The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

Reflection­s

-

Start-Up-Nation at the race are native-born young Sabras, two of whom race for the Israel Cycling Academy developmen­t team.

“I am determined to develop Israeli cycling,” he says. “We are taking young riders to big races, so it’s working. The plan is to make cycling into one of the most popular sports in the country.”

Team Israel Start-Up-Nation made many friends in the cycling community in Rwanda with its adoption of the only women’s cycling team in the country, donating bicycles, racing outfits, helmets, tires and other accessorie­s. The team mechanics also tuned up the women’s bikes.

“We spent a lovely day with the women’s team, and we have committed to adopting them. We want to help them reach higher levels of the sport and race in high-level women’s competitio­ns and inspire other younger girls to become bike racers,” he says.

For Adams, sports are a means to reach out and communicat­e with people around the world, showing the true face of Israel abroad. This trip to Rwanda was no exception.

“I rode my bike with the Israel Start-Up Nation team on Rwandan roads in the days leading up to the race. As for the race, the local viewership and support for our team was spectacula­r,” he enthuses.

“I am carrying the blue and white all over the world and showing our ancient cultural imperative of tikkun olam [repairing the world], and showing our true heart,” says Adams. This quality is perhaps best exemplifie­d by his involvemen­t in the Save a Child’s Heart organizati­on, which offers life-saving heart surgery to Israeli, Palestinia­n and other children from 62 countries where access to pediatric heart care is limited or nonexisten­t, at Sylvan Adams Children’s Hospital, as well as mobile teams operating on children in Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe.

ADAMS HAS been a devoted supporter of the program for the last number of years because, says Simon Fisher, executive director of Save a Child’s Heart, “It represents so much of what Sylvan believes in terms of showing Israel at its best and showcasing Israel around the world.”

Save a Child’s Heart was created by the late Dr. Amiram Cohen, an American physician who immigrated to Israel in the early 1990s. While serving as a doctor with the US Armed Forces in Korea in 1988, Cohen joined a program that helped poor local children with heart disease. The experience introduced him to a network of doctors doing similar work in developing countries, inspiring him to create Save a Child’s Heart after moving to Israel. Cohen’s team operated on their first two children in 1996, and 25 years later, the organizati­on has performed heart surgery on almost 6,000 children.

During the meeting between Fisher, Adams and Health Minister Dr. Daniel Ngamije, held in the Rwandan capital of Kigali, a memo of understand­ing was drafted to provide life-saving treatment for 70 children from Rwanda in Israel at the Sylvan Adams Children’s Hospital in Holon over the next several years, jointly funded by the Rwandan Health Ministry and Save a Child’s Heart.

Over the years, 22 children from Rwanda have come to Israel for treatment through the organizati­on. During their visit to Rwanda, Adams and Fisher organized a reunion of the Rwandan children who had undergone treatment in Israel and have gone on to lead healthy, successful lives.

“We are seeing young children whose lives we have saved turning into young adults with their own families, with the ability to give life to others,” says Fisher.

He noted that many of the patients, inspired by their experience­s, have gone on to study medicine and nursing. Fisher adds that one of the first Ethiopian patients, a young man named Yared, opened a home for children who have grown up on the streets.

“Yared is now responsibl­e for the lives of thousands of street kids who benefited from his dream, which resulted from his life being saved in Israel,” he comments, adding that “meeting families of the first children who were operated on in Israel from Rwanda in 2007 was extremely exciting.”

Save a Child’s Heart trained physicians from Tanzania and Ethiopia in advanced cardiac techniques, at Wolfson Medical Center in Holon. Adams says that those doctors will work with local surgeons in Rwanda to help treat cardiac cases in there. Children with severe heart issues who cannot be treated locally will be treated at the Sylvan Adams Children’s Hospital in Holon. The hospital is a seven-floor state-of-the-art medical center that includes a pediatric intensive care unit; a three-room operating suite, consisting of a hybrid operating room that allows the medical team to perform open-heart surgery in parallel with catheteriz­ation; a heart institute; two inpatient floors; and a department for pediatric outpatient­s. Other public-spirited individual­s and foundation­s, including Morris Kahn, the Ted Arison Family Foundation, and the Azrieli Foundation, have generously supported Save a Child’s Heart and the children’s hospital. The pediatric ICU is named after Jaqueline Kahn, and the Azrieli Foundation donated the equipment used for the operating and catheteriz­ation floor and for the two inpatient floors of the hospital. In addition, the Ted Arison Family Foundation has committed to donate the new pediatric Emergency Room.

“We want the world to know what Israel really is,” says Simon Fisher, “and what we stand for and how much we do not only for our own but for the whole world. The principle of tikkun olam is at the heart of what Save a Child’s Heart does and very much the heart of Sylvan Adams.”

‘I am determined to make Israeli cycling one of the country’s most popular sports’

This article was written in cooperatio­n with Sylvan Adams.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? OVER THE years, 22 children from Rwanda have come to Israel for treatment through Save a Child’s Heart.
OVER THE years, 22 children from Rwanda have come to Israel for treatment through Save a Child’s Heart.
 ??  ?? MEETING WITH Simon Fisher, executive director of Save a Child’s Heart, in Rwanda.
MEETING WITH Simon Fisher, executive director of Save a Child’s Heart, in Rwanda.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel