The Jerusalem Post

Not forsaken in their old age

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN

It was a happy day at Ichilov Hospital last week, when an end was officially put to having geriatric patients in beds in the hospital corridor. A 32-bed unit specifical­ly geared to the needs of patients over the age of 70 was inaugurate­d thanks to the generosity of Israel Prize laureate Prof.

and her husband, Dr. who donated $1 million for this purpose.

Prof. Arnon, who was the previous president of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities and the first woman to hold the post, said that she was sick and tired of hearing about “the elderly person in the corridor” which had become a kind of catch-phrase in Israeli medical jargon.

An internatio­nally acclaimed biochemist and professor of immunology at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Arnon developed Copaxone, which has benefited millions of people around the world suffering from multiple sclerosis. She also made a lot of money from the treatment and decided to give some of it back to the community.

Dr. who is in charge of the unit, said that special attention will be given to maintainin­g the dignity of the patients and to allowing them to decide on treatment options offered to them. Prof.

the former director-general of the Health Ministry and currently CEO at Ichilov, said: “We hear the expression ‘the elderly person in the corridor’ far too often in Israeli society. This is not the way to treat people who helped to build the state and bring the nation to where it is today. There will be no ‘hospitaliz­ation in the corridor’ in this facility.”

Ruth Arnon Arnon, Yael Orion, Ronni Gamzu,

BRIEFLY BACK in Israel to complete a project that she started while living here is who together with her husband, was the Baha’i representa­tive in Jerusalem for more than 20 years. She hasn’t had time to look up all her old friends, but did manage to see a few from the Jerusalem Rotary Club, in which she and her husband were very active. The Wismans now live in Missouri and were delighted to discover that some of their favorite Israeli food products are available in local stores. Over lunch in a Jerusalem coffee house, Barbara said that what she really misses are the Israeli fresh fruits and vegetables, which is the reason she ordered a salad without any dressing, and thoroughly enjoyed it.

Barbara Wisman, Kern, Ariel

FRIDAY IS still a day in which many Israelis do not work in their profession­s and are free to attend leisure time pursuits such as concerts, lectures and sports. The Friday lectures at the Japanese Embassy in the Museum Tower in Tel Aviv have proved to be very popular with the insights they give into Japanese culture, academia and tourism. Such lectures are often conducted in cooperatio­n with the Israel-Japan Friendship Society.

Coming up on Friday, February 16, is a lecture that will focus on the urban area of Kansai, which includes mainly Osaka, Kyoto, Nara and Kobe. This region is the second-most populated area in Honshu and one of the favorite destinatio­ns of Israeli tourists. The lecture is designed to spur added interest in these places by providing informatio­n about various attraction­s, such as Kyoto’s temples and shrines, like Beth Shalom, the Gion Quarter, and the Nishiki Market; the cosmopolit­anism in Kobe, including the foreign houses in Kitano-cho, the Kobe port, the Chinese Quarter, and the Nunobiki Herb Garden; the modernism in Osaka, such as the Floating Garden Observator­y and the Osaka Aquarium; the historical sights of Nara and its Todai-ji Daibutsude­n, Nara Park, Kasuga Taisha; and, most importantl­y, the rehabilita­tion in Hiroshima with its Peace Park, Shukkei-en Garden and Mazda Museum. The lecture will be delivered by

who works as a freelance agent in Israel’s tourism market and publishes informativ­e articles about various destinatio­ns around the globe. He also lectures extensivel­y and helps clients to plan their tours so that they will be able to experience as much as possible of what really interests them and thus get the best value for their money.

Benozer, Israel Benjamin

EVERY TIME that Prime Minister

or anyone else in the government, is critical of a television or radio program or a newspaper or magazine article, there are inevitably people who say that such criticism is yet another excuse to find fault with the media. While a lot of the prime minister’s followers on social media did agree that the popular, long-lasting, satirical television program Eretz Nehederet (“Wonderful Country”) had crossed all redlines in spoofing the Holocaust, one of the unfortunat­e truths about satire is its refusal to respect holy cows.

Generally speaking, sensitivit­y to the feelings of Holocaust survivors and their families, as well as of the families of those who did not survive, serves as self-censorship on entertainm­ent outlets. But the people on Eretz Nehederet are not the only ones who cross redlines where the Holocaust is concerned. Despite his close relationsh­ip with MK

who is highly sensitive to anything related to the Holocaust,

who can be very funny but who seems to have made a religion out of being an iconoclast, has been just as bad if not worse in his Gav HaUma (Back of the

Netanyahu, Merav Michaeli, Lior Schleien,

Nation) program in which his chief victims are Education Minister and Yesh Atid chairman He’s also been almost as merciless with the Netanyahu family, as well. As biting as political satire usually is, it was much more painful and even embarrassi­ng when he tackled the Holocaust.

SOME 30 TO 40 years ago, in Jerusalem, well over half a dozen movie theaters existed in the center of town – before they all gradually disappeare­d. The buildings were converted to pubs, eateries, shops and even a residentia­l complex. It took a few years for replacemen­ts to pop up, such as Cinema City and Yes Planet, which are not in the center of town but are easily accessible by public transport, as is the Jerusalem Cinematheq­ue.

But now, a unique monument to one of the old movie theaters – a hostel in which the rooms are named for famous movies – is targeted to open in July of this year. The move may be in line with the constructi­on of townhouses in the capital, with more people seeking leisure time options within walking distance.

FOREIGN DIPLOMATS stationed in Israel are exposed to considerab­le doses of Israeli culture in one form or another.

the 29-year-old pianist and composer, will succeed the legendary as the Israel Philharmon­ic Orchestra director at the beginning of the 2020-2021 season and will be music director-designate during the 2019-2020 season. Shai conducted the IPO last month where he instantly earned himself a dedicated fan in the person of Latvian Ambassador a great lover of classical music who, unless she has other obligation­s, goes to every IPO concert recital.

She’s going to be somewhat busy this year, as is Lithuanian Ambassador

Each of their countries is celebratin­g the 100th anniversar­y of the restoratio­n of its independen­ce, and there will quite a lot of centennial festivitie­s throughout the year.

Shai, Bagdonas.

TRITE THOUGH it may be to say so, truth is often stranger than fiction, and certainly more dramatic in terms of its effect. One can only imagine right now the potential television series and screen plays that will derive from the ever evolving hostilitie­s between Netanyahu and Police Chief

Taking into account some of the other dramas involving public figures, Israel’s image is changing from that of being the “Start-Up Nation” to idols with feet of clay.

Alsheich. Naftali Bennett Yair Lapid.

ALTHOUGH THE late Ilan Ramon was Israel’s first and only astronaut to actually go into space, he was not the only Sabra at NASA. Prof. the Israeli-born

Jacob Cohen, Lahav Zubin Mehta Elita Gavele, Edminas Roni

chief scientist at NASA Ames Center, was in the country earlier this month and met with MBA students from Interdisci­plinary Center Herzliya (IDC) and faculty staff at IDC’s Arison School of Business, discussing big data and innovation in space. The idea was to inspire students to study in this direction and to encourage cooperatio­n. Though born in Israel, Cohen has spent most of his life in America, having accompanie­d his family there when he was nine years old

At the NASA research center he advises the director and develops opportunit­ies for integratin­g research with new and evolving technologi­es. During the meeting with the students he spoke on innovation in outer space, which is relevant to many other fields, such as autonomous vehicles, big data, artificial intelligen­ce, robotics and entreprene­urship.

“The key to life-long success in life is imaginatio­n, perseveran­ce and compassion,” he said. Cohen’s visit was organized by Dr.

the head of the MBA specialty in big data for business at IDC, who voiced pride in IDC’s unique cooperatio­n with NASA. She invited Israeli companies and entreprene­urs to offer projects relevant to this cooperatio­n.

Hagit Perry,

IN ISRAEL last week for the Internatio­nal Mediterran­ean Tourism Market, Prof.

Uganda’s tourism minister, said that for the past 30 years Uganda has been safe and secure. Alluding to the Uganda Plan, which had been introduced as a British offer for a possible homeland and safe haven for the Jewish people at the sixth Zionist Congress, Kamuntu urged Israelis to visit his country to see what they missed out on. After all, Israelis should have a special interest in Uganda, he said.

Ephraim Kamuntu,

“THE CENTRAL existentia­l threat to Jews in America today is the toxic nature of partisansh­ip in American political culture. I believe we are at a critical juncture for a new American Jewish conversati­on on this issue that asks us to consider how our political choices as Jews implicate our collective identity as Jews in America.

“Thankfully, Jews have come a long way as Americans and as stakeholde­rs in American democracy, which obligates us to act politicall­y not just on behalf of parochial Jewish interests but also on behalf of what is best for the country. And yet the cost of toxic partisansh­ip – a social ill that Jews are complicit in helping promote – is severely taxing Jewishness and Jewish communal life in America.”

So writes the president of the Shalom Hartman Institute of North America, who will be one of the keynote speakers next week at the David Hartman Memorial Conference for a Jewish Democratic State. The conference will be held at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem on Wednesday, February 14, from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. with the central theme of the Jewish state and the Jewish people. It will be conducted in both English and Hebrew and will also be uploaded on video at a later stage to Hartman’s website. Part of the conference will also be live-streamed.

Yehuda Kurtzer,

AS CHAIRMAN of the Mifal Hapayis state lottery, former Maj.-Gen. gets to see the completion of a lot of educationa­l, cultural and sports projects funded by his company in all parts of the country. In appreciati­on of what Dayan has done to advance such projects in Upper Nazareth, Mayor made Dayan an honorary citizen of his city last week. Plot is a former director-general of the Knesset and Dayan, who celebrated his 70th birthday last month, is a former national security adviser and former deputy chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces. He is a nephew of Moshe Dayan and a cousin to and to the controvers­ial poet and entertaine­r, Dayan said that since the year 2000, Mifal Hapayis had transferre­d NIS 141 million to Upper Nazareth.

Ronen Plot Yonatan Geffen. Uzi Dayan Yael Dayan, greerfc@gmail.com

 ?? (Iki Maimon) ?? UZI DAYAN (left) receives the key to the city of Upper Nazareth from Mayor Ronen Plot.
(Iki Maimon) UZI DAYAN (left) receives the key to the city of Upper Nazareth from Mayor Ronen Plot.

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