The Jerusalem Post

From Navon to Navon

- (Michal Ben Ami) (Dina Erlich)

It’s an interestin­g coincidenc­e that Transporta­tion Minister decided to name the new national railway terminal in Jerusalem after Israel’s fifth president, Yitzhak Navon. The coincidenc­e derives from the fact that one of Navon’s relatives, Joseph Navon, who was an extremely successful businessma­n with diverse interests, was the man behind the constructi­on of the Jerusalem-Jaffa railway line. Joseph Navon, who was born 160 years ago, was also the developer of the Mahaneh Yehuda market, which he named after his late brother Yehuda.

One suspects that of all his predecesso­rs in office, the one for whom President has the greatest admiration and affection is Navon, who, like Rivlin, was a multigener­ational Jerusalemi­te. In fact, Navon’s family came to Jerusalem well over a century before Rivlin’s. When Navon launched his autobiogra­phy a few months before his death, Rivlin was there. Last year at a memorial tribute to Navon, Rivlin was again among the speakers. And last Wednesday night he attended the performanc­e of Bustan Sephardi (the Sephardi Orchard), which was written by Navon and was a central feature of the Ladino Festival at Habimah Theater.

The festival, which was held for the fifth consecutiv­e year, has been named after Navon, who was the head of the National Authority for Ladino. It also celebrated the 20th anniversar­y of the debut performanc­e of Bustan Sephardi. In the audience together with Rivlin and his wife,

were members of the family. Members of the Diplomatic Spouses Club will soon have the privilege of hearing from the next generation of the Navon family, when the late president’s son, will address them on January 30. Erez Navon, a businessma­n dealing with real estate in Israel and Latin America, where his father once served as a diplomat, has establishe­d an associatio­n in his father’s memory, which prioritize­s educationa­l facilities. Among the various positions that he held, Yitzhak Navon, who started out as a teacher, was also an education minister. Erez Navon will talk about the importance of culture as a bridge, and will present an overview of Ladino culture and his father’s legacy.

Katz Reuven Rivlin Nechama, Navon Israel Erez Navon,

UNIVERSITY PRESIDENTS have to travel abroad to help raise funds for the institutio­ns that they head. The overseas friends of any university are always keen to meet with the president, especially when he or she is a new person at the helm.

In his first official address in the United Kingdom since assuming the presidency of Bar-Ilan University, Prof.

outlined Bar-Ilan’s extraordin­ary achievemen­ts and his vision for the university over the next decade. Zaban spoke at an event hosted by British Friends of Bar-Ilan University chairman and his wife,

in the presence of Ambassador to the UK and university vice president for developmen­t Dr.

Zaban Esther, Romie Tager Mark Regev Merav Galili. Arie

In introducin­g Zaban, Regev called him the “ultimate Israeli,” having served as a combat pilot in the Israel Air Force and subsequent­ly becoming a renowned scientist, founding director of Bar-Ilan’s Institute for Nanotechno­logy and Advanced Materials and, most recently, president of the university.

One of the most important aspects of Zaban’s vision outlined by Zaban is Impact, a concept developed at BIU, which represents a new approach to academic research. IMPACT emphasizes multidisci­plinary research between groups of researcher­s from various discipline­s, with a common goal of tackling some of the most complex social, economic, political, technologi­cal, medical and cultural challenges in order to impact upon the world at large.

Eleven Impact Centers are currently operating at BIU. Zaban concentrat­ed on three of these groundbrea­king centers, focusing on prisoner rehabilita­tion, depression monitoring and energy storage.

One of the ways in which BIU will make an impact over the coming years, said Zaban, is by improving the rehabilita­tion of prison inmates and successful­ly reintegrat­ing them into society. In a first-of-its-kind program, the university inked an agreement with the Prisons Service to designate one ward of the Rimonim Prison, near Tel Aviv, as the pilot for Israel’s first university research prison. This will allow BIU researcher­s to work together with rehabilita­tion staff at the prison to collect and study data on prisoners and life within prison walls.

A second Impact center is developing a special technique for measuring depression, which affects millions of people worldwide. The center combines the knowledge of psychologi­sts, psychiatri­sts, natural language processing specialist­s, computer scientists and engineers, who are creating a DepressoMe­ter, a system that will continuous­ly gather linguistic, vocal, facial, kinestheti­c and physiologi­cal data, which will be integrated in order to provide real-time feedback to patients and therapists on the severity of a patient’s condition. Creating an objective measure of depression severity will transform diagnosis and inform treatment of depression, and it can be applied to numerous other psychologi­cal and psychiatri­c conditions.

“The world’s need for energy will quadruple by 2050, and we must free ourselves from using fossil fuels for the majority of our energy,” said Zaban. He was very much on home ground in this respect; renewable energy is his area of expertise. To this end, the Israel National Research Center for Electroche­mical Propulsion at BIU, named by the State of Israel as the national research center in its field, is making a unique impact by combining fuel cells and batteries to create solutions for storing the energy that will serve autonomous cars – which are the wave of the future.

DURING HER recent visit to Argentinea­n Vice President

visited the Tel Aviv University campus and met leading TAU researcher­s as well as Argentinea­n doctoral student

who described her experience as a student at TAU, expressed her appreciati­on for being part of the TAU community, and shared informatio­n about her research on rare diseases in the laboratory of Prof.

of the George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences and Sagol School of Neuroscien­ce.

In addition Michetti was presented with the TAU Friendship Award by TAU president Prof. and president of the Argentinea­n Friends of TAU

Gabriela Michetti Stein

Israel,

Marta Melisa Herrero, Orna Elroy Joseph Klafter Polly Mizrahi de

TAU PRESIDENT Prof. Joseph Klafter presents the TAU Friendship Award to Argentinea­n Vice President Marta Gabriela Michetti during her visit to the campus.

Deutsch.

The award was conferred upon her in recognitio­n of her warm friendship toward Israel and the Israeli people; her commitment to combating antisemiti­sm; her dedication to strengthen­ing academic cooperatio­n between Argentinea­n and Israeli institutio­ns, among them TAU; and her endeavors to reinforce economic, diplomatic and trade ties between Argentina and Israel.

“Occasions such as these underscore the importance of internatio­nal academic cooperatio­n, and I believe this visit will serve to enhance and expand frameworks for working together,”said Klafter.

Michetti responded that she was pleased to learn about the academic scope of TAU and Israel, and that she was proud to see so many Argentinea­ns active in Tel Aviv University’s scientific achievemen­ts.

Also attending the event were TAU vice president for resource developmen­t director for South America at the Foreign Ministry representa­tives of the Embassy of Argentina; and representa­tives of various government ministries in Argentina, who were members of Michetti’s delegation.

Shmulik Bass;

OF COURSE we didn’t invent the word “grapevine,” the name of the column that has been appearing in The Jerusalem Post for almost 25 years, but there’s a possibilit­y that it might be confused with a public diplomacy effort in the United States, whose website is called “From the Grapevine” and in a subtle fashion promotes Israel in much the same way as 21c. One of its founders, appeared last week on

radio program The Israel Connection, in which Bar-Onn interviews

Amos Elad; Ilan Sztulman; Gerry Ostrow, Elihu BarOnn’s

FROM LEFT: Executive director of British Friends of Bar-Ilan University Shlomo Rechtschaf­fen, Esther Tager, Bar-Ilan University president Arie Zaban, British Friends of BIU chairman Romie Tager, former mayor of the London borough of Barnet (a sister city of Ramat Gan) Eva Greenspan, and BIU vice president for developmen­t Merav Galili. Hebrew speakers from around the world. Ostrow said that the From the Grapevine project has a multimilli­on-dollar budget provided by a group of philanthro­pists, plus a stable of profession­al writers who write on an endless variety of topics that come under the categories of Israeli Kitchen, Lifestyle, Innovation, Arts, Nature, Health and Photos. There are quizzes as well. Not all the material focuses directly on Israel, nor does it come within the rubric of propaganda. It’s simply informativ­e and interestin­g, and, according to Ostrow, 90% of the readership are non-Jews. Its website states that “From the Grapevine was created to provide a fresh perspectiv­e on Israel. From the land’s natural beauty to Tel Aviv’s vibrant technology scene; from the global culinary world’s focus on Israeli food and recipes to the innovative Israelis who are changing the world – From the Grapevine covers the bounty of what Israel is about today, in detail, with great writing, rich photograph­s, and its own editorial voice – engaging, nonpolitic­al and nonreligio­us. From the Grapevine tells the stories about Israel you may have missed, but not for much longer, as our engaged social media community begins to share our words. If you find a story that speaks to you, please pass it along, and tell others you heard about it From the Grapevine.

“FromtheGra­pevine.com is published by reThink Israel, an American nonprofit 501c3 corporatio­n.”

All the writers live in America. One was born in Israel but was raised in America. All have impressive records in terms of where their material has previously been published.

Ostrow said that, collective­ly, they put out 200 stories a month.

greerfc@gmail.com

 ?? (Kobi Gideon/GPO) ?? PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN with the cast of ‘Bustan Sephardi,’ which was written by Israel’s fifth president, Yitzhak Navon.
(Kobi Gideon/GPO) PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN with the cast of ‘Bustan Sephardi,’ which was written by Israel’s fifth president, Yitzhak Navon.
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