"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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16 Feb 2012 17:14 Age: 90 days
Category: News Update, Kadima Mada

World ORT builds Israel’s first Ethiopian heritage centre

World ORT is ready to build bridges between Israel’s Ethiopian community and the wider population thanks to the Lipson Ethiopian Heritage Centre it has established in Kiryat Yam, the first of its kind in the Jewish State.   The Centre is a prominent part of the Alex and Betty Schoenbaum, Science, Educational, Cultural and Sports Campus which World ORT inaugurated in 2010, providing a shot in the arm for the blue-collar seaside town whose 45,000 residents include thousands of Ethiopians.   Its presence alongside glittering, well-used facilities such as the D. Dan and Betty Kahn science centre, the Margot and Jozef Rethazy Planetarium Building, an oceanarium and an athletics stadium is, says its Director, Shlomi Gedamo, testament to the vision of Betty Schoenbaum, the nonagenarian driving force behind the campus.


Pride in the past, hope for the future: Shlomi Gedamo sees the Lipson Ethiopian Heritage Centre as an historic opportunity to build bridges between communities.

"She wants to see Ethiopian kids integrating into Israeli society and this centre has everything necessary to make a significant contribution to that. It's all ready to go; we just need help to start the engine. Every donation we receive empowers us to grow and assimilate better into this country," said Mr Gedamo, who trekked through bandit-infested Sudan as a seven-year-old to reach the Promised Land he had heard his community's elders talk about for as long as he could remember.

The Heritage Centre presents the history and culture of Jews in Ethiopia, their gradual re-connection to the rest of the Jewish world, the extraordinary bravery, determination and sacrifice shown in the journeys to Israel, accounts of the individuals who helped bring them to Israel, as well as information on the better known mass rescue missions - Operations Solomon, Moses and Joshua - but also the difficulties faced by the olim in their new home.

World ORT is seeking donors for a range of programmes which have been prepared to provide local Ethiopian-born adults, who have found it particularly hard to adjust to life in Israel, with training in practical skills such as computing. Younger Ethiopian Israelis acting as guides will introduce groups of schoolchildren and other visitors to the Centre to their community's rich culture and boost their self-esteem in the process.

"This centre is an historic event in Ethiopian life in Israel; it's the first one of its kind," Mr Gedamo said. "Our centre is a way of bringing Ethiopians and non-Ethiopians together and to say, 'Look, you don't even know who I am. Find out who I am and then decide if you like me or not.' Once they know who we are they will understand us better and will have to re-evaluate their prejudices… to undergo a cheshbon hanefesh (soul searching)."

The need for the Centre is beyond dispute: Israeli society has been rocked by recent media reports revealing how Ethiopians were excluded from an apartment block by residents who described them as cockroaches and Ethiopian bus passengers subjected to a torrent of abuse by the driver. Coming as they do after years of Ethiopians suffering higher levels of unemployment and a tragically high incidence of family breakdown and even suicide, these reports have been shocking enough to prompt protest marches and, reportedly, a strongly-worded letter by UJA-Federation of New York President and CEO John Ruskay and two colleagues to Israel's Immigrant Absorption Minister Sofa Landver.

Education is seen as the key to a long term solution. Beejhy Barhany, who founded New York's BINA Cultural Foundation, dedicated to preserving the cultural heritage of Ethiopian Jewry, told Ha'aretz: "What's happening in Israel is simply a lack of awareness of the community: they look at them as people who have nothing to offer. The solution is exposure to the language and culture of Ethiopia."

And Yael Rosen wrote in The Jerusalem Post: "Education... is the key to bridging cultural gaps in our society. In this way, someone who began as an 'other' becomes 'another' - a fellow member of a wonderfully diverse community."

Ethiopian Jews waited for so long to come to Israel and suffered so much to reach it that it had been a painful shock to encounter prejudice from other Jews, said Mr Gedamo.

"Once they know us they will see that every Jewish family had the same experience as us: they all suffered discrimination in the gentile world, they all yearned for Zion, and they all came here through difficulties and hardship. The only difference between us is the colour of our skin. I'm very optimistic that when they see this and understand it then things will improve," he said. “We can’t wait to exploit the centre’s full potential to help Ethiopians and non-Ethiopians to live together harmoniously. Hopefully, one day, there will be more centres like this around the country breaking down barriers; the prejudice is so ingrained that only a grass roots approach can improve it.”

The Heritage Centre is the latest in a series of initiatives which World ORT has undertaken in support of Ethiopian Jewry stretching back to 1958 when the organisation sent two representatives to Ethiopia on a fact finding mission that included a meeting with Emperor Heile Selassie. This mission led eventually to ORT's ground breaking educational work among the Beta Yisrael community in the Gondar province of Ethiopia.

World ORT Director General and CEO Robert Singer said: “World ORT has enjoyed an unbroken relationship with the Ethiopian Jewish community since that first fact-finding mission. The Lipson Ethiopian Heritage Centre is a reaffirmation of our commitment to the community. We look forward to it taking a leading role in our work to help Ethiopians acquire the skills and knowledge that will enable them to fully participate in all aspects of life in Israel.”

In the 1970s World ORT established 19 schools for the Jewish community in Ethiopia, employing hundreds of teachers and educating thousands of students. Synagogues were built in 10 Jewish villages, and training programs were developed to help the religious community leaders and to train Hebrew teachers. Two health centres were opened, in Ambober and Tedda, and medical teams travelled to villages to service the needs of the more remote Jewish communities. World ORT also helped farmers to purchase seeds, tools, and livestock in order to help them to become self-sufficient.

Following Operations Moses, Joshua and Solomon, World ORT provided education and training opportunities for many of the new immigrants, including a joint programme with the Ethiopian National Project bringing advanced science and technology education to young people in Be'er Sheva; and work in the youth villages of Kadoorie and Kfar Chassidim to help youngsters at risk to improve their chances of integrating into Israeli society.