits were high and the veterans amongst us related anecdotes about previous battle experiences. Suddenly Baruch Toprover turned to me with a smile and said: "I have a strange feeling. Who knows when we'll meet again?" He must have had a premonition. Baruch was arrested after the operation, and when he was released, at the height of the War of Independence, I was in the besieged city of Jerusalem. Thus, we were not to meet again for several years. We sat there in silence, deep in thought.

The roar of engines approaching the packing-shed broke the quiet. The two trucks had been 'confiscated' during the day in order to transport us to our starting point. We clambered onto the truck unarmed, since we were supposed to be laborers returning from work. The second truck was loaded with oranges: the weapons were concealed beneath them, and the 'Arab workers' sat on top. We traveled in convoy southward towards the communal (Jewish) settlement of Yavne. The settlers barred the gates to prevent us from crossing their land. One of our commanders, who were sitting beside the driver, explained that we were on a mission on behalf of the Irgun. This persuaded the settler and he allowed the first truck to enter. Whilst driving through the settlement, we heard shouts from behind us. It transpired that he had refused to allow the second truck in, claiming that he could not allow Arabs to move around the settlement during curfew hours. At that time, the British had imposed a travel curfew from 6:00pm, and as we approached the settlement we had seen several truckloads of British soldiers setting out to enforce the curfew. Again we negotiated with the settler, and after we had convinced him that the passengers in the second truck were also Jewish fighters, disguised as Arabs, they were allowed to join us. While the discussion was underway, a group of inquisitive youngsters had gathered around our vehicle, and I thought I glimpsed my sister Rivka, who was spending a year of national service at the settlement. I crouched on the floor of the vehicle so that she would not identify me and waited impatiently for the truck to move off. How naive I was. A few days later my whole family learnt of my membership in the Irgun and role in the operation.

We left the settlement safely and the convoy halted at a pre-agreed spot. We climbed down, swiftly unloaded the oranges and extricated the weapons. We were a mixed group and the darkness added to the general confusion. Surprisingly enough, some sort of order established itself and, after distribution of the weapons, we took our leave of the unit, which was to operate in Ashdod and set out.

While we were moving through the fields, we spied a slowly moving dot of light. Our first thought was that it was a British armored vehicle coming to find us. Gad ordered the group to lie down, and I was ordered to advance with another fighter to clarify the source of the light. We crept forward cautiously, thinking as we moved: ' What if it really is a tank? Would we have time to inform the rest of the group before being trapped by its projector beam?' I glanced at my comrade, and without a word we continued towards the unknown object. When we were very close, we breathed a sigh of relief - It was the kibbutz tractor ploughing the fields by night. We reported this to Gad who, after advising the tractor driver to return home, gave the order to advance.

Gad urged us on since we were behind schedule. The plan was for the three groups to go into action simultaneously, and since we had no walky-talkies, our watches were the only means of coordinating action. The operation was set for 8:00pm. At precisely that time, as we approached our destination, we heard explosions as the railway bridge beside the Arab village of Yibne was blown up. We had forfeited the surprise element and it was clear that the force guarding our target would be ready for us.

This was indeed the case: as we continued on foot, a rocket suddenly illuminated the entire area. We immediately flung ourselves to the ground, continuing only after the light had died away. Thus we played cat and mouse with the guards until we finally reached our destination and the units dispersed. My unit had been assigned two tasks: first, to sabotage the railway tracks and telephone poles. Then we were to join up with the lookout unit, whose task was to delay any British force, which might arrive from the adjacent army base. For these tasks, we were equipped with a Bren machine-gun, submachine-guns and grenades.

We went out to the railway track, while Shmulik and his men remained on guard. We dispersed over a wide area of track and laid the charges by the telephone poles and beside the track. When everything was ready, I blew a blast on my whistle, and the charges were detonated. I sped away to take shelter, and on the way heard the whistle of bullets being fired nearby. I threw myself to the ground and heard Shmulik says: 'Come here, we're over here.' I stood up to join the group, when there was a sudden explosion. I felt a sharp blow to my right arm, saw blood pouring out and called to Shmulik. He staunched the blood flow with a tourniquet, bandaged my arm and helped me to the meeting spot.

We had to wait until all the units had completed their assignments before withdrawing together. The units returned one by one, Gad among them. He asked me how I felt and said that when all the fighters had arrived, they would decide what to do about me. He had two alternatives. The first one - to take me all the way to Bat Yam, the second one - to evacuate me to the nearest settlement, Rehovot or Rishon le-Zion, where I would receive medical treatment. Meanwhile another unit had arrived with a severely wounded fighter on a stretcher. It was Ezra Rabia, who had been hit in the chest when throwing a grenade at the firing guards. All attention was, of course, focused on Ezra. I finally asked Shmulik to give me a pain-killing injection. He searched the first-aid kit and found an ampoule of morphine and a needle, but did not know how to use them. In fact, nobody knew how to use the needle and no one was wiling to take responsibility for trying. Shmulik finally found some 'pills' and gave them to me, claiming they were analgesics. When I put them in my mouth, I discovered that they were mint candies...

While we were waiting for the last unit to arrive, we heard rounds of shots at increasingly short intervals. The boys lay down in a circle, ready for any possible threat. I was the only one without a weapon and asked Shmulik to give me a pistol so that I could defend myself if necessary. To my great disappointment, he firmly refused. There was a quick consultation, and Gad decided to set out at once, without waiting for the final unit. The convoy moved slowly, Ezra lying on the stretcher and I leaning on Amnon (Yoel Friedler). Ezra lost consciousness and died shortly afterwards. We buried him in the sand, on the assumption that the British would find him the following day and bury him in a Jewish settlement. We assembled around the fresh grave in total silence. Shmulik recited Kaddish (the prayer for the dead) and we stood motionless. It was the most moving Kaddish I have ever heard.

Ezra Rabia had come to Palestine from Iraq without his family and had joined the Irgun shortly after his arrival. Fluent in Arabic and well acquainted with Arab life and customs, he was given assignments in Arab districts. He took part in the confiscation of weapons from the Rosh ha-Ayin camp as a 'bearer' disguised in Arab dress. In the operation in which he lost his life, he had been one of the 'Arabs' in the second truck, sitting atop the heap of oranges. The following day the British did indeed find Ezra's body and he was buried at Kfar Warburg.

Gad, who announced that we were far behind schedule and had to move faster, broke the silence at Ezra's grave. He offered me the chance of being carried on the stretcher, but after he had explained that this would hold up our progress, I felt obliged to walk. I could no longer move the fingers of my injured hand and asked Shmulik to loosen the tourniquet. He did as I asked and, to my relief, the blood flowed back into my fingers. But the wound began to bleed freely, and Shmulik, fearing that I might collapse from loss of blood, tightened the tourniquet again and refused to open it until we reached base. We moved off and my arm soon became numb. Walking was hard; our feet sank into the sand and my pain was agonizing. I lost consciousness several times, but did not want to be carried for fear that we would all be caught by the British. Suddenly I became very thirsty, and asked for water. The water flask was empty and all that remained was a little cognac.

Thus we marched all night, my friends taking turn to support me. After several hours we reached Nahal Rubin. How good it felt to bathe my feet. We were warned not to drink the stagnant water, but I was so thirsty that I drank my fill despite the hovering mosquitoes. Our pace became slower and the convoy became a straggle. As dawn broke, Yoel Friedler waxed lyrical on the beauty of the scene. Gad halted the convoy and we thought that he would announce a break. But he merely urged us to increase the pace in order to reach Bat Yam before the British army arrived. Some of the boys were so tired that they became apathetic. As we moved on, a plane circled around us several times. Our Brennist took aim, but Gad decided that it was preferable not to fire and to conceal the weapons in the sand dunes. This was futile, since the plane had clearly spotted us and reported our progress to headquarters. The aircraft continued southward and we in a northerly direction.

At 8:00am we finally reached the sand dunes of Bat Yam. There we met up with several people who were awaiting us, including Dvora Kalfus, who worriedly asked me what had happened. I replied simply: "This is Jewish blood", before sinking to the ground in total exhaustion. One of the boys went off to summon a car whilst Yoel Friedler helped me up. Dvora stopped us, saying that I could not risk going into town in blood stained clothes. She lined up the other boys, and when she found one of about the same build as me, asked him to exchange clothes with me. I got into the back seat of the car driven by Eliyahu Spektor, with one of the women fighters beside me. En route from Bat Yam to Tel Aviv we encountered a police roadblock in Arab Jaffa. The car came to a halt, and before the policeman could poke his head through the window, the young woman threw her arms around me to hide my wounded arm. The pain was acute and I begged her to stop, but she persisted and we passed through the roadblock safely.

We finally reached Lilienblum Street and went into the Pochovsky Maternity Home where I had been born. I dragged myself up to the second floor, where I was given into the safekeeping of Sister Mina Oshinker, who immediately treated my wound. First, she gave me a morphine injection to ease the pain and then cut away my clothing, washed me and with great care cleaned the wound. She loosened the tourniquet. The flow of blood had ceased but I could not move my fingers at all. The arm was totally paralyzed. The injection soon took effect; I became drowsy and could do nothing but give myself up to the care of the medical team.

The Irgun's physician, Dr. Eliezer Matan, approached Professor Marcus, the most distinguished surgeon in Tel Aviv at the time, and asked him to operate on my arm. Professor Marcus examined the case carefully and decided that there was serious risk of gangrene and that the arm had to be amputated. Dr. Matan was unwilling to go ahead with so drastic an operation and consulted Dr. Friedlander, also a surgeon, who was associated with the Irgun and worked for right-wing health insurance fund (Kupat Holim Leumit). Friedlander believed that they could risk operating to fuse the bone without amputating. He claimed that because of my youth (I was not yet eighteen), there was a reasonable chance that my body would overcome the complications. The debate between the doctors was lengthy, and Dr. Friedlander, to whom I owe my right arm, finally performed the operation.

Dr. Friedlander operated me on that same afternoon. It transpired that the bone had broken in two, leaving my arm dangling. The two sections of the bone were fused with the aid of a platinum bar, the wound was cleansed and the arm placed in plaster. Because of the infection, I had a high fever and urgently needed antibiotics. During the Second World War, penicillin was available only to the military, and after the war it was allocated for civilian use only under strict official supervision. A request to the health authorities for penicillin might have given me away to the British. The Irgun preferred to use another method of obtaining the drug. At night, Irgun fighters broke into the warehouse of the Hirshberg Brothers and confiscated a shipment of penicillin. Thus Avraham and Yaakov Hirshberg, my maternal uncles, had unwittingly helped in my recovery.

The day after my operation I found myself in a room with a neighbor in the last stages of convalescence. I was pleased to see Noah Grizak, who had been wounded in the thigh in the attack on the army camp in the Exhibition Grounds. We had first met three months previously, at an assembly point in Ramat Gan returning from a field operation. Noah had then been evacuated to the Paulen hospital in Ramat Gan and only later was he transferred to the Pohovsky Hospital.

From Noah I learned of the fate of the group, led by Shimshon, which had set out to attack Ashdod railway station. The force had encountered resistance on the part of Arab guards, but had overcome them and blown up the station and the nearby bridge. After the operation, the force had withdrawn in the direction of Bat Yam. It was a long and difficult journey, and it soon became evident that some of the boys were not sufficiently trained in long-distance treks. When dawn broke, they were discovered by the same plane, which had spotted us. The army had encircled all the Jewish settlements in the south and after the report was received, a battalion of soldiers set out for Bat Yam. When Shimshon and his men reached the Bat Yam sand dunes, the British army was waiting for them. (We had succeeded in reaching Bat Yam shortly before the army arrived). The paratroopers fanned out all over the area and our people had no chance of escape. Eitan ordered the fighters to bury their weapons in the sand and try to slip away one by one. Most chose to make for the sea, and Eitan himself waded into the water, but to no avail; wherever they turned, they ancountered armed troops. Avner Ben-Shem, who had followed Eitan into the water, was shot dead, and the firing ceased only after all our fighters had surrendered. Only two got away - Shimshon and Chaim Golovsky. Chaim later told me that when the boys began running towards the sea, Shimshon had said to him: "Let's run in the opposite direction, and if we make it safely over the hill, we'll be able to reach Rishon le-Zion." They ran in zigzags and succeeded in evading the bullets fired at them. Afterwards, the British forces were concentrated by the seashore and the two Irgun fighters reached Rishon le-Zion unscathed.

The British arrested in Bat Yam dunes thirty-one fighters, including some of the Irgun best commanders. In addition to the 27 who had taken part in the operation, another four, who had been waiting for them, were detained: Menahem Maletzky (Commanding Officer Haifa district), Eliyahu Temler (C.O. Tel Aviv Fighting Force) and Dvora Kalfus- nehushtan, who had accompanied them in order to meet her brother. Also present was Menahem Schiff, commander of the operated at Yibne, who was waiting for his comrades. A large number of weapons were lost among the dunes. In addition to Avner Ben-Shem, who was killed by gunfire, four men were wounded and evacuated to the Government Hospital in Jaffa. The papers reported that the British had found blood-stained garments and thought that they belonged to one of the injured men they had arrested. Fortunately they did not guess that they were my clothes and did not bother to look for another wounded man in hospital. The arrest of the 31 fighters was a bitter blow for the Irgun but it did at least ensure coverage for the cause in the national and international press.

Noah Grizak did his best to make my hospital stay a pleasant one. He told me about his first few days in hospital and how his injured leg was attached to a weight for a long time. "You're lucky," he said. "You'll soon be able to walk about, and only your arm will be in a cast. I was immobilized in bed for three months. But even that passed, and in a few days time I will be out of here and back on active duty." I was very sorry when Noah left hospital, since we had become good friends. We decided to meet after I recovered from my injury, but our paths diverged; a year later, I moved to Jerusalem and after the War of Independence I learned that Noah had been killed in the battle for Jaffa.

The transition from intense activity to lying idle in bed was shockingly extreme. I suddenly found myself in an entirely different world and had to confront my helplessness and dependency. At first I was not sufficiently aware of the gravity of my condition - severe infection throughout my body, total paralysis of my arm, the threat of gangrene and subsequent need for amputation. I imagined that I would be able to leave hospital in a few days time. In fact, I lay there for two weeks, and only when the fever dropped did the doctors agree to send me home.

The hospital Director agreed to treat Irgun members on condition that visits by comrades were strictly prohibited, since he feared that they might alert the British police. Only two people were allowed to visit me: Dr. Matan and Amatzia' (David Grossbard), CO Tel Aviv District, who was in charge of medical services. They came daily, sometimes twice a day, and did their best to make my stay easier. On one occasion they asked me:"What would you like us to bring you? We'll bring anything you want" "Strawberries and cream," I replied cheekily, knowing that they were unobtainable. Several hours later, Sister Mina walked in and told me that a present had arrived from my friends and placed a large bowl of strawberries and cream beside my bed.

The day after I was injured, Shmulik visited my father in his chemicals' store in Tel Aviv and informed him that I had been lightly wounded and could be visited in hospital in several days' time. My father did not say anything, but thought to himself: 'If he's so lightly wounded, what is he doing in hospital, and why can we only visit him in a few day's time?' Years later he told me that after Shmulik had left; his friend Cohen from Kfar Saba came into the store. Alone together, Cohen told my father his troubles. The police had arrested one of his sons, Yehoshua, and the other son, Menahem, had escaped and nobody knew his whereabouts. Before his arrest, the British had offered a reward for information leading to the apprehension of Yehoshua and his picture had appeared in the press and on billboards. The two brothers were active in the Lehi and Yehoshua was renowned for his courage (Yehoshua later became David Ben-Gurion's bodyguard at Sede Boker). My father listened and thought: 'What can I say to him? I've just been told that my son is lying wounded in hospital and I can't discuss it with anybody'.

My mother's visit to hospital was not easy for her. When the nurse asked her to feed me, she said with tears in her eyes:" When I nursed you as a newborn baby, I never imagined that eighteen years later I would come to the same place and feed you again." The visit was brief and towards its end she plucked up courage and said: "They told me that the bullet only scratched you. So why is your arm in a cast? And why do you have to spend so long in hospital?" I tried to reassure her, but without success. Before leaving, she asked me to promise that when I was released from hospital, I would come home, so that she could look after me.

Life in hospital took on a routine, determined by the prosaic needs of the bedridden patient: measuring fever, bowel monitoring movements, etc. I slept a great deal, and the main thing that disturbed me were the penicillin injections I received every four hours for two weeks. I received so many of these shots that there was no room on my behind for further jabs. I spent most of my waking hours reading and received few visitors. I had no radio, but was fortunate enough to be able to hear the rehearsals and performances of pianist Pnina Salzman, who played in the Tel Aviv Museum, located just behind the hospital.

On my last day in hospital I was again taken to the operating theater, this time for an 'aeroplane' to be built to support my arm. Dr. Friedlander encased the upper half of my body in plaster, and inserted a metal rod to support my arm in its cast at shoulder height. I was forced to resort to acrobatics to manipulate the structure. Getting into a car, for example, was almost impossible. My appearance was apparently so frightening that when I arrived home, my two-year-old brother Zvi fled in panic.

I imposed voluntary ' house arrest' on myself, and did not go out in daylight. My alibi was that I had been injured in a road accident, but I knew the alibi would not stand up to thorough investigation. I developed a new routine of reading and listening to the radio. In the evening my friends came to visit and told me what was happening in the Irgun, and I strolled with them in the orange-groves near our house. My most devoted friend Yosef, visited daily and brought a parcel of home-made chocolate-nut candies each time .

After leaving hospital, I was informed that I had been commended for my exemplary conduct after being wounded.

A week after my return home, on April 23rd, at noon, a loud explosion was heard, followed by shots. It was the Irgun attack on the Ramat Gan police station, one of the great Taggart fortresses built during the 1930s riots. In this attack, three fighters were killed and five injured, including Dov Gruner, who was captured. The dead were buried anonymously in the Nahlat Yitzhak cemetery, in the presence of the Hevra Kadisha burial society and police guards, but without relatives.

The retreat route from the attack was not far from my home, and British policemen conducted searches throughout the neighborhood. When my mother saw what was going on, she panicked and told me to hide in the cellar. I refused flatly, since it was clear to me that the British would find me there and that my attempt to hide would incriminate me. The army soon imposed a curfew on Ramat Gan. As in previous cases, the soldiers came as far as Salameh Road, which was the municipal border of Ramat Gan. But, in contrast to previous occasions, I could not escape through the back door, and stayed at home till the curfew was lifted. Fortunately our house was not searched and the British returned to base."

Source: Yehuda Lapidot. Besiege. Part one. In the underground. Wounded in Battle. [FullText]

Labels:

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

US-Canadian Fund Looks to Rehovot's Cancer Researchers for Answers

"At first it was founded to stem the scientific 'brain drain' from Israel, but the Israel Cancer Research Fund (ICRF) now says it is looking to Israeli scientists for a prescription to stop cancer deaths. They recently moved a step closer.

A team of researchers from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, led by ICRF-supported scientist Professor Yosef Yarden, [who also serves as Scientific Advisory Board Member of Rehovot's Biotech Firm GammaCan International, Inc.] has identified a specific protein that enables breast cancer cells to metastasize and spread to other organs.

The team hopes that the discovery will facilitate the development of drugs that block or inhibit the production of this protein to prevent metastasis in breast and other cancers. Metastasis, when cancer cells break away from the original tumor and spread via the blood stream to other organs, is the leading cause of cancer death.

According to the National Breast Cancer Coalition (NBCC), breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer death for women worldwide. NBCC estimates that some 3.3 million women in the United States are living with breast cancer: about 2.3 million who have been diagnosed and an estimated 1 million who do not yet know they have the disease. The NBCC estimates that about 2,030 new cases of invasive breast cancer will be diagnosed in men in the United States in 2007.

The work by the team at the Weizmann Institute was published recently online in Nature Cell Biology. It identifies "tensins," a family of proteins that stabilizes the cell structure, as a controlling mechanism for the spread of breast cancer. The scientists discovered a link between a specific tensin and a substance called growth factor which signals cells to spread.

The team examined the effects of drugs that block the effect of the growth factor. In patients who received the drugs, the harmful tensin proteins disappeared from the cancer cells.

"The mechanism we identified is clinically important. It can predict the development of metastasis and possibly how the cancer will respond to treatment," Yarden, of the Weizmann Institute's Biological Regulation Department, said in a statement.

The team, which was composed of researchers from Israel, the United States and Portugal, also included ICRF-funded scientist Professor Gideon Rechavi of the Sheba Medical Center.

"Each of us would like to play a role in bringing an end to the cancer crisis," Yashar Hirshaut, ICRF International Chairman, told ISRAEL21c. "ICRF scientists are providing the crucial ideas that are going to lead to the next generation of drugs."

The ICRF, which provided Rechavi a grant in 2006, was founded in 1975 by a group of American and Canadian researchers, determined to harness Israel's educational and scientific resources in the fight against cancer.

It's the single largest source of private funds for cancer research in Israel and has awarded 1,578 grants valued at more than $33 million to scientists at all of Israel's leading institutions.

ICRF chairman Hirshaut, an oncologist and associate professor at Weill-Cornell Medical College - New York Hospital in New York, said that ICRF is dedicated to supporting Israeli scientists in their mission to eradicate cancer.
Scientists who have made strides in that direction include the first two Israelis to win Nobel prizes in the sciences - Aaron Ciechanover and Avram Hershko - for helping to understand how the human body gives the "kiss of death" to faulty proteins to defend itself from diseases like cancer.

Additional ICRF-supported scientists recognized for their achievements include Yair Reisner and his team which developed a novel bone marrow transplant technique for leukemia patients; Moshe Orens whose early research discovered the location and revealed the chemical nature of the common protein p53, a tumor suppressor that prevents tumor growth; Alberto Gabizon and his team which developed Doxil, an FDA-approved drug used in the treatment of breast and ovarian cancer, as well as Kaposi Sarcoma; Eli Canaani and his team which identified the molecular structure of the "Philadelphia Chromosome," the first abnormal chromosome found in leukemia. The "Philadelphia Chromosome" research led to the development of Gleevec, a drug that directly targets cancer cells and is now being used to treat chronic myelogenous leukemia.

Hirshaut added that through these discoveries the ICRF is "creating the base for an international pharmaceutical industry coming to Israel."

"We have insisted on preventing the brain drain, and have developed the scientific leadership in Israel and some outstanding people," Hirshaut said. "It is sophisticated and exciting work, which the world is waiting for. Israel has the people that can do this work."

In addition to the raw talent in Israel, Hirshaut said from a financial perspective, research dollars went further in Israel. He said the ICRF monies are used solely to provide the "everyday running materials" that permit the scientists, most of whom already are employed by universities, to conduct their research.

"The ICRF provides a vehicle to make important, substantial contributions to the solution of the cancer problem in sums that can be dealt with by many people," Hirshaut said.

On September 5th, the ICRF will hold its Annual Scientific Awards Evening at which time it will announce its 2007-2008 grants."

Source: Ahron Shapiro and Aimee Rhodes. US-Canadian fund looks to Israeli cancer researchers for answers: The work of Israeli cancer researchers is enhanced by the efforts of the ICRF. Israel21c.org (26 August 2007) [FullText].

Labels:

Monday, August 27, 2007

Siemens Seeks Stake in Dalia Energy Power Plant Near Rehovot

Israel "Globes" first reported on the bid by the German engineering company earlier this week.

Siemens AG (NYSE: SI; XETRA: SIE) is in talks with Dalia Energy Ltd. to become a partner in its private power plant. Energy market sources believe that Siemens will probably acquire a 20% share in the $350-440 million project. Dalia Energy confirmed today that it was holding talks with a subsidiary of Siemens on its entry as a partner in the power plant. "Globes" first reported on the deal with Siemens earlier this week. Siemens will also be the lead contractor for the construction of the plant, and maintain it for 15 years.

Dalia Energy intends to build a 560 megawatt power plant with production capacity of 560 megawatts, which can be later expanded to 840 megawatts, 8% of total electricity production in Israel. The plant is due to be up and running by 2010 at the latest. Dalia Energy recently received a conditional electricity production license, after it found a site for the plant in the Tzafit region near Rehovot.

Source: Lior Baron. Siemens seeks stake in Dalia Energy power plant. Globes.co.il (15 August 2007) [FullText]

Labels:

Sunday, August 26, 2007

The 'Ethiopian Herzl' Gets Official Rehovot Recognition

"My brother is the Herzl of all Africa. He gave his life for the sake of Ethiopian Jewry," said Colonel Metuku Bogale, formerly the police commissioner of Ethiopia's Shewa Province, of Yona Bogale, the legendary leader of Ethiopian Jewry. A week ago, the 20th anniversary of Yona Bogale's death was marked, and at about the same time, the Rehovot City Council decided to name a local school after him.

Bogale was born in 1908 in the village of Wolleka and came to Israel for the first time when he was 13 years old. He studied in Jerusalem and continued his studies in Frankfurt, Lausanne and Paris. In 1931, he returned to Ethiopia and taught at the Jewish School in Addis Ababa until it was shut down by the Italians, who occupied the country in 1936. In the 1950s, together with Diaspora Jewish organizations, he established a network of Jewish educational institutions and later a network of health clinics as well.

"Without Yona Bogale, Ethiopian Jewry would have perished," said Yaakov Elias, an educational social worker in Rehovot. Elias is one of Bogale's many students. He was sent to study at Kfar Batya in Ra'anana in 1956 and returned to Ethiopia in 1964 to serve as a teacher. He and Bogale then began a Zionist campaign to open schools in remote villages in Ethiopia. "We would walk for an entire day to get to Jewish villages. Because the Jews did not own land, Yona negotiated with landowners to establish schools." Elias said.

At one stage, Bogale served as head of the translation department at the Ethiopian Education Ministry. In the course of his work, he saw a document from an Anglican mission that wanted to convert the Jews of Ethiopia. Yona, who foresaw the fate of his Jewish brethren, resigned from his position and began organizing against the mission. The emperor asked him to drop this activity and serve as a cabinet minister, but he refused.

In 1979, Bogale immigrated to Israel together with his wife and daughter, joining seven other children who had immigrated before him. That same year, he was invited to deliver a speech at the General Assembly of what is today known as the United Jewish Communities of North America, which was held that year in Canada. Addressing an audience of 3,000 Jews, Bogale asked Diaspora Jewry to work to promote the immigration of Ethiopian Jews to Israel.

This was a breakthrough for the immigration of Ethiopian Jewry, which began in the 1980s. Diaspora Jews began to pressure the Israeli government to promote this immigration. Bogale also lobbied rabbis to cancel the requirement that Ethiopian Jews undergo a pro forma conversion as a precaution to ensure their Jewishness.

Bogale passed away in 1987, at the age of 79, and was interred in Jerusalem's Har Hamenuhot Cemetery.

"It disturbs me greatly that the children of Ethiopian Jews are not familiar with the history of their elders and leaders," said his brother. "If they had been, there would not have been such a deterioration, which has them sleeping in the streets. Today, I want the history of Ethiopian Jewry to be added to every textbook. We have a glorious history, and society would do well to learn of it, in order to give it the honor and respect that it merits."

Source: Ayanawo Farada Sanbetu. The 'Ethiopian Herzl' finally receives recognition. Haaretz.com (13 August 2007) [FullText]

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Rehovot Holocaust Stories: The Sister She Never Knew

by Serge Debrebant

Two months ago, Yad Vashem published the diary of Rutka Laskier, a Jewish girl from Poland who, at the age of 14, died in the Auschwitz concentration camp. Over the course of a few months in 1943, Rutka kept a diary while living in a ghetto in the town of Bedzin, about 20 miles from Auschwitz. She wrote about her first love, but also about the gas chambers. For 60 years, her Christian friend Stanislawa Sapinska preserved the diary. She and Rutka had agreed that Rutka would hide her diary under the stairs of her house and Sapinska would retrieve it after the war. In 2005, Sapinska decided to make it available to the public.

Rutka’s father, Yaacov, was the only family member to survive the Holocaust. He immigrated to Israel, remarried and had another daughter, Zahava Scherz, who works in Rehovot as a director of science and education communication at the Weizmann Institute of Science. She recently sat down with the Forward to discuss the sister she never met.

Rutka Laskier’s diary is compared to Anne Frank’s. In what sense, do you think, the diaries are similar?

I read Anne Frank’s diary some years ago, but I remember it quite well. In a way, Rutka’s diary is a completion to Anne Frank’s. Both of them were born in 1929, and both were Jewish girls who died in concentration camps. Both wrote about their love affairs and their personal lives on the one hand, and the Holocaust on the other. Besides the similarities, their situations were quite different. Rutka was not locked in a flat, but lived in an open ghetto. She knew about Auschwitz and the war between Germany and Russia. She even escaped an attempted deportation. I hate to say it, but there is more action in Rutka’s diary. It’s also much shorter.

I was surprised that a girl her age knew about Auschwitz

Yes, it’s unbelievable. It was a shock to me that she knew about the gas chambers. I thought Jewish people didn’t know about them until they came to Auschwitz. Stanislawa Sapinska, her friend, thinks that she possibly was connected to a secret organization. She was a very political person and a very sharp, strong and mature character.

Did your feelings change after you read the diary?

I knew that my father had a daughter who died in Auschwitz, but he didn’t talk to me about her a lot. I never felt like she was my sister. Then I got to know her through the diary and by meeting her friends, and all of a sudden she became real to me and very close. I discovered how wonderful she was. I became proud of her, and I started to love her. I became her sister, and she became mine. I grew up as an only child, and suddenly I wasn’t anymore. That is very nice.

How did you first learn of Rutka?

When I was a child, my father, Yaacov, never talked with me about his former family. At the age of 14, I found a photo album, which he didn’t keep with the others but between some cloths in a cupboard. I had noticed that my father and my mother took this album out and looked inside from time to time, and I wanted to see what was in there. I found the picture of a girl and asked my father why we looked so alike. He said, “That’s my daughter Rutka.” He told me he had a wife, a daughter and a son and that they were killed in the Holocaust. I was shocked. I cannot even explain how sorry I felt for him. You think your parents are normal people with a normal life, and suddenly you discover how much they have suffered. I couldn’t understand how people could suffer so much.

Did you know that your father had survived the Holocaust?

Yes, I did. He was in Auschwitz and had a tattoo on the inside of his left forearm. After Auschwitz, he was transferred to Sachsenhausen and worked in the Bernhard operation. The Jewish prisoners had to print false money for the Germans; the Germans wanted to use it to destabilize the economy of the Allies. It was a top-secret operation. At the end of the war, he was transferred to Austria. They were all doomed to death, but when the Americans came, the Germans escaped and left all the prisoners behind. Then he immigrated to Israel.

How did he talk about Rutka?*

With a lot of love, sorrow and pain, but without giving any details. We only talked a few times about her. He only said that she was very smart and very mature, nothing more. I think he wanted to protect me and also himself. If you decide to continue with your life, you cannot live with your other life. He had to make a cut. I think he is fortunate that he didn’t know about the diary. I cried when I read it, and I didn’t even know her. He had enough bad memories. I fear that my father wouldn’t have been able to continue his life.

You wrote the foreword of the publication. Why did you choose to write it in such a sober, minimalistic style?

I wanted to give facts. I don’t see myself as a writer, and I didn’t want to divert the readers’ attention from Rutka’s diary. It’s her book, not mine.

Source: Serge Debrebant. The Sister She Never Knew. The Jewish Daily Forward (15 August 2007) [FullText]

Labels:

Friday, August 24, 2007

Remembering Fallen Soldiers From Rehovot

Do you remember fallen soldiers from Rehovot?

Over the years over 400 chayalim have given their lives to defend Israel Independence. There is a memorial called Yad La'Banim in the center of the city. Inside the memorial a flame illuminates a wall listing the fallen soldiers. Outside is a park and a sculpture memorial.

This is where Official Memorial Service on April 23 took place this year.

There is also a website that displays the names of the fallen soldiers, Rehovot residents.

*) Beit Yad La'Banim is part of the Merkaz HaTarbut and also houses an art gallery and theatre for plays and concerts.

Source: City of Rehovot Web site

Labels:

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Rehovot, Israel Roads, Streets In Civil War

Or Who will combat the violence by irresponsible drivers at Rehovot streets?

Traffic Police heads decided on Sunday to increase patrols on the roads, up police presence on weekends and at night, and recruit more volunteer traffic cops, following a surge in road deaths over the weekend.

After seven people were killed in car accidents throughout the country, Traffic Police head Cmdr. Avi Ben-Hamo called for an emergency meeting Sunday to discuss the issue.

Heads of traffic police from every district and police's top command were present at the discussion.

On Saturday evening, 45-year-old Moshe Solimani and his five-year-old daughter Shani were killed when a truck hit their car as they were traveling on Highway 1.

Rescue teams managed to save the mother, Irit Solimani, who had been trapped in the car, and evacuated her and the couple's son, Idan, to a nearby hospital. The mother was listed in serious condition, and the son in good condition.

The driver of the truck was found to be a serial traffic offender, with no fewer than 190 traffic violations on his record. The driver was remanded Sunday morning.

The two victims will be laid to rest at 6:30 p.m. at the cemetery in Holon.

Following the accident, police closed traffic on the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem Highway eastward of Lod junction for several hours.

In another accident, Uzi Natan, 55, died when he suffered a cardiac arrest while driving.

The man was traveling with his wife and son southward on Route 2 and when he suffered the attack he lost control of the vehicle, smashed into a vehicle to his right, then continued and stopped only after crashing into a security railing.

The other travelers in the car were unharmed, and medics arriving at the scene established the man's death.

Also Saturday evening, Albert Sulimanov, a worker at a carwash near Hakfar Hayarok junction was killed when a car slid toward him and hit him.

Earlier Saturday, Yosef David, an 82-year-old pedestrian was killed after he was hit by a car as he tried to cross the street at Rehovot junction; on Friday evening, Shimrit Hillel, 26, was killed in Tiberias as she was crossing the street near a hospital; and earlier Friday, 30-year-old Abed el Hija Sah was killed when his car flipped over at the entrance to the Arab village of Arava, where he lived.

Source: Police to increase traffic patrols. JPost.com (12 August 2007) [FullText and Talkbacks]

Labels:

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Rehovot Man on a list of NBA prospects

Here is player six on Lance Walton list of top 10 international prospects 20 and under.

Omri Casspi: Is 6’8, 220 pounds, 19 years old from Rehovot, Israel

He has real deep shooting range. He prefers to shoot than slash, but he has skills to slash to the basket. He is good one on one, he does a great job of getting to the basket and finishing well after contact. He has a great short-range jumper. He passes the the ball well in transition, he is pretty explosive and runs the floor well. He is a good perimeter shooter. He is capable of getting steals and scoring points after the steal. He has pretty good awareness.

He is not a very good rebounder. He doesn’t play defense with a passion, he basically just looks to get back on the end to score points. I believe he could be a star player in Europe, and just a solid NBA player. He will need to play good and stand out these next couple years to have NBA teams consider him a legit prospect. I see similarities between him and Adam Morrison.

Source: Lance Walton. International Prospects Report (13 August 2007) [FullText]

Labels:

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Not So Brief History of Rehovot, US Sister City Mayor Office Account

The city of Citrus, Culture and Science was reestablished in 1890 by immigrants who purchased the land to create a well organized democratic settlement. The first settlement in this area was destroyed in biblical times, when it was famous as the place where the prophet Jacob stopped after leaving Beersheva to travel to Egypt.

Modern Rehovot is a growing, dynamic city of almost 100,000 people located 15 miles southeast of Tel-Aviv and 40 miles northwest of Jerusalem. About 20% of the city's residents were absorbed in the late 1980s and early '90s from the former Soviet Union, Yemen and Ethiopia. The city's culture reflects the diversity of the over 80 nations represented by the population.

The home of three world renowned institutes, Rehovot is visited by students and professors from around the world. Best known and largest is the Weizmann Institute of Science, which was founded in 1934. Chaim Weizmann, the distinguished scientist and statesmen, became the president of the Institute as well as the first President of Israel. The Institute is devoted to research and teaching in the natural sciences. Jerusalem's Hebrew University uses Rehovot as the site for its new School of Humanities and School of Agriculture. The Development Study Center for intensive study of rural development is utilized by many third world countries as well as advanced nations for graduate studies and planning for socio-economic growth.

Rehovot has a science and information based Industrial Park, a municipal cultural center, two art galleries, a music conservatory as well as several world renowned musical groups. The modern city whose emblem depicts oranges, a book and a microscope is indeed the "City of Citrus, Culture and Science."

Rehovot: Then and now

Rehovot is a city situated on the southern coastal plain of Israel. It is identified with Doron, a Jewish settlement during the period of the Mishna and the Talmud (4th century). It was built on a site from the Roman and Byzantine period, and was given its name during the Arab period.

In 1890, Aharon Eisenberg proposed to Joshua Hankin to establish a Jewish settlement here and to redeem the land of Doron. In the spring (7th Adar), a contract for the sale of the land was signed, and during Purim of that year celebrations were held beside the ancient well. The proposal of Israel Belkind to call the settlement "Rehovot" was accepted - basing the name on Genesis 26, v.22: "And he removed from thence and digged another well: and for that they strove not. And he called the name of it Rehovot: and he said: 'For now the Lord hath made room (in Hebrew: rehov) for us, and we shall be fruitful in the land'".

At this time, in Warsaw, the "Sons of Moses" established a society called "Menuhah V'nahalah''. Its purpose was to purchase land in Israel and to establish a settlement that would not be dependent upon the good will and, unfortunately, the tyranny of the philanthropists. Representatives of the society arrived and purchased from Joshua Hankin 6,000 dunams for the "Menuhah V'nahalah" society. The remaining area was bought by various individuals.

The founders of the settlement wrote and signed a "Book of the Covenant" on the manner in which the land was to be distributed and on the planning of the settlement. They took possession of the land in the summer of 1890 (I5th Av). The individual landholders settled immediately, each on his lot, whilst most of the members of "Menuha V'nahalah" remained abroad until their vineyards gave fruit and livelihood was assured. Eliyahu Ze'ev Levin-Epstein was head of the society and its committee in the early years of the settlement. Aharon Eisenberg was responsible for the planning and Shlomo Goldin was the treasurer.

In the fall of 1891 (19th Kislev) the residents of the settlement held their first general meeting to lay the foundations for the public affairs of the community, which brought Rehovot fame as the best organized and most democratic settlement in Palestine. Rehovot was distinguished by its orderly life and by its spirit of brotherhood and family atmosphere. It was also kown for its hospitality. It became famous for friendliness towards the Hebrew worker, as throughout its early years, when the land had to be made fit for agriculture and the vineyards planted, thousands of Hebrew workers spent time in Rehovot.

It was at this time that the workers of Rehovot established a secret organization, "Ha'asarot", with the aim of improving the material situation and to serve as a nucleus for the future army.

The workers' center was the 'shalash' a wooden hut which was used as a kitchen, a synagogue, a school (heder), a society for visiting the sick (Bikur Holim) and free overnight lodgings (Linat Tzedek).

The second wave of immigration, the "Aliya", brought many who later became the leading characters of the settlement. Their love and appreciation was expressed in their spoken words and in their writing. Rehovot was the first settlement to absorb immigrants from Yemen and to establish a dwelling quarter for them. Groups of workers of the third and fourth Aliya lived in the settlement, worked in the vineyards and in the citrus groves, and afterwards established Kibbutzim and moshavim (collective settlements) in the vicinity. Members of the future collectives lived in the settlement before they settled on their own lots, and their descendants participated in the establishment of settlements throughout the land.

The founders of the settlements tried to maintain a good relationship with the surrounding Arab villages, and some of them, especially Moshe Smilansky, believed in the principle of mutual work as a means of co-existence. But in spite of this, quarrels broke out between the settlers and their neighbours. In the summer of 1891, Arabs from Zarnugah attacked the settlement because of an argument about grazing. The Satariah tribe attacked the settlement many times, claiming tenancy of the land. Their attacks were driven back, and in the end they accepted the settlement's right to exist. In 19l3 a bitter, bloody conflict occurred between the guards of the settlement and the village Zarnugah and, as a consequence, a year-long judicial division concluded with a "sulha", or "burying the hatchet", feast. During Passover, 1921, the defenders of the settlement repelled a mob of riotous Arabs returning from a celebration of Nebi Zalah in Ramlah. In the anti-Jewish riots of 1921, 1929 and 1936 the orchards were damaged and the workers and guards attacked.

Rehovot was distinguished for its cultural atmosphere. Many of its early settlers were scholars, a fact that contributed to the character and life of the settlment. The "rebellious young", among them Moshe Smilansky and Eliezer Margolin, together with the teacher Vilkomitz, raised the standard of education in the schools, which were at first one-room "Heders"; in the beginning they strove for spoken Hebrew and later even for the Sephardic pronunciation. As the leaders of "Menuhah V'nahalah" turned to the Baron Rothschild with a request to send the Rehovot grapes to Rishon I' Zion for processing, the settlers established an independent winery which operated from 1921 to 1933. They also founded the "Carmel" Co. to market abroad the wines of the Baron's presses; this is still active today under the name "Carmel Mizrahi".

From the year 1908 the famous "Passover celebrations" drew large crowds from all over the country and even visitors from abroad. This continued until the First World War.

The settlement made a considerable contribution in the area of security and defense. Rehovot was the first settlement in Judea to hand over to "Hashomer" (The Guard) the responsibility of guarding the settlement. It was also one of the first centers for volunteers to join a Hebrew battalion during the First World War. Many settlers were members of the "Haganah" and others joined the "Etzel" and the "Lechi" paramilitary organizations. During these years a great quantity of arms and ammunition was obtained and hidden in arms caches, and handed to the commander of the "Givati" brigade during the War of Independence. In the winery there was an industry for cartridges and explosives. Scientists from the "Sieff Institute" contributed towards the security effort in various areas, and at "Givat Hakibbutzin" there was an underground factory for the manufacture of bullets for Sten guns.

During the War of Independence the people of Rehovot fought on all fronts, but chiefly in the ranks of the "Givati" brigade. The headquarters of the brigade, the southern unit, was billeted in Rehovot. The settlement was shelled nine times from the air, ten people were killed and several were wounded. Houses were hit and the original Town Hall was destroyed. Seventy-five residents of Rehovot fell during the war. A cultural hall, "Yad l'banim" and a statue in the Gan Hamanginim (Defender's Park) were erected to their memory. After the establishment of the state, new streets were given the names of the fallen.

In the early years, Rehovot was a settlement of vineyards. In 1907 many of the vines were uprooted because of a crisis in the wine industry and replaced by Almond trees. It was in 1904 that the first citrus orchard was planted, to be followed by many more. After the First World War, citrus became the main branch of Rehovot's economy. Near the railway station, mechanical packing facilities were built and Rehovot became a large center for packing and shipping citrus fruit to the ports. Research institutes that were established in the settlement investigated ways of cultivating and producing new products. All these activities contributed to Rehovot's reputation as the "Citrus City".

In 1932 the Agricultural Research Station was transferred to Rehovot; in 1942 the Faculty of Agriculture of the Hebrew University was established there, and in 1970 the school for the Science of Nutrition of the Hebrew University also came to be. In 1934 the Sieff Institute was built, and in 1949 it became the Weizmann Institute of Science. In 1963 the Settlement Study Center was established. In addition, the Institute for Biological Control of Pets and the Israeli Wine Institute are located in Rehovot. These research institutes gave Rehovot another name: "The City of Science".

The symbols of Rehovot are citrus fruit, a microscope and a book. To a certain extent, Rehovot became the borough of the book. Writers and poets who lived in the settlement described, in their works, the settlement and its people. These included Moshe Smilansky, David Shimoni, Yehoash, Nahum Guttmann, Benjamin Tammuz, S. Yizhar and many others. To these must be added the research works of the scientists who lived in the city.

Until the War of Independence, Rehovot was the central settlement of the south, through which passed the transport to the south and to the Negev, as well as to Jerusalem during the war.

Rehovot was in the past, and is today, a center for the marketing of agricultural products, a commercial center, a transport center and an administrative center serving the whole region. In addition, it is a sub-district with government offices, a court of law, a police station, the Kaplan hospital which is as well a medical university (making Rehovot the "University City"), the central offices of public institutions such as Kupat Holim (Health Fund), Tenuvah (the workers' cooperative for marketing and distributing farm produce) and others.

In 1950 Rehovot was declared a city, and today it has about 100,000 residents.

Source: A brief history of Rehovot, Israel. About Rehovot. CityofRochester.gov (last viewed 21 August 2007) [FullText][FullText edited by Jan M.L. (Gershom) Martin of the Weizmann Institute]

Labels:

Monday, August 20, 2007

Rehovot's Local Restaurant Oro Goes National

Following its success in Moshav Galia near Rehovot, Moroccan restaurant Oro opened its second branch in the entertainment area of Rishon LeZion a week ago. Executive chef Guy Peretz oversees both restaurants, and has created a special summer menu for his new locale.

The Moroccan style of cooking is heavily influenced by Arab, Middle Eastern, Turkish, Moorish, Berber, Mediterranean African and even Jewish cuisines. The abundant use of spices such as saffron, cinnamon, cumin, turmeric, ginger, paprika, parsley and coriander ensure colorful and tasty dishes. Add to that the yellow-orange-and-black glazed earthenware tagine vessels the food is served in, and you're in for a very visual gourmet experience.

Oro's soothing interior is decorated in cream, black and gold - classic Moroccan colors. Interior designer Itzik Levi had the impressive 5,000 - crystal chandelier that is the centerpiece specially imported from Italy. Dozens of bottles of local and boutique wines adorn the wall above the bar, a nice place to have a pre-dinner drink or snack.

Apart from the main dining room there is a glass-enclosed terrace for private parties and a small open garden area where smoking is permitted.

We tasted the ethnic cigars, the pastilla cigars filled with chicken, nuts, raisins, cinnamon and ginger with a cherry tomato sauce; the grilled Andalousian eggplant; fried sardines on a bed of grilled peppers, garlic and coriander served with crushed lemon sauce; and fried golden mushrooms. All were interesting and full of flavor.

For our main courses we tried a three-tagines, each so different in taste from one another. The sweet tagine with chicken thighs, pumpkin and onion jam on a bed of couscous was absolutely delicious. The chicken and olives tagine with lemon on a bed of couscous was a hit with my dining companions too, but not being a lover of cooked olives, I gave that one a pass. The lamb tagine in red wine is definitely worth another trip to Rishon. Other tagines on the menu include a vegetarian option, soups, salads, fish and grilled meats - in short, something for every taste.

The halva kadif with wild berries served for desert was just as colorful as the previous dishes and, although too sweet for me, it was pounced upon by my dining partners.

Price range: First courses: NIS 22 to 49 Main courses: NIS 42 to 125 Deserts: NIS 24 to 32

Oro, Rehov Moshe Bachar 16, entertainment area, Rishon LeZion. Kosher. Tel: (03) 950-7085. Open Sunday to Thursday from noon to midnight. Friday: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Source: Linda Lipschitz. A touch of kosher Morocco in Rishon Lezion. JPost.com (9 August 2008) [FullText]

Labels:

Sunday, August 19, 2007

280,000 NIS Fine for Rehovot Dairy Farm Nuisances

A lawsuit filed by the Ministry of Environmental Protection has led to the imposition of a record 280,000 shekel fine on Kibbutz Na'an, located near the city of Rehovot, for water source contamination. The fine was imposed both on the kibbutz and on two of its senior officials - the farm coordinator and the dairy farm coordinator.

The defendants were charged with improperly treating dairy farm wastes on different occasions in 2000 - 2003. Piles of manure were left on exposed soil, manure and leachates overflowed toward drainage canals, large parts of the dairy farm were left exposed without sheds or suitable gutters, containment facilities did not exist and manure was allowed to wash away with the rain.

Kibbutz Na'an is located in the Soreq River watershed in the eastern part of the coastal aquifer, the main aquifer supplying pumped water in Israel.

On May 29, 2007, after the dairy farm was removed from the kibbutz and the area was cleaned up, the court convicted the defendants of the charges against them.

On August 6, 2007, the court fined the kibbutz 280,000 shekels and obligated it to sign an undertaking in the amount of 300,000 shekels to refrain from offenses under the Water Law for a two-year period. The farm coordinator was fined 3,600 shekels or 40 days imprisonment in lieu of the fine. The dairy farm coordinator was fined 750 shekels or 10 days imprisonment in lieu of the fine. The fines will be paid into the Maintenance of Cleanliness Fund.

Att. Tamar Zohar of the Legal Department of the Ministry of Environmental Protection noted that this is the highest fine imposed on a dairy farm to date. The sentence reflects the policy of the Ministry of Environmental Protection and the position of the courts regarding raising the penalty level against environmental polluters in general and polluters of water sources in particular.

In the sentence, the judge related to the following, among others: "The deeds of the defendants are severe. Due only to the economic considerations of defendant 1 and his intention to transfer the dairy farm from Na?an to a more distant location using the assistance offered within the framework of the dairy farm reform, the defendants disregarded requests and inspection reports, refrained from investing in dairy farm infrastructure in Na'an and did not repair what was necessary to prevent or reduce nuisances, for a long period of time.

The defendants ignored the requests of representatives of the Ministry of Environmental Protection and the inspection reports which were transferred to them and continued to operate Na'an's dairy farm, while causing the nuisances described in the sentence, although aware of the sensitive location of the dairy farm near the drainage canal."

Source: 280,000 Shekel Fine for Dairy Farm Nuisances. Environment.gov.il (Updated 14 August 2007) [FullText]

Labels: ,

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Rehovot Scientists Finds a Drug to Erase Memories in Rats

"In the comedic sci­ence-fic­tion film “Men in Black,” a top-se­cret team uses a “mem­ory eraser” to make peo­ple for­get they’ve seen aliens. Mem­o­ry eras­ure is a re­cur­rent theme in sci­ence fic­tion, but un­til re­cently it has stayed in that realm on­ly.

That’s chang­ing. For the first time, re­search­ers say they have erased spe­cif­ic mem­o­ries in rats weeks af­ter the me­mor­ies were formed.

The find­ing comes on the heels of an­oth­er study a year ago in which sci­en­tists erased one-day old mem­o­ries of spa­tial in­forma­t­ion from rats. But it was un­known then wheth­er that could work for more es­tab­lished or com­plex mem­o­ries, the sci­en­tists said; now it’s be­com­ing ap­par­ent that it can.

The find­ings can serve to ben­e­fit peo­ple, such as for treat­ments to en­hance mem­o­ry or erase trau­mat­ic rec­ol­lec­tions, the re­search­ers added. But some au­thors have al­so pre­dicted po­ten­tial for abuse of such treat­ments. For in­stance, one might blot out a mem­o­ry to keep some­one from test­i­fy­ing about a crime. “Only the inherent good­ness of our fel­low men and wo­men” can pre­vent abuse, wrote one of the sci­ent­ists, Todd Sack­tor of SUNY Down­state Med­i­cal Cen­ter in Brook­lyn, N.Y., in an email.

Sacktor is part of a team—along with Yadin Du­dai of the Weiz­mann In­sti­tute of Sci­ence in Re­hovot, Is­ra­el—of researchers stu­dying what hap­pens in our brains when we learn and re­mem­ber. Mem­o­ries aren’t recorded as a sta­ble phys­i­cal change, like writ­ing an in­scrip­tion on a clay tab­let, they have found. Rath­er, long-term mem­o­ry stor­age is a dy­nam­ic pro­cess, in­volv­ing a min­ia­ture mo­lec­u­lar ma­chine that must run con­stantly to keep mem­o­ries alive. Jam­ming the ma­chine briefly can erase long-term mem­o­ries, they say.

In their new stu­dy, to ap­pear in the Aug. 17 is­sue of the re­search jour­nal Sci­ence, they trained rats to avoid cer­tain tastes. They then in­jected in­to the taste cor­tex—a brain ar­ea linked to taste mem­o­ry—a drug that would block the ac­tions of a par­ti­cu­lar mol­e­cule. They hy­poth­e­sized, based on ear­li­er re­search, that this mol­e­cule is a min­ia­ture mem­o­ry “ma­chine” that keeps mem­o­ry up and run­ning.

The mol­e­cule is an en­zyme called PKMzeta. An en­zyme is a pro­tein mol­e­cule that causes changes in oth­er pro­teins. PKMzeta lies in synaps­es, con­tact points be­tween nerve cells where they pass mes­sages to each oth­er in the brain. The en­zyme causes the struc­ture of these con­tacts points to change sub­tly.

But the mol­e­cule must be per­sist­ently ac­tive to main­tain this change, re­searchers found. Learn­ing brings about this ac­ti­vity. Si­lenc­ing PKMzeta re­verses the change: re­gard­less of the taste the rats were trained to avoid, they for­got their learn­ed aver­sion af­ter one in­ject­ion of the drug.

The tech­nique worked as suc­cess­fully a month af­ter the mem­o­ries were formed, equiv­a­lent to years for a hu­man, the re­search­ers said. All signs so far in­di­cate that the un­pleas­ant mem­o­ries were gone, they added. “This drug is a mo­lec­u­lar ver­sion of jam­ming the opera­t­ion of the ma­chine,” said Du­dai. “When the ma­chine stops, the mem­o­ries stop.”

In a pre­vi­ous study in the Aug. 25, 2006 Sci­ence, a group in­clud­ing Sack­tor found that a si­m­i­lar treat­ment could erase one-day-old mem­o­ries of spa­tial in­forma­t­ion in rats. But this work, re­search­ers said, shed lit­tle light on PKMzeta ac­ti­vity in the neo­cor­tex, the brain re­gion con­sid­ered re­spon­si­ble for per­ma­nently stor­ing most long-term mem­o­ries. These in­clude mem­o­ries re­quired for higher-level cog­ni­tive func­tions, such as lan­guage and com­plex thought. The new work fo­cused on that ar­ea of the brain.

Yiv­sam Az­gad, a spokes­man for the Weiz­mann In­sti­tute, wrote in an e­mail that he thinks abuse of the find­ings can be pre­vent­ed only through “eth­ics, and by the laws of each coun­try.” As with all re­search, he added, it’s sci­en­tists’ job to gain new knowl­edge, and so­ci­ety’s to use it re­spon­si­bly."

My Rehovot previously disclosed ("Criminality or Irregularity? Israel State Comptroller Finds Weizmann Institute Fools Funding Bodies", 4 February 2007) that Yadin Du­dai was included (without his knowledge) in grants by other less successful Weizmann Scientists. No doubts this academic misconduct (aiming to improve poor ranking of corresponding grant applications) could be assisted and directed by the corrupted Institutional academic office, headed by Mr. Boaz Avron.

Source: Drug found to erase memories in rats. World Science (16 August 2007) [FullText]

Labels:

Friday, August 17, 2007

Maccabi Tel Aviv Football Club Stars Attracted Rehovot Youth to Grand Opening of New Sport Complex


A grand opening for the Sportec Sports Complex (Big Orange TV by My Rehovot, 16 August 2007), located at Rehovot Hollandit area, featured a mini football game between Maccabi Tel-Aviv and Rehovot Municipality, preceded with the first symbolic goal by Rehovot Mayor Shuki Forer.


The event was widely publicized by the municipality, so, top players from national soccer league took deserved attention by Rehovot youth crowd, and participated in a feature minifootball game.

Please note: This is original material by Myrehovot. Any republication (both online and in print) should be accompanied by the quotation of the original place of publication, www.MyRehovot.info

Labels: ,

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Rehovot SportTek Sports Complex and Family Activity Center Grand Opening Celebrated

A grand opening for the Sportec Sports Complex, located at Rehovot Hollandit area, was celebrated Wednesday, August 15, at 6 PM.

The new multi-purpose complex, features field lights, artificial turf, an outdoor exercise facility by Greenfields, and a multi-purpose areas for team excercise and competition.

There are several basketball/minifootball fields, a soccer field, impressive children's playground, picnic areas, and planters with shade trees, and restrooms.

Rehovot's Wu-Shu Team showcase its' skills


The event was widely publicized by the municipality, so, Rehovot’s sports enthusiasts joined celebrations marking the day of official opening of SporTek. It was a true no-admission-fee 'come and try' day opened to all ages and offering free cookies, sporting demonstrations, live entertainment and mass exercise by Holmes Place...


...and Holmes Place...



Many people have been enjoying the children's playground since April but the official opening coincided with the opening of other facilities.


There were probably few thousand people on the day. The event was open to all ages so teenagers, kids and families all had lots of fun.

There were no official opening ceremony, except of a blessing glass of wine by Rehovot municipality members and religious leaders, and the plaque opening, went unnoticed by many participants.

Please note: This is original material by Myrehovot. Any republication (both online and in print) should be accompanied by the quotation of the original place of publication, www.MyRehovot.info

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Explosion, fire awakens Rehovot streets three blocks away from the Weizmann Institute and Melzer Street Synagogue


A fire by an antiterrorist special operation group at Rehovot's Melzer Street corner of Herzog Street (Menuha Venahala) jolted residents awake early Wednesday. This happened shortly after the Police closed a section of Herzog and Melzer Streets (hundred meters from the Weizmann Institute and tens of meters from Melzer Street Synagogue) early morning (about 7 AM) today after a suspicious item, later discovered to be "quite a good student bag with educational materials", was left unattended at a street sidewalk. Because of the morning rush hours, police urged residents to remain in their apartments until further notice is given.


Police Special Operations Group officer by using a remote control bomb-disposal robot inspected the bag and made a control explosive fire. Luckily, there were no bomb. "It was a student bag left unattended at a sidewalk,'' Melzer St. resident told MyRehovot while rushing to reach his office in time.


Additional 20 minutes of the disassembly of the mini-van based bomb disposal setup temporarily blocked the traffic at Melzer street, that become one way just a week ago.

My Rehovot would like to repeat once again, that it is very important Rehovot residents take greater responsibility of disposing old items to a designated garbage-collectors only, so, that valuable time and money of the Police would be directed for issues of greater security importance, not faulty security threat alerts.

Also see: Rehovot's Weizmann Street Reopens After Bomb Scares. www.MyRehovot.info (19 March 2006) [FullText]

Please note: This is original material by Myrehovot. Any republication (both online and in print) should be accompanied by the quotation of the original place of publication, www.MyRehovot.info

Labels: ,

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Back to the Ghetto in Rehovot

Rehovot News 1990s Archive

"Since its founding by religious settlers a century ago, Rehovot has been characterized by peaceful relations between religious and non-observant residents. Rabbi Simha Kook, chief rabbi of the city for 27 years, is one of the best-known figures in the city, and is invariably invited to give a dvar Torah at any major event in the city.

Religious and non-religious Jews have always lived in close proximity to one another. There are no completely religious or completely secular neighborhoods in the city. Traffic flows freely on Shabbat past the main shuls. Rabbi Kook himself lives in a building in which half the residents are observant and half are not. A Scout troop meets a hundred meters from his entrance every Shabbat.

Three months ago, Rehovot's air of peaceful coexistence was shattered when Am Hofshi mounted a determined campaign to prevent the construction of a Habad educational complex in the southeastern section of the city. A group of residents of the city's Yovel neighborhood, consisting mostly of recently built high-rises separated from the proposed construction site by a four-lane boulevard, protested that they had known nothing of the intended construction.

Yet a groundbreaking ceremony for two pre-schools took place at the site in 1994, and two years later, there was a groundbreaking ceremony for the entire complex, with the interior minister and the mayor of Rehovot in attendance.

Opponents of the complex describe it as an attempt to thrust a haredi institution into the middle of a completely secular neighborhood. That is patently false. The complex is surrounded on two-sides by four-lane boulevards and on a third by the religious high school of Kiryat David, one of the most religious neighborhoods in the city.

Moreover, the Habad complex will serve a fully local population. It is a five-minute walk from the Denya neighborhood, where over 500 children are currently studying in makeshift classrooms in the Habad shul and an adjacent building. Even Meretz city council member Dov Chafetz approved the building of new schools after viewing the existing conditions.

All those 500 children live within five to 10 minutes walking distance of the proposed complex. The planned school buildings are thus local schools for local children.

Am Hofshi, headed by Shinui MK Yosef Paritzky and Meretz's Ornan Yekutieli, has embarked on a nationwide policy of opposing the opening of any religious institution in a neighborhood that is not exclusively religious. Religious Jews are to be confined to their Bantustans in Bnei Brak and Jerusalem, where only those tourists whose curiosity is piqued will ever have to come in contact with them.

At a rally organized by Am Hofshi to protest the Habad center, singer Shimrit Or declared, 'This is war on all fronts; the battlefront is everywhere.' Another speaker brought in for the occasion told the audience that haredim fly around the country in helicopters, licking their lips at the sight of vulnerable neighborhoods. Meretz MK Ilan Gilon expressed astonishment that public lands could be allocated for 'such things' as religious schools, and demanded rock and roll clubs and sports facilities instead.

Following its strategy of national war, Am Hofshi bussed in demonstrators from around the country. Using the techniques so successfully employed by blockbusters in the United States whenever a black family moves into a previously all-white neighborhood, organizers warned darkly of rapidly declining property values and a haredi takeover. Residents were told that a planned dormitory would house 1,000 yeshiva students. The actual number is 160. They were told that 70 classrooms will be built, not 22 as is actually the case.

Nor did opponents confine themselves to scare tactics and lies. One night a dozen or so were videotaped ripping down the fence around the construction site and, in a frenzy, stomping on the fence and trying to rip beams from their place.

Appalled by the threat to Rehovot's hundred year history of religious coexistence, Mayor Shuki Forer, who is not religious, labeled the opposition to the Habad center pure antisemitism.

Typically, Am Hofshi also financed a suit to the Supreme Court to stop the building at the site, into which Habad had already poured almost NIS 1 million. The absurdity of the Supreme Court acting as a court of first instance in a zoning dispute and of three justices, who might never have been in Rehovot, substituting their judgment for that of the elected mayor and city council, did not occur to the court.

Even worse, Justice Strassburg-Cohen took 'judicial notice' from the bench of the fact religious and secular Jews cannot live in proximity to one another (something Habad emissaries do in hundreds of places around the world). Thus those who vandalized the site effectively bolstered their case by demonstrating their own intense animosity.

The court issued a temporary injunction against further building, without even requiring the posting of bond, as is standard procedure in such cases.

And, in its capacity as solver of all national problems, it referred the case for arbitration.

As Mayor Forer noted in his answer to the court, this case starkly poses the question: Is it now the legal doctrine of the Jewish state that religious and non-religious Jews must be confined to separate ghettos, forbidden to live in proximity to one another?"

Source: Jonathan Rosenblum. Back to the ghetto in Rehovot. Jerusalem Post (2 July 1999) [FullText][Google Cache]

Labels:

Monday, August 13, 2007

Big Orange TV: Rehovot Residents Hoped for a Quick Restoration of Electricity


Hundreds of people streamed into the streets of Rehovot in about 30-degree heat, when the city went dark Monday 20-21 PM. Many walked down the stairs of their residential buildings because elevators weren't working. Some people were stuck in elevators and were rescured by Fire Department 102 rescue teams.

For some reason or other, there was a power failure on Monday evening. The water supply was safe and we did not hear of any injury by those trapped in non-functioning elevators or dark streets. Emergency city phone number 106 was working.


Some people remained in their apartments and even managed to... solve Sudoku Puzzles under the candle light.

After the electricity was restored at 20:53 PM, traffic light remained dead in a number of locations that we inspected.


Previous daytime "blackout" in Rehovot happened a year ago (see My Rehovot, 5 June 2006).

Please note: This is original material by My Rehovot. Any online reuse must be accompanied by a function hyperlink to www.myrehovot.info

Labels: , ,

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Remembering SFC Keren Tendler of Rehovot, 2nd Lebanon War Fallen Hero

Sergeant First Class Keren Tendler, would-be-27, of Rehovot, was one of five soldiers killed a year ago, 12 August 2006, when the helicopter on which they were serving, was shot down by Hizbullah terrorists over southern Lebanon.

Keren Tendler would often be seen in her neighborhood returning home wearing her IDF uniform. A few days ago, she was once again called to serve as a flight technician with her helicopter unit in the air force.

"She was smiling broadly – so happy," said a neighbor. "She said they were going to hold a special party for her in the army. She didn’t say more than that, but she was always very happy to serve, and was even proud of her reserve duty."

Shosh Levi, a teacher at the local ORT high school and a family friend, remembers Keren as "a very friendly and special child, who exhibited outstanding technical skills even as a small child." She was among the very few girls who studied mechanics in high school.

"She was a very pleasant girl, blonde with piercing eyes," continued Levi. "She had a special sense with her hands, and was one of the outstanding students in her track. She was just like her name – a ray of light who was full of life and happiness. She would always bring candies for her classmates."

Sergeant First Class Keren Tendler was buried in the military cemetery in Rehovot. She is survived by her parents Viryona and Dan, and a younger brother.
SFC Keren Tendler

My Rehovot supports One Family Fund , the author of this publication (.pdf reader required), please visit their web site to tearn more about the Fund mission.

Also see: Outdoor Gym Garden of Sports Dedicated in Memory of Fallen Soldier-Woman, Rehovot Resident (My Rehovot, 9 August 2007)

Are you a frienf of SFC Keren Tendler? Then write and send to us your story about Rehovot hero.

Labels:

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Rehovot Companies Show Off Talent

Big "Idea:" An IMBA student explains a product at Fox expo.

In a forum that has become as highly anticipated for the potential of its promise as for its proven results, IMBA (International MBA) students, full-time MBA students, domestic and foreign companies, nonprofit organizations and investors were brought together under the same roof for the ninth consecutive year by Temple University's Fox School of Business and Management through its Global Innovation & Entrepreneurship Expo.

Presented by the Fox School's Enterprise Management Consulting Practice and the school's Innovation and Entrepreneurship Institute, and by the Fox MBA, the expo -- held on the Temple campus -- attracted several hundred people.

It was preceded by a kick-off evening reception, hosted for the Fox School by the America-Israel Chamber of Commerce at the Science Center in University City.

"These events are a catalyst for investment in Israeli companies and strategic partnerships with Israeli companies that commercialize through the Greater Philadelphia region," said Debbie Buchwald, executive director of the regional AICC.

As always, the expo itself featured presentations by skilled teams of Temple IMBA and MBA students, and other postgraduate-level university students from universities overseas on behalf of 19 companies this year, the most ever, including three from Israel -- Idea Bio-Medical and EZ2CAD from the realm of high technology, and AppliCure Technology from the high-tech and biomedical technology sphere.

"The uniqueness of the program for students is that it integrates finance, marketing, human resources and other areas of learning and proficiency into one project," explained M. Moshe Porat, dean of the Fox School.

"Also, this year the Israeli business projects tended to be more mature, reaching beyond seed-money stage," he noted.

Adding his thoughts about the expo's success to the dean's assessment, Professor T.L. Hill, faculty manager, EMC, Fox School, acknowledged that it had produced the desired results. "It pushed the students and clients as well to polish their presentations to a high shine -- something that rarely happens when there is a hard deadline [to meet] and event" to produce.

Professor Dov Dvir, chair, department of management at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, in Beersheva, commented on the relationship between his university and Temple: "Because of the real-world experience and contacts it affords, this program is one of the most important programs being run currently at Ben-Gurion."

A participating graduate student, Amit Rozenblat from Ben-Gurion and employed by Discount Bank, where he has worked for the past three years, called the program "a great experience that will give me the tools for whatever my next management position may be."

A brief look at the expo's three Israeli companies shows that Idea, based in Rehovot, was seeking $7 million to market a highly advanced electron microscope, its latest product; while EZ2CAD, Kiryat Sapir and Netanya, was looking for $3.5 million to help launch its QuickSurveyor Real Time Local Positioning System.

AppliCure, located in Herzliya, had gone public on the Tel Aviv stock exchange the week before the expo. Yaacov Sherban, its vice president of marketing and business development, said that the firm used the expo mainly to introduce dotDefender, a software-based application designed to protect Web sites.

As an executive in residence at the Fox School, where he also is a clinical professor, Sidney Amster, founder/co-partner of Phase II International, a venture-capital and management-consulting firm for early-stage companies in Cherry Hill, N.J. -- and a member of the high-tech advisory board of AICC -- served as a project manager, advising students who worked on the AppliCure project plan.

"The Fox program is about working internationally with a number of companies, while AICC is the regional conduit for U.S. investment specifically in Israeli companies, and in assisting those companies to enter U.S. markets in and through the Philadelphia region," he explained. "It's very important for people to have knowledge of the potential to work with Israeli companies -- and that's what AICC does."

Source: Frank Rosci. Israeli Companies Show Off Talent. JewishExponent.com (9 August 2007) [FullText]

Labels:

Home | Archive | Rehovot.org | BizDir | rBB | rForum | Rentals | Property | Jobs | Makolet | Flowers | Car4sale | TV | Photo Albums | Arts | Events | Obituaries/Guest Books | Sport | Bulletin Board (Rus) | Dating (Rus) | Advertise | Contacts
_ _Press go button to proceed with your subscription request          This is a link to MyRehovot.Info in Russian  This is a link to MyRehovot.Info in Hebrew  This is a link to MyRehovot.Info home in English
Visit Google Scholar, new search of quality scholar literature by Google   _