Showing posts with label Golan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Golan. Show all posts

Time for Change



Part of the preparations for the Jewish New Year involves an individual’s commitment to changing bad characteristics into good ones.  As I reflect on my personal improvement plan, I am pleased to report that on a national and global level, Israelis are definitely changing the world to the good with their innovations.

In the medical arena, many people find it impossible to change their diet to resolve physical obesity. So students from the Bio-design program of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have enforced a change to the metabolism with a gastric sleeve that blocks food absorption.  Doctors insert the sleeve down the throat and via the stomach to the duodenum, without surgery or anesthetic.  Israel’s NI Medical will certainly change the lives of cardiac patients. Following an agreement with Mobile Medical Services, NI Medical’s Non-invasive Cardiac System (NICas) monitors will be installed in nursing homes across the United States.  The monitors will dramatically reduce the number of unnecessary transfers to hospital.


Israeli biotech D-Pharm discovered that the parasite transmitted diseases malaria and sleeping sickness cause changes in the metal ions within brain cells.  D-Pharm has just announced that its revolutionary treatments are able to regulate the disrupted ions and provide a totally new therapeutic solution to these devastating diseases.  But the world will probably be more interested in the cosmetic changes that Israel’s EndyMed can make to the faces of aging women.  The US Food and Drug Administration has given its approval to EndyMed’s 3Deep treatment that applies radio frequency energy to the skin in order to remove wrinkles.

Change the radio frequency to the visible spectrum and you will find Israeli startup Gauzy, whose liquid crystal technology allows “smart” glass to change from transparent to opaque with just a touch. Too hot?  Then touch the glass to block out the sunlight.  It will change the construction market out of all recognition.


The recent launch of Israeli start-up Lingua.ly will change how we learn languages.  Lingua.ly’s personal educational service starts with a quiz and then it indexes the Internet, feeding you with appropriately selected texts based on your vocabulary.  But this is nothing compared to the changes we will see arising from the Brain Computer Interface developments that Israel is at the forefront of.  Tel Aviv’s Brainihack competition brings together neuroscientists, artists, designers, robotics experts etc. to see who can build the best viable product in one weekend.

As the Jewish Year 5773 comes to an end and the rest of the Middle East implodes, there has been a marked change in how Israel is viewed amongst the nations.  Not surprising, given Israel’s:
-         Regular discoveries of natural gas off its coast. (Even Egypt wants to buy some)
-         Advanced telecommunications. (Enhanced by its launch of the Amos 4 satellite).
-         Expertise in water technology. (IDE just sold another desalination system to Asia)
-         Agro technology (Kinneret College has developed a plant that survives extended droughts)

Even Israel’s wine industry has become one of the most respected of the New World.  Israel’s Golan Heights Winery picked up another award, on the eve of its 30th anniversary.  And you need to see the changes Israel is making to the Negev desert when planted with vineyards.  What better location to get a really dry wine.  Or possibly even a “dessert” wine?


Israel is certainly changing perceptions amongst ordinary Arabs.  The families of Syrian patients brought to Israeli hospitals for treatment suddenly realize that everything they have been told by their leaders and media about the Jewish State has been a lie.  Meanwhile, five Arab schools in East Jerusalem have decided to change from the PA curriculum to the Israeli curriculum.

For a change, an Israeli won a gold medal at the Judo World Championships when Yarden Gerbi, from Netanya, won the women’s under-63 kg class. But Israel’s soccer team did more in defeat to change sporting attitudes towards Israel.  In the blistering cold and rain of the Ukraine, as the national anthems were played, the Israelis removed their training jackets and shielded a group of children lined up in front of them on the field.

To conclude, here are some thoughts for those not already living in the Jewish State.  How about making plans to change your place of residence in 5774?  For those not already married, there is even a new Nefesh b’Nefesh on-line dating site for Aliya-minded individuals to “share their love of Israel”.  For the health conscious, Bloomberg has just confirmed that Israel has the fourth best healthcare system in the world, only surpassed by Hong Kong, Singapore and Japan. The UK came 14th and the USA 46th.

Finally, for those who cannot make the move, please continue to support the Jewish State whenever you can.  If you wish to make a change in 5774, then this article by P. David Hornick may initiate it. He asks “Why is Israel so bad at public relations?” His conclusion is, that no matter how much effort and money Israel spends on defending itself, those that hate us will always hate us.  Far better then to publicize all the good things that Israel does, to those willing to listen. 

Or, as I would put it ….

“Change the conversation.”

Michael Ordman writes a free weekly newsletter containing Good News stories about Israel.
For a free subscription, email a request to michael.goodnewsisrael@gmail.com

The Jewish State makes Perfect Sense



The images that the international media portrays of Israel are so distorted that it seems that the reporters and editors must have closed their eyes, ears and minds to common sense.  Well welcome to the blog that blows away those false smokescreens and gives a true sense of what this amazing country is achieving.

The brain controls our senses and the nerve center of Israeli research is Neuroscience.  A groundbreaking ceremony took place at the site of the Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences (ELSC) at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The new building will be home to the largest neuroscience center in Israel and one of the most ambitious in the world. One Hebrew University Professor, Hagai Berman, is to receive he Rappaport Prize for Excellence in Biomedical Research as overdue recognition for his work on Deep Brain Stimulation.  Over 100,000 Parkinson’s sufferers have been treated with DBS, one of the most effective treatments for the ailment.

Researchers over at Israel’s Technion are working at the forefront of a new Neuroscience category called Optogenetics where they have discovered a substitute for damaged retinas. A light-sensitive protein can turn the ganglion cells in the eye into photoreceptors.  Visual images projected onto these cells stimulate neurons and recreate the image in the brain.  Watch this space!  Meanwhile Bloomberg TV highlighted Israel’s huge advances in brain science. The reporter even put on an Israeli Brain Machine Interface.  But it took common sense to recognize that Alzheimer’s sufferers would benefit simply from wearing “MediTags” - bracelets that contain medical and contact details in Hebrew and English in case they get lost.

Turning to the sense of smell, even habitual slanderers of the Jewish State - the UK Guardian newspaper and the BBC – recently hailed the innovative cancer breath test invented by Israel Technion Professor Hossam Haick.  And you may be able to sense the aroma of 18,000 tons of freshly picked apples being exported by Druze farmers in the Golan Heights to Syria over the next three months.  And what nonsense that the BDS movement promotes the boycott of Ahava’s fragrant skin care products, given that virtually every tour bus that comes to Jericho is directed by the Palestinian Authority into the Ahava Temptation store.

The visual senses are enhanced by the super-resolution technology from Tel Aviv-based Sightec.  US-based Pongr has just acquired Sightec to help improve its image and take its photo-sharing business to a completely new level.  And there is no need to take your eyes off the road if you purchase a Voyager car phone from Israel’s Accel Telecom. It acts as an extension of your smartphone, with sensory features especially for drivers. Big, easy to access keys; noise filtration and cancellation facilities; enhanced volume for clearer conversations; voice activation and much more.

Israeli musicians are busy making (sound) waves around the world.  If you are lucky enough to be in Austin Texas, you should visit the South By South West event where you will get an opportunity to hear performances from ten of the best Israeli bands.  And to follow up on last week’s blog, here is the full video of Iranian-born Israeli singer Rita rocking the audience at the United Nations.


It also makes perfect sense that Israel’s educational activities are attractive to the world.  For example, the Chinese Ambassador to Israel visited Israel’s Technion and explained how the long histories connecting China and Israel attracts top Chinese students to study there.  Then, in Washington DC, the new Israel Institute opened its doors with a novel mission: to advance the scholarly study of modern Israel in the United States and around the world.  Finally, Israel became a global player in the educational games industry when Israeli publisher of children’s and family apps, TabTable, bought Israeli smartphone educational games company Kids Games Club. Together they market over 200 educational apps.


Israeli scientists have made so many medical discoveries that they almost seem to have a sixth sense.  No wonder then that a delegation from the UK HQ of GlaxoSmithKline visited the Weizmann Institute, Sheba Medical Center, Hadassit in Jerusalem, Ben-Gurion University, Israel Technion and other institutions. GSK’s leader Dr. Duncan Holmes said, “We recognize the huge expertise of Israeli academics in research in this field.”

I’ll conclude this journey through the physical senses with the news that NASA engineer David Brent will shortly become an American Israeli.  He writes that he is going up in the world by making Aliya and immigrating to the Jewish State.  He says that in Israel, the laws of physics are reversed as it is a lot easier to go up, than to go down. 

David can sense that he is coming home.

Michael Ordman writes a free weekly newsletter containing Good News stories about Israel.
For a free subscription, email a request to michael.goodnewsisrael@gmail.com