The Jewish Chronicle

D to search for is career took off

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mated hand gestures as he shouts down the phone i n Hebrew. Then, he returns.

“The poverty is shocking in Israel," he says. "Twenty-five per cent of the children go hungry to bed every night; even the middle-class find it difficult to make ends meet. It’s awful. I don’t understand why there is not a revolution; there should be a revolution.”

But that has not affected his plans to make AliyaH next year. “I love Israel. I hate the politics and I hate the politician­s,” he says. “I really hope the Labour Party will win. If the right wing parties win again, it will be a disaster.”

Now a top businessma­n, he has “hundreds of employees – depending on how you look at it” and invests millions in high-tech start-ups in both Israel and Silicon Valley in America.

“It looks like from the day I was born, I was meant to be in commerce,” he says. “I never borrow money, that’s how I sleep at night. Right now if all the businesses go bankrupt — I’ll not suffer at all. Nothing will happen.”

What’s more, he is now dedicated to making a success of his latest business venture: a university.

Togetherwi­th a Serbian business partner, he’s invested more than £12 million on setting up a university in Marbella; the Spanish city known for attracting high-flyers and partygoers from Saudi royals to the cast of The Only Way is Essex.

The Marbella Internatio­nal University Centre, which he claims is in exchange programme talks with UK universiti­es, including Durham and the Manchester Business School, will take its first tranche of 70 internatio­nal students this year — each paying a fee of £15,000 per year.

I wonder whether his passion for the venture (he’s bought a Spanish villa so he can monitor it) stems from his scientific background?

“No,” he says, adamantly. “Even though I like education, this started as a pure investment. I did due diligence and saw that it was one of the best investment­s possible. It’s fantastic, especially if the education is good, for Arab and European countries because Marbella is a brand name.

“It’s going to do what other universiti­es do. It’s not at the same level as Oxford or Cambridge, but we’ll get there.”

Will it look to excel in science? “No. There’s no demand for science or engineerin­g,” he adds, pointing to its business and communicat­ion courses. “In today’s world, people only understand business, making money, trading money and going into banking.”

From the day I was born, I was meant to be in commerce

Dr Nissim Levy

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Listening and learning: years after leaving NASA, he is now helping to fund a £12m Spanish university project
PHOTO: AP Listening and learning: years after leaving NASA, he is now helping to fund a £12m Spanish university project
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