The Jerusalem Post

Dimona high schoolers win fourth place for Israel in robotic Olympics

Team allied in qualifier with Syrian refugee team

- • By OREN OPPENHEIM

A team of high school students from the city of Dimona in the Negev won fourth place while representi­ng Israel in an internatio­nal robotics competitio­n last week in Mexico City.

The team from Dimona’s Lehman High School, which calls itself ‘Black Magic 11901,’ sent 12 participan­ts to the FIRST Global Challenge, an annual competitio­n where nearly 200 teams from around the world power through challenges using robots built before the competitio­n. ‘FIRST’ is an acronym for “For Inspiratio­n and Recognitio­n of Science and Technology”.

Black Magic 11901 was paired with teams from China and Kiribati on the last day of the competitio­n, the team said in a Facebook post, after losing 2 out of 3 games on the competitio­n’s first day but winning 3 out of 4 on the next day. In addition to scoring fourth place with China and Kiribati, the Dimona team also won the bronze in the ‘Internatio­nal Unity’ competitio­n and a ‘Safety Award.’

“We are so happy and satisfied with the results we achieved at the end of the competitio­n – and of course with the fact that we represente­d Israel in the best way that we could do!” the team said in a statement on their Facebook page.

Itay Turgeman, who served as the team’s mentor, wrote to The Jerusalem Post that Team Israel was one out of 48 different teams that competed on the last day of the challenge for first place, eventually losing to Romania.

“The experience itself is tremendous,” he said of competing in FIRST Global. “You get to know a lot of countries you never heard about before... We had a connection to a lot of groups and with the Mexican audience.”

Black Magic 11901 was chosen to represent Israel because of its “excellence in robotics, and we thought that it’s right to give them this honor,” Benny Kedar, who sits on the board of directors of FIRST Israel, told the Post by phone.

Kedar emphasized that after FIRST Israel selected the team, it operated independen­tly, and the larger Israeli organizati­on was not directly involved with their efforts or with the FIRST Global Challenge.

On its competitio­n-website page, Black Magic 11901 wrote that its motto is: “If the sky is the limit, we want to reach the moon” and that the team believes that “through hard work and commitment to the goal, we can achieve everything we want… the FIRST Global Challenge’s missions make us think about the design and throw creative ideas [around] on how we are going to successful­ly complete tasks and get points for that.”

The three-day competitio­n was run by FIRST Global, a US-based organizati­on that encourages science-based problem solving. It organizes the annual robotics competitio­n to “ignite a passion for Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Mathematic­s… among the more than two billion youths across the world,” according to its website.

While the Israeli team was not paired with any teams officially representi­ng other Middle Eastern countries for any of the qualificat­ion matches, where alliances and competitor­s were set up in advance, it did play and win a qualificat­ion match while allied with Team Hope, a group of refugees from Syria who currently live in Lebanon.

“After the game [with Team Hope],” Turgeman said, “we [all] hugged each other.”

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 ?? (Itay Turgeman) ?? TEAM ISRAEL from Dimona celebrates victory in the arena where the robot challenge took place.
(Itay Turgeman) TEAM ISRAEL from Dimona celebrates victory in the arena where the robot challenge took place.

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