Poetry: Ricky Rapoport Friesem

English

 

Rickey Rapoport Friesem. Poet laureate

 
Recently, Ricky Rapoport Friesem was named International Senior Poet Laureate by the U.S. Amy Kitchener Foundation, an honor she received for her poem Afterlife. Rapoport Friesem, who is married to Prof. Asher Friesem of the Physics of Complex Systems Department, headed the Institute’s Communications Department for many years.

Her first poetry collection, Parentheses, won first prize in the Writer's Digest 2007 International Poetry Book Awards. Her second collection, Laissez-Faire, was published in 2009. Her poems, which have appeared in numerous publications, reflect the insight that comes with maturity; she expresses herself in a forthright manner, in the language of everyday life.
 
Rapoport Friesem is the second Israeli to receive the Amy Kitchener Foundation prize. Helen Bar-Lev received the prize last year. Bar-Lev is the editor of the poetry collection, Cyclamens and Swords, in which Afterlife first appeared.
 
Afterlife
 
Strange to think
this teapot will live on
long after me
and someone else
will pour the tea
and maybe
for a fleeting moment
see my image
think of me
there pouring tea
and then the talk
will flow and wash away
the flotsam thought
and they will sit there
drinking tea
around my teapot
without me.

The Two of Us

We walk together
hand in hand
and only I can tell
you’ve left me
once again
to dally in a realm
I’ll never know
where
perfect numbers rule.

First Words
 
See cars
a red one
and a blue
and there’s a truck
It’s yellow.
 
Hear doggy woof and kitty meow
and way up in the sky
helicopter goes chop chop
airplane roars vroom vroom
and far away the rockets land
Listen. Boom boom boom.
 
A Marriage
 
He lives in his head
she, in the eyes of others
he focuses, she scans
he ambles, she leaps
 
But when the music starts to play,
they meld, they sway, they bend
they dance, as if the dancing were enough.
Perhaps it is.
 

 
Ricky Rapoport Friesem. Poet laureate
English

Portrait of a Statesman

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In their documentary film The Statesman, filmmakers Dan and Noit Geva present fascinating insights into the public figure and private personality that were merged in Israel’s first president. The Statesman – the first full-length film on Dr. Chaim Weizmann – uses his own words, taken from some of the thousands of letters he wrote, including 1,500 to his wife, Vera. These letters are presently in the Weizmann Archives on the campus of the Weizmann Institute.
 
The film premiered at the Jerusalem Film Festival in the summer of 2010, and it recently had a special showing at the Weizmann Institute, courtesy of Yad Chaim Weizmann (the organization dedicated to preserving Dr. Weizmann’s heritage). After the showing, film critic Gidi Orsher led a discussion with the filmmakers and Prof. Yaacov Shavit, Head of the Jewish History Department at Tel Aviv University.
 
The Statesman shows Weizmann’s metamorphosis from shtetl boy to world-renowned scientist to key figure in the World Zionist Movement and finally, to first President of the State of Israel. Through his letters to Vera, brought to light for the first time in this film, we get a picture of the complex relationship – one that informs our understanding of Weizmann’s inner and outer lives. The letters are a sort of skeleton on which we see the body of his life take shape.
 
We are privy to his inner conflicts, along with his existential need for distance, quiet and precision – the fire and ice that drove him in equal measure. On the cinematic journey through the physical locales of Weizmann’s life, as well as its history-making uphill struggles and disappointments, we hear the echoes of his voice – gentle but determined – in the letters.
 
The Statesman was written and directed by Dan and Noit Geva; photography by Itay Neeman, Gil Elkarif and Dan Geva; editing by Noit Geva; original score by Shem Tov Levy. The film was produced by the Israel Film Service for Israel’s Second Television and Radio Authority, in partnership with the Ministry of Culture and Sport and Yad Chaim Weizmann.
 
Dr. Chaim Weizmann
English

Beer, Science and Good Spirits

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Prof. Irit Dinur talks on women and science

 
 
To celebrate the 120th anniversary of Rehovot, and in cooperation with the Municipality of Rehovot, more than 20 Weizmann Institute scientists and graduate students took to the local pubs and coffee shops, where they shared with the public the excitement that accompanies scientific research at the forefront of human knowledge.

In an Irish pub situated in the Rabin Science Park, Weizmann Institute President Prof. Daniel Zajfman spoke about the possibility of the existence of extraterrestrial life.
 
Meanwhile, a local café provided the picturesque backdrop for a discussion between Weizmann Institute Vice President for Resource Development and Dean of Educational Activities Prof. Israel Bar-Joseph and Rehovot Mayor Rahamim Malul about science education. Computer scientist Prof. Irit Dinur and International Women’s Film Festival Director Anat Shperling spoke about “Women in Science and Cinema.” Among the topics discussed by students in the local pubs and coffee shops were supercomputers, quantum theory and how life evolved on Earth.
 
The celebrations opened with a children’s exhibition, “Nano Comics, Science and Good Spirits,” based on the comic series published by the Weizmann Institute that depicts the real work of Weizmann scientists.
 
A workshop that was popular with the children was one held in honor of Prof. Ada Yonath. Her unique personal history led her on the quest to study ribosomes, and decades of intense research finally earned her the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
 
Prof. Irit Dinur
English
Yes

Chemical Stamps

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Newly-issued stamps honor Israel’s Nobel-winning discoveries in chemistry. The ribosome

2011 has been declared the International Year of Chemistry. To celebrate, the Israel Post Office has issued two commemorative postage stamps depicting the research subjects of Israel’s Nobel laureates in chemistry. One stamp shows the ubiquitin molecule, for which its discovers – Profs. Avram Hershko and Aaron Ciechanover of the Technion – were awarded the 2004 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. The second sports an image of the ribosome – the cellular machine whose structure and mode of action were deciphered by the Weizmann Institute’s Prof. Ada Yonath, for which she received the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

The stamps, which went on sale in January, have values of NIS 4.20 (ubiquitin) and NIS 6.10 (ribosome). They were designed by Hayyimi Kivkovich, and the first-day cancellation stamp was designed by David Ben-Hador.

Newly-issued stamps honor Israel’s Nobel-winning discoveries in chemistry. Ubiquitin stamp

Prof. Ada Yonath is the Head of the Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman Center for Biomolecular Structure and Assembly. Prof. Yonath is the Martin S. and Helen Kimmel Professor of Structural Biology.

 

 


 

Newly-issued stamps honor Israel’s Nobel-winning discoveries in chemistry
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Walking on Fossils

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The paving stones in the Weizmann Institute's Memorial Plaza reveal the shapes of snails that were fossilized in the rock some 80-100 million years ago. Thanks to Prof. Lia Addadi for directing us to the site.

 

 

Memorial Plaza on the Weizmann Institute campus

 
 
Paving stone in the Plaza
 
 

Ancient snails preserved in the stone

 

 

 
 

 

Memorial Plaza on the Weizmann Institute campus
English

War and Peace

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In his new autobiography,* Prof. Ephraim Katzir discusses the co-evolution of science and the State of Israel
 
Prof. Ephraim Katzir: Sipur Chaim (A Life Story), Carmel Publishing, is currently available only in Hebrew.
 
Among the most important books to be published this year, the year of Israel’s 60th anniversary, is the autobiography of Prof. Ephraim Katzir – one of the founding faculty members of the Weizmann Institute of Science and fourth President of the State of Israel. Such a combination of science and statesmanship is rare – in the 60 years since the establishment of the State of Israel, there have been only two scientist presidents – Katzir and Dr. Chaim Weizmann. That they both came from the Weizmann Institute of Science provides testimony to the important part the Institute plays to this very day in the shaping of Israel.
 
The book gives an intriguing account of Katzir’s dramatic personal life, and Israel’s historic events, as well as a fascinating perspective on the advancements made in science – all woven together and revealing the underlying chronicles of the development of the State of Israel. In the beginning, science was drafted to ensure the survival of the young state; Katzir shares his personal memories about the development and acquisition of arms. But soon after, scientists began making contributions both to the economy and to the placing of Israel at the center of world science – an endeavor in which Katzir himself has played a significant role.
 
A particularly relevant chapter is dedicated to an account of the pioneering activities of Katzir and the contribution of other scientists to the field of science education – a field that continues to play a pivotal role in the activities of the Weizmann Institute of Science. 
 
* Prof. Ephraim Katzir: Sipur Chaim (A Life Story), Carmel Publishing, is currently available only in Hebrew.


A Pivot of the Nation

 
Prof. Ephraim Katzir was born in Kiev, Ukraine, in 1916. His parents, Yehuda and Tsila Katchalski, brought him to British-ruled Palestine in 1922. Katzir enrolled in the Hebrew University of Jerusalem to pursue Ph.D. studies in biochemistry and organic chemistry, graduating in 1941. He continued his education at the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Columbia University and Harvard University.
 
While studying in Jerusalem, he participated in the first non-commissioned officers’ course given by the underground Haganah. Later, Katzir became deeply involved in the Israel Army’s Science Corps, Hemed, founded at the start of the 1948 War of Independence, and for a time he commanded it as a lieutenant colonel.
 
At war’s end, in 1949, Katzir and his scientist brother Aharon joined the Weizmann Institute. Ephraim founded and headed the Biophysics Department, while Aharon headed the Polymer Research Department until his tragic death at the hands of terrorists at Lod Airport in 1972.
 
Ephraim Katzir’s initial research centered on polyamino acids, synthetic models that facilitate the study of proteins. His pioneering studies contributed to the cracking of the genetic code, production of synthetic antigens and clarification of the various steps of immune responses. The understanding of polyamino acid properties led, among other things, to Weizmann scientists’ development of Copaxone®, a drug used worldwide for the treatment of multiple sclerosis.
 
In 1973, Katzir was elected fourth President of the State of Israel, a position he held until 1978. (It was upon becoming President that he changed his last name from Katchalski to Katzir.) During his term he paid special attention to the problems of society and education and was consistently concerned with learning more about all sectors of the population.
 
Upon completion of his term of office he returned to research at Weizmann, where he was awarded the Institute’s highest honor – the title of Institute Professor.
 
The magazine Annual Reviews once quoted Katzir as saying: “I have had the opportunity to devote much of my life to science. Yet my participation over the years in activities outside science has taught me there is life beyond the laboratory. I have come to understand that if we hope to build a better world, we must be guided by the universal human values that emphasize the kinship of the human race: the sanctity of human life and freedom, peace between nations, honesty and truthfulness, regard for the rights of others, and love of one’s fellows.”
Prof. Ephraim Katzir
English

What a Wonderful World

English
 
The world is filled with beautiful things. To see them, all we need do is take a break from our daily routine, from all the tasks we perform at home and at work, and just watch the world – its people, architecture, landscapes. Too bad so few of us really take the time for such observations. Fortunately, some of those who do, document their unique vision in striking photographic images.                                                                                                                                                        
 
Photo by Abraham Ben-Naftali
 
 
Abraham Ben-Naftali, Chair of the Weizmann Institute’s Executive Council and Executive Committee, took up photography while a young lawyer in Tel Aviv specializing in the stock market, an area that requires precision and commitment. He bought a simple Russian “Zorky” camera and in his limited free time would develop the film himself.
 
In recent years, his free time increased and his cameras became more sophisticated, but his desire to freeze the moment and collect images has remained constant. Ben-Naftali has been traveling around the world of late, armed with his cameras and taking pictures of people, landscapes and buildings. he says. “I choose my subjects almost instinctively,”
 
 
 
Images from around the world. Abraham Ben-Naftali
 
 
 
 
A series of his portraits that was part of a large exhibition recently held in the Shalom building in Tel Aviv presented a fascinating human mosaic: The face of the human race around the world. “I try to follow beauty, understand it, document it.
 

Freezing the momoent. Abraham Ben-Naftali

 

In a way, my curiosity is similar to that which guides scientists in their research. I don’t always manage to understand scientific studies, but I tend to identify with the scientist’s curiosity. We all try to understand the world, each in his own way and using his own tools.”   

 

The face of the human race. Abraham Ben-Naftali photograph

Understanding the world with a camera. Abraham Ben-Naftali photo

 

Following beauty. Photography by Abraham Ben-Naftali

 

 

 

 
 
 
Understanding the world with a camera. Abraham Ben-Naftali photo
English

A Comedy with Eight Funerals

English
 
 
Empty stage and suitcases    
 
"Look, we didn't come into this world just to complain about illnesses. Nor did we come into this world to count money. And we didn't come into this world to play bridge. Nevertheless, the one real thing that we do have to say, we never say."
 
What is that real thing that we never say? And how much sorrow, disappointment, loneliness and despair does one man have to suffer until he discovers that real thing, until he wins a bit of human affection, until he fulfills his desires, and gets to travel, for example, to Switzerland? These questions are raised in Hanoch Levin's play Suitcase Packers, which he himself described as "a play set in our times and location, comprising 6 families, 5 lovers, 3 single women, 9 deceased, 8 funerals, 4 widowers, 3 Americans, 11 suitcases, a baby, a homosexual, a prostitute, a stutterer and a hunchback – all of whom are very unhappy."
 
 
Weizmann Institute Student theater group
 
Suitcase Packers was recently staged at the Tzavta theater in Tel Aviv by student members of the Weizmann Institute of Science's theater group, which was established in 2002. The students enjoy dealing with the existential questions the theater poses – as well as removing themselves once in a while from the questions that science poses. In their spare time, the students research the world of theater, combining humanity's questions with new friendships. Through improvisation and dialogue, and with the guidance of actress, director and drama teacher Irit Natan-Benedek, their efforts come to fruition each year in a theatrical production by the ensemble.
 
Posing existential questions. Weizmann Institute student theater group
 
"We have always dreamt of staging one of Levin's plays," says Inbal Friedler. "The work was intensive and hard, often continuing into the night; but in the end – thanks to Irit's energy, vigor and talent – we could see the play taking shape." 
 
The cast of players: Inbal Alaluf, Liran Goren, Haim Harush, Shlomit Zarkhi, Keren Hamama, Yoav Lahini, Klil Hahoresh Neori, Ran Navok, Adi Natan, Elena Smolensky, Inbal Friedler, Moti Fridman, Barak Raveh and Yael Ronen

   Weizmann Institute student theater group

 

Weizmann Institute Student Theater group
English

The Art of Complex Systems

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Flower image by Janet Dwek

 

Janet Dwek

 

The inherent beauty of flowers has aroused the imagination and emotions of man in innumerable ways since the dawn of history. "Flowers are like the pleasures of the world," exclaimed William Shakespeare. Claude Monet owed the fact that he became a painter to flowers. German artist Peter Kaizer likes to paint flowers that blossom in his imagination. Janet Dwek, the wife of Maurice Dwek, Chairman of the European Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science, on the other hand, prefers to paint flowers in the exact likeness of those that exist in reality.

Or, more precisely, it is specific moments in a flower's life that capture Janet's attention."It is unbelievable how complex a flower's system is," says Janet. "If you look at a flower in the afternoon, it looks quite different from the way it looked in the morning." Janet's quest, therefore, is to create a watercolor from life, blending not only a calm moment of her chosen flower, but perhaps even guiding us toward looking at it with her – sharing in its serenity.

Janet has always had a passion for flowers and an interest in gardening, but in 2000, taking her hobby a step further, she enrolled in a one-year botanical painting course at the English Gardening School at the Chelsea Physic Garden, London, which was founded in 1673. English-born, Janet has lived in Switzerland with Maurice and their two sons for over 30 years, and there she produced a series of botanical paintings that in 2005 were exhibited in their hometown, Geneva. Several years ago, Janet's artistic interests began to spread beyond the world of flowers, finding artistic beauty in Chinese calligraphy. Depicted is Janet's calligraphed rendition of a verse of the poem, Lying Down Quietly, written by an 8th-century Chinese poet, Bai Juyi.

 

True to life. Watercolor by Janet Dwek

Chinese calligraphy by Janet Dwek

 

Lying Down Quietly

All day long, lying in the room in front
My soul quiet and peaceful in a world of emptiness
The mountains above my pillow
Nothing can come to trouble my heart

 

 

 

 

Flower image by Janet Dwek
English

Nobel Portraits

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Steven Chu. Physics 1997

 

During the past few years, the German photographer Peter Badge has traveled around the world to create photographic portraits of Nobel Prize laureates. Many of his photos have already become cultural icons. The Weizmann Institute recently hosted an exhibition of his work, comprising portraits of those Nobel laureates who have a special connection with the Institute. These include members of the Weizmann Institute’s Board of Governors or its Scientific and Academic Advisory Committee, and those who have received an honorary Ph.D. from the Institute, have delivered the Chaim Weizmann memorial lecture or have been visiting scientists at the Institute. Badge’s photographs have been shown at numerous exhibitions in Europe and the U.S., and many are featured in private collections and museums. The Nobel Portraits project is supported by the Lindau Foundation, and the exhibition’s catalogue was produced and donated to the Institute by MARS, Inc. Count Bjorn Wilhelm Bernadotte af Wisborg, son of Countess Sonja Bernadotte af Wisborg, President of the Council for the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings, was guest of honor at the March opening of the exhibition, which was a gift of Dr. Klaus E. Tschira, founder and managing partner of the Klaus Tschira Foundation.

Rita Levi-Montalcini. Physiology or Medicine 1986

 
Steven Chu
English

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