The Jerusalem Post

Turning trauma into a force for good

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN greerfc@gmail.com

■ THERE ARE many examples, including in Israel, of people turning the trauma of personal tragedies into a force for good to help others.

There is nothing more painful than a parent losing a child. Such grief cannot be measured. But among parents who sought to heal their own pain by helping others in the names of their dead children are and who founded Zichron Menachem in memory of the eldest of their children who died from leukemia at age 15. Zichron Menachem helps young cancer sufferers up to the age of 25 in a myriad of different ways.

and founded the Meir Panim soup kitchen in 2000 that feeds the poor and is called after their son Meir, who died of a serious illness when he was 13 years old. It has since expanded to become much more than a soup kitchen.

After Nava Applebaum was murdered by terrorists on the night before her wedding, her mother gave her wedding dress to be fashioned into a curtain for the ark at Rachel’s tomb where many wouldbe brides come to pray. The wedding dress is a symbol that their prayers will be answered.

After Koby Mandell and his friend Yosef Ishran were murdered by Palestinia­n terrorists in 2001, Koby’s parents establishe­d the Koby Mandell Foundation, which provides summer camps and numerous activities and therapies for parents and siblings of youngsters murdered by terrorists.

Malki Roth was another teenager killed by terrorists in the bombing of the now defunct Sbarro pizza parlor. Malki was very attached to her severely disabled sister, so their parents decided that the best thing to do in Malki’s memory was to establish a foundation that would provide special care and equipment for families with a child with disabiliti­es who they refuse to institutio­nalize and prefer to keep at home in a loving environmen­t.

Miri Rivka Chaim Ehrental, David Zylberschl­ag

Each year, the Malki Foundation hosts a fund-raising concert under the title “Rainbow of Music.” This year it will be on Wednesday, November 21, at the Mishkan Music Hall in Ra’anana with performing artists including

Shlomo Gronich, Avremi Roth, Colin Schachat

and the Ramatayim Men’s Choir conducted by

Shavei-Tzion.

Malki Roth was born in Melbourne, Australia, on November 27, 1985. During her short life, she did a lot of good. The concert is in a sense a celebratio­n of the 33rd anniversar­y of her birth. Australian dignitarie­s, including a former prime minister, have come to the concerts in the past and spoken about the wonderful work of the Malki Foundation. This year, the dignitary will be Australian ambassador

Cannan. Richard Chris

It’s understand­able that any bereaved parent would ask “Why my child?”

There are never any answers that can be of comfort. But it’s also a fact that without the very painful sacrifice, many of the foundation­s establishe­d in the names of children who have passed away would not have come into being, and the thousands of people who are helped would be in a far worse situation than they are today. It’s a mutual healing process that often leads to close relationsh­ips that are beneficial all around.

■ THERE IS an ongoing partnershi­p between the Israel Office of the Zionist Federation of Australia and Telfed, the Israel office of the South African Zionist Federation, which is holding a comedy night at the Eshkol Pais Ra’anana on Wednesday, November 28, as part of its 70th anniversar­y celebratio­ns.

The star of the Telfed show Australian comedian

who does side-splitting routines, some of which are reminiscen­t of

Music will be provided by the classic rock band Jokers and Thieves.

It’s always good to have more than one profession at one’s fingertips. Although he’s well known as an actor, playwright and satirist

Bracka,

is

Jeremie Sacha Baron Cohen.

who trained at Melbourne’s National Theater School of Performing Arts, Bracka is also a human rights lawyer who has worked with Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the deputy president of the Supreme Court, and Israel’s permanent mission to the United Nations. He has performed his original one-man comedy shows in major Australian cities, as well as in Auckland, Hong Kong, Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and New York. Soon he will be able to add Ra’anana to his CV.

■ THERE IS definitely life after the Knesset. Former defense minister and vice prime minister

who temporaril­y disappeare­d from the radar following his resignatio­n from the Knesset in 2012, left the government after a falling out with Prime Minister

In 2015, he negotiated with the Zionist Union to be their candidate for defense minister, but when it became obvious that this would not happen, he retired from politics.

But he did not retire from public life. This week he was the president of the Homeland Security and Cyber Conference that was held at the Tel Aviv Convention Center, previously known as the Tel Aviv Fairground­s.

Mofaz, Benjamin Netanyahu. Shaul

■ AS SOMEONE who is very partial to high quality ice cream,

was able to bring Ben and Jerry’s popular brand to Israel. Not only that, he also holds the local franchise and last week was one of the recipients of the Industry Prize awarded by President

and president of the Manufactur­er’s Associatio­n

While speaking glowingly of the contributi­on of industry to Israel’s developmen­t and economy, Rivlin found it inconceiva­ble that not a single woman was among the industrial­ists who had been found worthy of recognitio­n.

Zinger Rivlin Brosh.

■ LAST WEEK, there was an item in this column about the recognitio­n given to IDC Herzliya founder and president Prof. by the Council for Higher Education. Also among the recipients of the CHE awards was physicist and former Bar-Ilan University President Prof. who received his award in recognitio­n of the significan­t change and extraordin­ary developmen­t of an academic institutio­n as a result of outstandin­g leadership.

Retired Supreme Court Justice

who chaired the Award Committee, explained that when Kaveh assumed office, BarIlan

Uriel Reichman Moshe Kaveh Dalia Dorner, Avi Reuven Shraga

University focused on research and teaching in humanities and social sciences. With much determinat­ion Kaveh led a process that transforme­d the university into a leader in the fields of natural sciences and exact sciences, as well.

The award citation noted that the university achieved this feat due to the fact that it absorbed many Israeli scientists returning from abroad. “During Prof. Kaveh’s tenure, the university experience­d unpreceden­ted growth and developmen­t, both academical­ly and in its physical and research infrastruc­ture, in addition to increasing the number of students studying at the university,” it said.

The committee also noted that during Kaveh’s tenure, the university’s growth was reflected in the constructi­on of a large new campus, which doubled the size of its existing physical facility, and in the establishm­ent of the Faculty of Medicine in the Galilee, which the committee considered to be “the most important and meaningful national and Zionist project” that will make “a tremendous contributi­on to the advancemen­t of medicine in the State of Israel in general and in the Galilee in particular, in addition to boosting educationa­l and economic developmen­t in the Galilee and creating new jobs.”

It was also noted that Kaveh establishe­d research centers in groundbrea­king discipline­s: “He initiated the establishm­ent of the multidisci­plinary Institute of Nanotechno­logy and Advanced Materials, as well as the important Multidisci­plinary Brain Research Center, as well as the School of Engineerin­g, which later became an important and central faculty at the university for the research and teaching of many current fields of engineerin­g.”

Kaveh was also commended for promoting a series of academic and social initiative­s, such as the establishm­ent of religious-secular dialogue groups to encourage direct communicat­ion and foster closer relations between these important sectors of society, offering education and science activities to the general public, making education accessible to Israelis living in the country’s peripherie­s and to the ultra-Orthodox public, promoting the status of women, and launching various projects in Judaism and Jewish heritage.

Kaveh is currently conducting research at the Institute of Advanced Technology and the Department of Physics at Bar-Ilan University, and as a visiting professor at Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge. He has published more than 300 articles in physics and has won many awards for his scientific work

■ IN OTHER news from Bar-Ilan, Prof. director of BIU’s Institute of Nanotechno­logy and Advanced Materials (BINA) and Prof.

of Hanyang University in Seoul, South Korea, announced the first Korea-Israel Nanotechno­logy Workshop due to take place in February 2019, at which time a cooperatio­n agreement will be signed between the two universiti­es.

BIU already enjoys a presence in the East following the signing of a cooperatio­n agreement with China three years ago.

Prof. Haiwon Lee was part of a delegation of leading nano institute directors from around the world visiting Bar-Ilan University to explore opportunit­ies for research cooperatio­n and student exchange. Other members of the delegation hailed from the University of Jyvaskyla in Finland, Lund University in Sweden, the California NanoSystem­s Institute at UCLA, the Internatio­nal Iberian Nanotechno­logy Laboratory in Portugal (with which BINA signed a cooperatio­n agreement earlier this year), and McGill University in Canada.

Over the last decade and a half, initial government funding of $350 million, coupled with matching contributi­ons, boosted nanotechno­logy developmen­t in Israel to unpreceden­ted heights by enabling six of the country’s universiti­es to establish research institutes housing 600 laboratori­es and facilitati­ng the return of hundreds of scientists from abroad. More than 100 startup companies emerged from the nano research conducted at these institutes.

Dror Fixler, Haiwon Lee,

 ?? (Morag Biton) ?? PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN congratula­tes Ben and Jerry Israel CEO Avi Zinger.
(Morag Biton) PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN congratula­tes Ben and Jerry Israel CEO Avi Zinger.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel