Hitting back, at Harvard: Conference aims to sell students on innovative Israel (TIMES OF ISRAEL) By DAVID SHAMAH 03/29/12)
Source: http://www.timesofisrael.com/harvard-conference-to-present-the-real-story-on-israel/
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Tired of the bad rap, students have organized a confab on how the
world benefits from made-in-Israel technologies
In an effort to educate their fellow students and the greater college
community on what Israel is really all about, a group of Harvard
students are organizing that university’s first-ever Israel
Conference. “We want the world to see Israel as we see it,” Yaniv
Rivlin, a Harvard student and one of the event’s organizers, told The
Times of Israel. “We want the world to see Israel as the innovative
place we know it to be.”
Israel is a hard sell at Harvard. There are many anti-Israel
activists on campus, and Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government,
where Rivlin is working toward a master’s degree in public policy,
earlier this month held a “One State Conference” that pilloried
Israel and Zionism and advocated the dissolution of Israel as a
Jewish state to be replaced with a “free and democratic Palestine.”
The boycott, divest, and sanctions (BDS) movement has a significant
presence at Harvard.
It’s against this backdrop that Rivlin, along with other nine
Israelis studying at Harvard, decided to tell the story of Israel’s
contributions to the world. “Seeing the situation on campus, we
Israeli students brainstormed and came up with the idea of the Israel
Conference,” said Rivlin. “There is a German Conference, an Asian
Conference and an Arab Conference at Harvard. Why not a conference
about Israel?”
The idea was hatched several months ago, and the pro-Israel and
Jewish community at Harvard, including Jewish student organizations
like Hillel, embraced it.
The two-day conference, set for April 19-20, will focus on the
contributions Israel has made to technology, agriculture, energy
management, medicine, and a plethora of other areas. A star-studded
list of personalities, including “Start-Up Nation” co-writer Dan
Senor, former US Ambassador to Israel Dennis Ross, and Bank of Israel
Governor Stanley Fischer, will speak on Israel’s contributions to
modern life.
Other speakers include serial innovators like Dov Moran (formerly of
the cellphone company Modu, and now head of Internet TV start-up
Comigo), Yariv Bash (CEO and co-founder of SpaceIL, the Israeli team
competing in the Google Lunar X-Prize), Jon Medved (founder of
Vringo), Habib Hazzan (co-founder of Al-Bawader fund, the first
investment fund focused on the Arab private sector in Israel), and
many others. The conference will also feature panels analyzing why
Israel is such an innovator despite its being surrounded by enemies,
and how to move the peace process forward using technology.
To encourage that latter idea, the conference is sponsoring a Peace
Innovation Competition open to the general Harvard community, which
encourages students to think of innovative ways technology can be
used to advance peace in the Middle East. “The longer we remain
deadlocked, the less likely it is that there will be a peaceful
resolution of the conflict. The region needs new and innovative ideas
to stimulate and inspire thinking outside of the box,” Rivlin said.
In order to encourage those ideas, the conference will give away
$1,000 to the student with the best proposal.
“We have gotten some great ideas so far,” said Rivlin. “All of the
ideas are grounded in reality, much more so than the ideas presented
at the One State Conference… I have asked them about the dichotomy
between their calls to boycott Israel and their continued use of the
many technologies developed in Israel that they depend on, but have
never gotten a straight answer.”
Rivlin expects his event to have its share of protesters. “We expect
them to be there, and we will invite them to look past their
prejudices and learn about what Israel really is like.” A little
education goes a long way, said Rivlin. “Students from the Kennedy
School who came to Israel last year were amazed by what they saw,” he
said. “They had no idea about the Israel I and my friends grew up in,
the Israel that immediately sends out help when a crisis breaks in
the world, the Israel whose technologies do so much for the world.”
As far as Rivlin and the other organizers are concerned, the
conference is apolitical, but he realizes that politics immediately
becomes an issue where Israel is concerned. “We realize there are
issues, and we don’t shy away from them,” he said. “We believe in the
power of technology to help bring peace, and that is the direction we
want the conference to take. We don’t want to dwell on the past —
instead we want to build a tomorrow that can benefit everyone in the
region, and the world, using the technology and innovation that
Israel has created.” (© 2012 THE TIMES OF ISRAEL 03/29/12)
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