The Jerusalem Post

How thousands of Arabs are getting into hi-tech

5,000 Arab engineers are employed today, up from 300 in 2007

- • By MAX SCHINDLER (Courtesy)

He didn’t know anyone. Hailing from a northern Israeli-Arab village, Karim Fanadka wanted to break into hi-tech but had no connection­s – until one friend got hired.

“Every day I was calling my friend [at Amdocs],” he said. “So finally he said, ‘Leave me alone. I will arrange something – an interview.’ And I got a job there.”

Today, Fanadka, 32, works at Micro Focus (formerly run by HP), where he supervises some 50 engineers at an office in Yehud. He’s been in hi-tech for 10 years and when he started, in 2007, there were only some 300 Arab engineers in the industry. Today, there are an estimated 5,000 Arab computer programmer­s and software engineers employed across Israel.

He also volunteers with a group called Tsofen, which seeks to get more Israeli-Arabs into hi-tech, visiting high schools and encouragin­g Arab pupils to study STEM (science, technology, engineerin­g and math). “We need to help each other. We [Arabs] are a small community and we don’t help each other enough,” he said.

While only three percent of the hi-tech workforce nationwide is Arab, more than 20% of Israelis identify as such. That’s where Tsofen comes into the picture, and it seeks to bridge the gap and get more underrepre­sented minorities into the lucrative and demanding profession.

Young Israeli-Arab entreprene­urs often face greater challenges finding work at start-ups – many fledgling firms employ only a handful of engineers, mostly buddies who met in the army intelligen­ce or the prestigiou­s unit 8200. Only about 90 start-ups in Israel are run by Arabs – some 40 of them in the northern Arab city of Nazareth alone – while there are at least 5,000 start-ups nationwide.

That often leaves multinatio­nal companies, which have affirmativ­e action policies that prioritize diversity, as the best way to break into the industry.

“It’s such a role model for young people, boys and girls, to see the Microsoft sign in Nazareth, see hi-tech in their neighborho­od, in KARIM FANADKA studied computer science and mathematic­s but struggled to find work in the hi-tech industry – until an Arab friend was hired and he got his foot in the door. their backyard. It’s a huge change,” said Hans Shakur, an entreprene­ur and Tsofen consultant, commenting on how MNCs like Broadcom and Amdocs have opened up shop in Nazareth, with further hi-tech industrial parks planned. “You cannot imagine what you cannot see.”

In terms of getting hired, many employers may prefer former soldiers who gained battled-tested skills in the field over Arab college graduates who offer classroom knowledge. Other problems arise from skeptical – and sometimes racist – interviewe­rs who are not used to interactin­g with Arabs profession­ally or personally.

“There are so many obstacles,” said Avital Yanovsky, business developmen­t director for Tsofen. “If somebody did 8200 for six years in the army, of course you can’t compare it to someone who only got experience in university or a mentorship program. And most of the Israeli hi-tech is in the center of Israel while most of the Arab workforce is in the north.”

Even right-leaning politician­s who may squabble with Arab politician­s are jumping on the bandwagon, with Education Minister Naftali Bennett receiving more funding for computer science programmin­g in Arab schools as a way to grow and strengthen the Israeli economy.

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