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This message has 760 words and will take about 3 minutes to read.
“What started out as a mission to rediscover Israel changed within days to a solidarity mission. As the tragic and terrifying events unfolded, we landed in Israel and went straight to Jerusalem to welcome Shabbat. We were welcomed with open arms and gratitude that we had come in spite of the violence. Our walk through the Old City was surreal - never had any of us seen the city so deserted, and there were no more than 20 people in total at the Kotel. We all monitored the news throughout the days and journeyed south, away from the violence, to Beer Sheva to tour Soroka Hospital, the main trauma treatment centre during the conflict of summer 2014. The hospital's emergency and trauma rooms now empty, were overflowing that summer, and we left impressed by the facility, the staff and its capacity. Little did we know then that just three short hours later a violent attack would occur at the central bus station, filling the trauma rooms that we had just seen with numerous casualties. This is life in Israel as our Israeli brothers and sisters know it, and we took pride in their resilience and courage as we shared our mission experiences together last night. The common thread among the group being our love and commitment to Eretz Yisrael - the land and its people.”
Another of our strategic projects with wide-ranging impact is, of course, the Bar-Ilan University – Faculty of Medicine in the Galilee. One of my first stops this trip was to visit MSR, the Israel Center for Medical Simulation, a training program we’re considering for expansion to the medical school. I met with MSR founder and director, Dr. Amitai Ziv and deputy director Kim MacMillan, and observed some of Israel’s top doctors using high-tech simulators to train other doctors to handle particularly high stress emergency medical situations, like mass casualties. Who were these other doctors? They were 15 doctors from Gaza. In the midst of terror attacks, here is MSR quietly finding ways to bring these doctors into Israel so Gazans can have better medical care. Some would see this as a contradiction – full stop. But in Israel what appear to be contradictions are often was inspire us the most. It’s hard to truly appreciate that until you’re here, for only when you’re in Israel do you really see the complexities of life here. Shabbat shalom, Ezra S. Shanken |
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