"It is … our duty as scientists to promote education, rational thinking and tolerance. We should also encourage our educated youth to become technological entrepreneurs. Those countries that nurture this knowhow will survive future financial and social crises. Let us advance science to create a better world for all."
Professor Dan Shechtman, winner of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry 2011, and member of World ORT’s Academic Advisory Council in Israel.

"I think education is the fundamental component to South Africa being able to become a successful nation. Education should not be based on race, class, gender or ethnicity and ORT has ensured that people from all walks of life are afforded an equal chance for a better tomorrow.”
Johnny Clegg, musician and anthropologist.

"Throughout the world, ORT schools provide a modern educational environment in which young people learn to appreciate time-honoured general values as well as get connected to Jewish values. The cutting edge technological orientation brought in by ORT positions Jewish schools at a much higher level, thus providing them with an ability to attract the generation who may otherwise remain unaffiliated."
Natan Sharansky

"I have had occasion before to remark on the fact that ORT's activity does not base itself upon 'charity' but upon self help. Both for the work of rebuilding human lives and the great task of building a new nation in Israel, the acquisition of skills assumes an enormous importance. I want to assure you of my greatest admiration for the cause in which you are so nobly engaged."
Albert Einstein

"Your vocational training activities … represent a constructive activity on a people-to-people level which deserves approbation … You are engaged in a work of great humanitarian significance. Yours is the type of meaningful program which transmits skills and technical knowledge as an aid to the modernization of communities and to the improvement of living standards. It is thus in consonance with the main currents of our times."
President John F. Kennedy

"…ORT has provided an education for life to Jews and others in vulnerable communities throughout the world. In so doing, it has exemplified one of Judaism's greatest values. We are the people who predicated our very existence as a people on education, on 'teaching... diligently to our children.' … The civilizations of ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome have long since disappeared. Judaism still lives and flourishes and survives. ORT is testimony to that truth.”
Lord Sacks, Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth

World ORT News

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10 Nov 2011 14:52 Age: 188 days
Category: News Update, FSU, Events

Mission accomplished! World ORT supporters visit Moldova and Ukraine

It is easy for those of us living in the West to forget - even in these precarious days - how lucky, how privileged, we are. But a World ORT mission can quickly put things into perspective.   For the participants in last week's mission to Moldova and Ukraine, it was a chance to meet students, teachers, community leaders, diplomats and politicians, to learn about the challenges they face and the hopes they harbour - and to help.   "Anyone involved in education and philanthropy should experience a mission like this because you see the sheer poverty in which people live and the ability of ORT to bring them out of it," said London-based World ORT President Emeritus Sir Maurice Hatter, who chaired the mission, which visited Kishinev, the capital of Europe's poorest country, Moldova, and its not much wealthier neighbour, Ukraine. "We're very lucky to be living here in the way we do."   Together with his wife, Lady Hatter, and ORT France President Lucien Kalfon, Nadia Guth Biasini, Lower Galilee Mayor Moti Dotan, and British ORT Trustee Simon Aron, Sir Maurice visited the two ORT schools in Kishinev, and, in Odessa, a new computer centre at the Tikva Orphanage, and the ORT School and Technology Centre.


World ORT President Emeritus Sir Maurice Hatter (centre) talks to students at the Tikva Orphanage’s new computer centre in Odessa. With him are mission members (from left) Nadia Guth Biasini, ORT France President Lucien Kalfon, World ORT Representative in the CIS and Baltic States David Benish, World ORT Director General and CEO Robert Singer, and Mayor of the Lower Galilee Moti Dotan.

Sir Maurice was struck by the enthusiasm and hunger for knowledge of the children they met, some of them displaying the capacity to rise above the challenges of their current circumstances. One such boy was Dmitry Nemirovsky, an 11-year-old student at the Odessa ORT School whom the mission participants visited at the three-room flat he shares with his grandmother and severely disabled mother.

Like many other poverty-stricken children, Dmitry's best hours are the ones spent at school where he enjoys a hot, square meal, the company of friends, mental stimulation and comfortable, spacious surroundings. His favourite subject is IT but he cannot pursue his studies at home because his family cannot afford a computer or Internet connection; Sir Maurice spontaneously bought him both.  

"Speaking to Dmitry I could see he had the mettle to go on and do well, to lift himself out of the gloom - we're just giving him the tools so that he can study at home," Sir Maurice said.

Fellow mission participant, Simon Aron, was similarly pro-active. He decided to share his expertise as Managing Director of the award-winning IT consultancy, Eurodata Systems, with two groups of senior students at the ORT Herzl School in Kishinev, the only Moldovan school chosen by Microsoft for one of its international educational initiatives.

"I felt that we made a good connection: I gave them information about the IT industry and about the need to have a specialised skills set, one which makes them valuable," Mr Aron said. "And I told them about the international competition in IT. If they have an Internet connection at home then they have no excuses not to learn more - if you have a browser then you can find out anything you want."

And at Kishinev's Rambam School, which only joined the ORT network two years ago, it was Mr Aron's turn to put his hand into his pocket when a student asked why they did not have robotics kits. "I felt compelled to do it. You want to make a difference, you can make a difference, so you do it. And robotics is very good for stimulating young minds into designing, building and inventing; it's so important."

It was Mr Aron's first ORT mission and he returned to England invigorated and equipped to answer the questions levelled at him by potential supporters.

"I'm often asked why these people are so poor, what their Jewish status is and why they don't move to Israel. Well, now I've got the answers to those questions. If I hadn't gone on this mission I would not have been able to sell ORT: I've been a businessman all my life and when you sell something, if you know it back to front then you can do it, but if you don't know it then you'll be caught out," he said.

He said the extent of the poverty in some of the places they had visited rivalled what he had seen in Africa and Central America; in Dmitry Nemirovsky's home, for example, they bathed, did laundry and cooked in the same room.

"Many of the people we met were living on less than $200 a month so they rely on the mutual support which has developed among them which makes emigrating a very difficult option," he said. "Education is the only way forward. Yes, those organisations which provide food and clothes are doing an important job but most of these people would find these basic needs themselves. But they wouldn't stumble across a school with infrastructure and good teachers that would give them a chance in the future. And that's why I believe in ORT." 

But the mission's climax was the "breakneck speed" in which a deal is sealed with the Moldovan Government for ORT to move its two schools in Kishinev from their cramped, antiquated and ill-equipped buildings into a massive, centrally located building. The new school will be named after the late father of ORT Moldova President Ilan Shor, who had pledged $160,000 for it, to match Sir Maurice's donation.

"The Herzel and Rambam schools are in former kindergartens," Mr Aron said. "They don't have sports facilities or even a playground; the Rambam school doesn't have a cafeteria - they eat lunch at their desks. But the new school has a huge gymnasium, foyer, thick walls, large classrooms - and a cafeteria. It's a proper high school! You go, have loads of conversations, meet all the right people, and come out with a new school. It's incredible! What a difference!"

Mission members were greeted with ecstatic applause when details of the project, which will see the creation of the largest Jewish day school in the Former Soviet Union next year, became known at a packed meeting of parents. 

"The new school - that's my greatest pleasure to get that going," said Sir Maurice, who has been on more missions than he cares to remember in the nearly 30 years he has been involved with ORT.

His wife, Lady Hatter, ranked this mission among the top five they had participated in. 

"Each one we have come back and thought it was wonderful," she said. "But we were doing a lot of constructive things - we did what we need to do and came out feeling that we had achieved something. ORT is doing a fantastic job there."