Edmonton Journal

Israel’s only diamond explorer keeps digging, inspired by rabbi’s prophesy

Rabbi’s words inspire search for ‘divinely’ buried treasure

- To va Cohen and Ari Rabinovitc­h

AKKO, Israel – Somewhere in the Carmel hills of northern Israel, diamond exploratio­n company Shefa Yamim hopes to uncover the exact spot where faith meets science.

Inspired by the words of a revered rabbi who prophesied that precious stones were divinely buried in the area, the firm has been mining for about a decade along the steep hills and lush valleys that surround the city of Haifa.

Now, Shefa Yamim, the first and only diamond explorer in Israel, says it has found strong signs that significan­t diamond deposits are indeed hidden in the Holy Land, surprising many who had dismissed the mission as a pipe dream.

Potential new mines are big news in an industry that gets most of its diamonds from 20 or so mines, and where no large discovery has been made in 15 years.

Israel has long been a global leader for polishing diamonds, but it was never considered to be a possible source for rough diamonds, which it imports from abroad. Top Israeli diamond dealers even have their own mining operations in Africa but with booming demand for the gems driven by prosperity in China and India there are certain to be many more speculativ­e projects.

Shefa Yamim’s workers have dug up thousands of geological indicators — including 77 macro- and micro-diamonds — in their trenches and boreholes, said chief executive Avi Taub.

“It’s a mission. … We’re talking about divine providence,” Taub, an Orthodox Jew who wears a skullcap and a long, white beard, told Reuters at the company’s offices in the coastal city of Akko. “I hope I’m going to have the right to reveal it.”

In 1999, Taub founded Shefa Yamim, which means “bounty of the seas” in Hebrew, based on a conversati­on that took place 11 years earlier in Brooklyn, N.Y., between the late Rabbi Menachem Schneerson and the then mayor of Haifa. The dialogue was caught on video.

“The uniqueness of Haifa is that it has a sea and it has a valley — and in the valley are precious stones and gems. The Holy One, blessed be He, did a wondrous thing. He concealed them in the depths of the earth,” the rabbi told his visitor.

“There is no reason why you can’t connect faith with economics here.” Mark Fedikow, geochemist

Many of Schneerson’s followers believe him to be the messiah, making the comments a decree of sorts, and Taub answered the call.

Religious belief and biblical verse have inspired others to search for natural resources in the Holy Land.

In the same year Schneerson spoke about precious stones buried near Haifa, he also received a letter from a geologist who is now the chief explorer of Givot Olam, which is drilling for oil in central Israel. The letter described how the Bible and Jewish commentary both contain “a poetic descriptio­n of fundamenta­l principles of modern petroleum geology.”

Texas-based Zion Oil and Gas is exploring for hydrocarbo­ns in the same area as Shefa Yamim and was inspired by a map of the 12 biblical tribes of Israel.

These companies are all optimistic, but have yet to announce commercial finds.

Shefa Yamim has licences to explore 67,000 hectares. The company’s website is filled with hard geological data, but also contains Jewish scripture and commentary.

When Shefa Yamim chose to go public in Tel Aviv, a skeptical Israel Securities Authority delayed the issuance for a year until the Energy Ministry, which oversees the country’s natural resources, could confirm the findings. The company was listed in April and has kept a market value of roughly $62 million.

Research analysts at Canada’s Canaccord Capital think early-stage companies like Shefa Yamim that have found diamond-bearing kimberlite have only a five to 10 per cent chance of success.

Only about one per cent of kimberlite pipes — the geological structures where diamonds are concentrat­ed — that have been discovered to date have been economical­ly viable. They are mostly found in South Africa, Siberia, North America, Brazil and Australia.

Shefa Yamim has until now been focusing most on alluvial mining, which is shallower along the riverbed in the valley. It will need a significan­t injection of capital if it is to dig deeper to find bigger diamonds and move closer to its goal.

Shefa Yamim’s consultant geochemist Mark Fedikow of Mount Morgan Resources in Winnipeg believes its chances for success are as high as 30 per cent because of the abundance of mineral indicators. He thinks it could reach the point of production in three to five years.

“There is no reason why you can’t connect faith with economics here,” he said. “There is no basis to throw up your hands and laugh. You accept what the rabbi said and developmen­ts after are not based on faith but on hard fact.”

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