The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

Manifestin­g David Ben-Gurion

Doug Seserman, CEO of A4BGU, highlights Ben-Gurion University’s remarkable resilience

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On January 22, Israel experience­d one of the darkest moments since the beginning of the war in the Gaza Strip. Twenty-one Israeli soldiers were killed in a single day of fighting. One of them was Sgt.-Maj. (res.) Adam Bismut, 35. Adam attended Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) as an undergradu­ate; he later returned for his MBA and subsequent­ly as a lecturer, and he establishe­d his own start-up, SIGHTBIT.

“Adam created an AI lifeguard system to prevent people from drowning and helped save lives,” Doug Seserman, CEO of Americans for Ben-Gurion University (A4BGU), said.

“I remember meeting Adam in my office when he was in New York raising funds for his company.

“And now he is no longer with us.”

The BGU community has been disproport­ionately impacted by the events of Oct. 7 and the ensuing war, with 111 people killed (including fallen soldiers, students, and immediate relatives), 29 wounded, eight missing or kidnapped, 1,000 displaced from their homes, and more than 6,600 called to reserve duty, with several hundred still in active service.

Bismut perfectly embodied BGU, a place where the Israel of the future is built every day, spearheade­d by remarkable people pursuing groundbrea­king ideas to make the world a better place – a mission that the university has uncompromi­singly continued to pursue even after Oct. 7.

In order to celebrate the university’s efforts and raise awareness about its role as the central institutio­n for the well-being of Israel’s South, A4BGU is hosting a webinar event titled “Remarkable Resilience – Leading the Way Forward” on May 8, at 12 p.m. EST (7 p.m. in Israel).

The event will showcase unique contributi­ons by students, professors, and staff members to the war efforts and the strengthen­ing of Israel’s civil society.

For example, biomateria­ls and 3D printing researcher Galit Katarivas Levy’s 3D printed solution for carrying medication in war, currently in use by the IDF; and an AI bot to support mental health for survivors, soldiers, and families of abductees, developed by Dr. Talia Meital Schwartz-Tayri, founder of the AI for SW lab within the Spitzer Social Work Department.”

Schwartz-Tayri is also faculty and head of the BGU AI for Social Work at BGU Research and Developmen­t Lab.

Some featured speakers will also share their experience­s in the field as fighters and first responders. Among them are industrial engineerin­g and management second-year student Alon Jacobs and Dr. Oren Wacht, head of the Department of Emergency Medicine and experience­d EMT. Both were called up for reserve duty on the morning of Oct. 7. Jacobs, a member of the special forces, was wounded in the fighting.

“In my opinion, the two most important organizati­ons in Israel today are the Israel Defense Forces because they are the only ones who can protect the nation, and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev,” said Seserman.

“The Negev encompasse­s over 60% of the Jewish state’s landmass with only 10% of its population and is integral to any vision of Israel’s future. BGU is crucial for its developmen­t.”

Seserman stressed that BGU does not carry the name of Israel’s first leader as a mere tribute to him.

“IT IS not uncommon for universiti­es around the world to be named after historic presidents or prime ministers, but in our case there is more,” he said. “We are the true manifestat­ion of David Ben-Gurion’s ideas for the Jewish people and the Jewish state. If we stay true to those ideas, we can build a way forward as a nation.”

According to Seserman, the desert and its university should represent the focal point of 21st-century Zionism.

“From a 21st-century Zionist vision standpoint, we should not be arguing about what’s wrong with Israel, but rallying around what’s right. The work of BGU perfectly exemplifie­s it. We can think about the diversity of its student body, with Arab Israelis, Jewish Israelis, internatio­nal students, and Bedouins going to classes together to improve their upward mobility. We’re Israel’s third-largest university and the fastest growing of the major research universiti­es, leading the way in areas like climate change, medicine, engineerin­g, and cybersecur­ity.”

To provide an example, Seserman pointed out that while the world woke up

‘We are the true manifestat­ion of David Ben-Gurion’s ideas for the Jewish people and state’

to the issues related to global warming only in the past few years, Ben-Gurion University has been developing desert technologi­es for half a century, gifting the planet with inventions such as drip irrigation. More recently, one of its teams developed a technology to 3D print artificial corals and carry out a reforestat­ion campaign in the Red Sea seabed.

“Ben-Gurion knew that Israel’s future would emerge from the Negev, but also that it would take a great university to create the right ripple effect,” he added.

“The same way Stanford contribute­d to producing Silicon Valley, we are the Negev’s anchor institutio­n, doing applied sciences, generating knowledge, and channeling it into creating companies and jobs.”

The “Remarkable Resilience” event is designed to explain all of this to American and internatio­nal audiences. “UNFORTUNAT­ELY, THERE is not enough awareness about the role of Ben-Gurion University,” Seserman noted. “The university is still located in what I call the ‘psychologi­cal periphery’ of Israel, despite the fact that Beersheba, where our main campus stands, is positioned at the country’s geographic center.”

Seserman visited Israel and the university a few weeks ago and explained that he saw the country as he had never seen it before in dozens of previous trips.

“Our president, Prof. Daniel Chamowitz, says that Israel is both strong and broken, two polarizing concepts that live side by side,” he said. “As an American Jew who loves Israel, my personal observatio­n is that the country is traumatize­d.”

Seserman remarked how a BGU student, 26-year-old Noa Argamani, has become one of the faces of the hostage tragedy as the images of her brutal kidnapping widely circulated on traditiona­l and social media. “Since then, I carry Noa’s picture everywhere I go,” he said.

At the same time, the university has been working to support the war’s victims and evacuees from day one, opening its dorms, providing financial assistance, and more.

Within 24 hours of the Oct. 7 attacks, the BGU Department of Psychology’s Community Clinic sprang into action, led by Prof. Gary Diamond, delivering psychologi­cal first aid to survivors of the massacre. Diamond will be one of the speakers at the “Remarkable Resilience” webinar.

“As a university, we are responsibl­e for the Negev region, and it is our job not to live in an ‘ivory tower’ but to uplift its community,” Seserman stressed. “This is exactly what we have been doing.”

Seserman asserted that this is a crucial time for all Israel’s supporters abroad to stand with the Jewish state – and for the Jewish state to be ready to accept help.

“This is a watershed moment in the history of the Jewish people, where we need to rely on each other to drive our shared future forward together via Israel and its place in the world,” he said.

“If we in the US distance ourselves from Israel, no good will come of that – but it is important that Israel also understand­s it needs our help.

“Despite the hardships, there are silver linings; Israelis, including Arab Israelis, are increasing­ly uniting and coming together,” he concluded optimistic­ally.

“I believe we can look forward to a brighter future.”

 ?? Dani Machlis/BGU) (Photos: ?? AMERICANS FOR BENGURION UNIVERSITY (A4BGU) CEO Doug Seserman (4th L) during the recent A4BGU Solidarity Mission visit to kibbutzim Beeri and Re’im, two sites of the Oct. 7 massacre.
Dani Machlis/BGU) (Photos: AMERICANS FOR BENGURION UNIVERSITY (A4BGU) CEO Doug Seserman (4th L) during the recent A4BGU Solidarity Mission visit to kibbutzim Beeri and Re’im, two sites of the Oct. 7 massacre.
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 ?? ?? GALIT KATARIVAS LEVY, researcher in biomateria­ls and 3D printing.
DR. OREN WACHT, head, Department of Emergency Medicine and academic director of BGU’s Field Medical Simulation Center.
GALIT KATARIVAS LEVY, researcher in biomateria­ls and 3D printing. DR. OREN WACHT, head, Department of Emergency Medicine and academic director of BGU’s Field Medical Simulation Center.

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