The Jerusalem Post

Greece can learn from Israel’s success, visiting minister says

- • By BEN HARTMAN (Greek Press Office)

With the country’s economic future in doubt, Athens believes it can learn a lot from the academics, businessme­n and hitech innovators who have helped make Israel an economic success story in the heart of one of the world’s most uncertain regions.

Visiting Israel this week, Minister for Education, Lifelong Learning and Religious Affairs Anna Diamentopo­lou (Pan-hellenic Socialist Movement) said that Greece believes that they can gain from collaborat­ion with Israel, which she said presents a model of a small country that has invested in its human capital as a recipe for success.

“We are a small country in a time of crisis. We don’t have much physical resources so it’s the human capital we have to invest in and here we can learn a lot from Israel.”

When asked if she sees a parallel between the two small countries bordered by historical enemies, she said that while Israel’s history of wars and security flare-ups is different than the crisis currently facing Greece, “they have achieved so many things and now have four percent growth so I think of course we can extract optimism from what you have achieved.”

During a whirlwind two-day visit to Israel, Diamentopo­lou laid a wreath at Yad Vashem, met with Religious Services Minister Ya’acov Margi (Shas), Industry, Trade and Labor Minister Shalom Simhon (Independen­ce), and her Israeli counterpar­t, Education Minister Gideon Sa’ar (Likud).

She also toured the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, the Beit Dagan Agricultur­al Research Organizati­on, Tel Aviv University’s Research and Developmen­t department, and held a meeting with heads of venture capital companies. In addition, Diamentopo­lou made time to meet with Israeli author Amos Oz, who she said is very well known in Greece, where a number of his novels have been translated and been bestseller­s.

She said that her priority is to work towards strengthen­ing cooperatio­n between Greece and Israel in the fields of research and developmen­t and hi-tech, a goal that would seem to be complicate­d by the worsening economic crisis in Greece, which has had a serious effect on the country’s higher education system.

Diamentopo­lou said that the Greek education system “is in the most difficult period ever, in terms of everything. Not only in academics, but also the budgets for ANNA DIAMENTOPO­LOU, Greek minister for Education, Lifelong Learning and Religious Affairs said ‘we can extract optimism’ from what Israel has achieved. schools, teachers, it has affected everything.”

She said that professors’ salaries have been cut by around 30 percent during the budget and that tens of thousands of teachers have retired.

Diamentopo­lou said this situation has driven Greece to look for ways to “have the results with less resources,” and find ways that reforms can repair the education system.

Diamentopo­lou, EU commission­er for Employment and Social Affairs from 1999–2004, wrote an book called Exipni Ellada (Intelligen­t Greece), which deals with the importance of innovation and profession­al approaches to bringing about social and economic progress.

Following her visit with Sa’ar, Diamentopo­lou released a statement reading “my official visit in Israel is held in the context of the enhancemen­t of the organized bilateral relations for the benefit of our people. There are a lot of things the two countries can share and create in the sectors of education and research.”

She spoke of the how she and Sa’ar discussed cooperatio­n on establishi­ng academic centers of excellence and her invitation to have Israeli classical studies department­s take part in studies at the Plato Academy in Greece.

“Our goal is the backing of a pilot program for a lynchpin of innovation in the framework of Israel’s experience,” Diamentopo­lou said.

She said that the cooling of Israel’s relations with Turkey has not spiked greater Greek interest in strengthen­ing ties with Israel, saying “politics is always a puzzle, so everything influences everything but I think that it’s very important for our two countries to work together and develop their own relationsh­ip, independen­tly of what Turkey or other countries do.”

Back on the subject of education, when asked if there are educationa­l controvers­ies like the teaching of the founding of the State of Israel and the creation of the Palestinia­n diaspora, she laughed and said “you’re not special,” in that regard.

She said that the teaching of Greece’s wars with Turkey, the teaching of the Balkan Wars and the issue of Macedonia can all lead to front-page controvers­ies in Greek newspapers.

When asked how young Greek students see their future in the current economic climate of their country, she said that her countrymen are wrought with pessimism and a feeling of opportunit­y, but that in the darkest of days there is opportunit­y for change.

“It’s like a great cloud suddenly stayed over the country. I tried to stay optimistic saying we’re not the only country which has a crisis like that,” she said, “and through this crisis we have the opportunit­y to change everything that was wrong.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel