Inside · 2017. 10. 16. · march 31, 2016 • 21 adar I I, 5776 $2.00 • 52 PaGES • W W W.CJ N...

2
march 31, 2016 • 21 adar I I, 5776 $2.00 • 52 PaGES WWW.CJNEWS.COM ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE 416-872-1212 Photo by Cylla Von Tiedemann NOW THRU MAY 15 ONLY Out West, a holy society lives on Calgary’s Chevra Kadisha has been performing acts of loving kindness for 108 years. PAGE 22 A new way to help our chained women Technology is rebooting how we deal with men who won’t give a get . PAGE 10 From Golda Meir to Walking Dead American actor Tovah Feldshuh set to reprise role as Israel’s fourth prime minister. PAGE 38 Inside Shmini CANDLELIGHTING, HAVDALAH TIMES halifax 7:24 p.m. 8:28 p.m. montreal 7:05 p.m. 8:10 p.m. Ottawa 7:13 p.m. 8:18 p.m. Toronto 7:27 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Winnipeg 7:43 p.m. 8:53 p.m. calgary 7:52 p.m. 9:03 p.m. Vancouver 7:26 p.m. 8:35 p.m. From electricity to the oil sands, Canadian and Israeli companies are collaborating in new ways. PAGE 8 How Iron Dome can help Canada Ottawa confirms closure of Office of Religious Freedom Jewish groups decry decision after Conservative motion to extend mandate fails. PAGE 16 Community divided over Tony Kushner invite UJA distances itself from Koffler event featuring U.S. playwright. PAGE 12 Contacts Canadian Office (CIIRDF Headquarters) 371A Richmond Road, Suite 3 Ottawa, Ontario Canada, K2A 0E7 Tel: (613) 724-1284 Fax: (613) 729-3061 Israeli Office Bat Shlomo 15, P.O. Box 352, Kochav Yair 44864, Israel Tel: (Israel) 972-9-749-4043 Mobile: (Israel) 972-50-216-3144 Phone: (North America) 613-482-9779 CIIRDF Canada-Israel Industrial Research and Development Foundation

Transcript of Inside · 2017. 10. 16. · march 31, 2016 • 21 adar I I, 5776 $2.00 • 52 PaGES • W W W.CJ N...

Page 1: Inside · 2017. 10. 16. · march 31, 2016 • 21 adar I I, 5776 $2.00 • 52 PaGES • W W W.CJ N E WS .CO M ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE 416-872-1212 NOW THRU Photo by Cylla Von Tiedemann

march 31, 2016 • 21 adar I I, 5776 $2.00 • 52 PaGES • WWW.CJNEWS.COM

ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE 416-872-1212

Phot

o by

Cy

lla V

on T

iede

man

n

NOW THRU MAY 15 ONLY

Out West, a holy society lives onCalgary’s Chevra Kadisha has been performing acts of loving kindness for 108 years. PAGE 22

A new way to help our chained womenTechnology is rebooting how we deal with men who won’t give a get. PAGE 10

From Golda Meir to Walking DeadAmerican actor Tovah Feldshuh set to reprise role as Israel’s fourth prime minister. PAGE 38

Inside

Shmini

Candlelighting, havdalah tiMeS halifax 7:24 p.m. 8:28 p.m.

montreal 7:05 p.m. 8:10 p.m.

Ottawa 7:13 p.m. 8:18 p.m.

Toronto 7:27 p.m. 8:30 p.m.

Winnipeg 7:43 p.m. 8:53 p.m.

calgary 7:52 p.m. 9:03 p.m.

Vancouver 7:26 p.m. 8:35 p.m.

From electricity to the oil sands, Canadian and Israeli companies are collaborating in new ways. PAGE 8

How Iron Dome can help Canada

Ottawa confirms closure of Office of Religious Freedom

Jewish groups decry decision after Conservative motion to extend mandate fails. PAGE 16

Community divided over Tony Kushner invite

UJA distances itself from Koffler event featuring U.S. playwright. PAGE 12

Contacts

Canadian Office (CIIRDF Headquarters) 371A Richmond Road, Suite 3 Ottawa, Ontario Canada, K2A 0E7 Tel: (613) 724-1284Fax: (613) 729-3061

Israeli Office Bat Shlomo 15, P.O. Box 352, Kochav Yair 44864, IsraelTel: (Israel) 972-9-749-4043Mobile: (Israel) 972-50-216-3144Phone: (North America) 613-482-9779

CIIRDFCanada-IsraelIndustrial Research andDevelopment Foundation

Page 2: Inside · 2017. 10. 16. · march 31, 2016 • 21 adar I I, 5776 $2.00 • 52 PaGES • W W W.CJ N E WS .CO M ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE 416-872-1212 NOW THRU Photo by Cylla Von Tiedemann

8 T THE CANADIAN JEWISH NEWS MARCH 31, 2016Cover Story

PAUL [email protected]

Back in the 1970s, science historian James Burke hosted a television series called Connections that looked at how science discoveries in one sphere of life unintentionally and unexpectedly led to breakthroughs in other areas.

As if to add evidence to his thesis, de-velopments in Israel designed for the Iron Dome missile defence system are now being applied to a Canadian electri-city grid. And Israeli innovations in water treatment are being tested to determine whether they can apply in reducing waste in the Alberta oil sands.

At the nexus of these collaborations and others stands the Canada-Israel Industrial Research and Development Foundation (CIIRDF), an organization founded in 1994 by the governments of Canada and Israel to fund joint projects, promote technology development and bring together companies from both jurisdictions.

The oil sands and electric grid collab-orations are but two of the organization’s success stories, said Henri Rothschild, CIIRDF president. But CIIRDF does more than merely create business rela-tionships. “You build profitable business relations,” he said. “You also build profit-able human relations.”

In Ontario, Ellis Don, a Canadian con-struction services company, is teaming up with Rafael Advanced Defence Sys-tems, an Israeli high-tech firm respon-sible for the development of Iron Dome, to use Israeli-designed applications to operate a Guelph-based electricity grid in the most efficient manner possible.

Rafael’s “autonomous decision-mak-ing” software is adaptable to running a power grid, explained Robert Barnes, dir-ector of managed services for Ellis Don, who has been at the focal point of rela-tions between the two companies.

The Iron Dome software that evaluates incoming rocket threats and determines which should be shot down and which should be ignored can be adapted to a

From electricity grids in Ontario to Alberta’s oil sands, Canadian and Israeli companies are working together in new and creative ways

civilian use, Barnes said.Right now, Ellis Don is looking at “the

commercial application for [Rafael’s] software expertise,” said Geoff Smith, the company’s president and CEO. That could be applied to make power utiliza-tion most efficient and place Ellis Don at the forefront of this developing market, he added.

Ellis Don teamed with Rafael following execution of a memorandum of under-standing between the two companies, but it was CIIRDF that acted “like a mar-riage broker” and brought the two sides together, Barnes said.

In its recently released 2016 Impact Re-port, CIIRDF focuses on the burgeoning business relationship between Canada and Israel.

Over the course of its history, CIIRDF has funded 110 projects involving more than 200 companies from both countries. It has enabled the joint development, marketing and sales of more than 50 technologically improved new products for global markets and generated $60 million in initial sales and $300 to $500 million in additional economic value. Hundreds of people in both countries owe their jobs to CIIRDF projects.

Rothschild has been instrumental in creating the structure that brings togeth-er the two sides in innovative and com-mercially viable projects.

At a time when “China and India are beating a path to Israel to be partners,

Canada has the unique opportunity to seize on opportunities as they arise,” he said.

Rothschild suggested that another area on which CIIRDF has focused – promo-ting the Arab-Israeli business sector in Canada – could bear fruit as well.

Last January, CIIRDF teamed with one of the arms of Israel’s National Tech-nology Innovation Authority (NTIA) to bring a delegation of Arab-Israeli indus-try innovators to Canada to meet with the representatives of Ontario firms. The meeting connected 12 innovative Galilee companies with prospective R&D partner firms from Ontario.

Rothschild believes there is room to grow that part of the Canada-Israel re-lationship. He has advised Ontario Pre-mier Kathleen Wynne, who is scheduled to visit Israel in May, “to go to Nazareth (a largely Arab city in northern Israel) to reach out to the business and greater community, in light of the potential for business and overall relations between Arab-Israeli community and Ontario.”

Avi Hasson, Israel’s chief scientist and chair of the NTIA, said the Israeli partici-pants in those January meetings reported that “they got very significant business introductions.”

Hasson believes that, in particular, there is room to grow the Canada-Israel relationship in resource-related technol-ogies and in medical applications.

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

A dramatic innovation in the Canada-Israel relationship

Israel’s Iron Dome technology could be applied to electricity grids in Canada. FLASH 90 PHOTO

® Registered trademark of The Bank of Nova Scotia, used by ScotiaMcLeod. ScotiaMcLeod is a division of Scotia Capital Inc. (“SCI”). SCI is a member of the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada and the Canadian Investor Protection Fund.

HELPING OUR CLIENTS PRESERVE & GROW WEALTH

We are a team of committed, responsive investment professionals who put your financial goals first. After gaining a full understanding of your life goals, we build a customized investment strategy focused on consistent, long-term growth.

To find out more about our team and the services we offer, please visit our website: www.NewmanGroup.ca

416-863-7750 / [email protected]

Greg Newman, B.Comm, LL.B., C.I.MDirector, Wealth ManagementAssociate Portfolio Manager and Senior Wealth Advisor

Allan Newman, H.B.A., LL.B., C.I.MDirector, Wealth ManagementAssociate Portfolio Manager and Senior Wealth Advisor

9THE CANADIAN JEWISH NEWS TMARCH 31, 2016 Cover Story

Ad generou

sly spon

sored by:SEW MUCH M

ore THAN A FABRIC STORE!THANK YOU

UJA Federation of Greater Toronto extends its sincere appreciation to philanthropic leaders David and Angela Feldman for their visionary gift of $2 million towards Phase 2 of Sherman Campus.

Sherman Campus is located on Bathurst St. north of Sheppard Ave.

“We’re certainly not experts in oil and gas,” he said. “We’re without natural re-source companies. What we found out at conferences and meetings is that when the needs of those companies are ex-plained, there were a lot of Israeli com-panies that had the technology applicable to that space.”

“No word is more important than collab-oration,” he said.

From Hasson’s perspective, “the last few years have been very successful.

“The companies follow the opportun-ities. They don’t care about the political situation and they respond loud and clear. They recognize the opportunity Can-adians and Canadian companies present to them.

“A lot of it is about awareness,” Has-son continued. “We need to expose the capabilities, interests and gaps of each country to each other. That’s a lot of work and CIIRDF plays right into this.”

When it comes to resource development in the Alberta oil sands, provincial legis-lation sets tough regulatory standards for the industry, including in water use and a reduction in the carbon footprint. That’s where Israel comes in, Rothschild said.

Israel is a country that faces a shortage of fresh water, but “adversity brings ingenu-ity, the need to be on top of your game,” and so Israel has developed an expertise in water use, which can be employed in the oil sands, he said.

The Canada Oil Sands Innovation Alli-ance (COSIA) has been “evaluating Israeli technologies. Last year, Israel was the sin-gle biggest source of new technologies in

areas such as water purification, monitor-ing, sensors,” Rothschild said.

Tom Reinders is intimately familiar with the Israeli role in technologies that could benefit the oil industry. A technology de-velopment engineer at Devon Canada, one of 13 members of COSIA, he’s visited Israel to see first hand what technologies might be available for use in the Canadian oil industry.

Acting as a middleman and leveraging its position as an associate member of COSIA, CIIRDF had presented more than 20 Israeli proposals to COSIA for its con-sideration.

“Of the 20 plus Israeli technology pro-posals that were submitted to COSIA through CIIRDF, about half a dozen were selected for further evaluation by COSIA member companies.” Reinders said.

“Israel’s reputation is strong. I would say the perception is that there is a lot of high-tech being developed in Israel. Cer-tainly on the water side, everyone knows the challenge of water, and people know they’re leaders in water treatment,” he said.

“We want to collaborate and work together to improve environmental per-formance,” he added.

As described in 2016 Impact Report, “the Canada-Israel R&D project aims to improve the operation, service and main-tenance capabilities” of parts of the water treatment process, improve safety, reli-ability and ultimately boost productivity and profitability.

There are many other areas of bilateral co-operation, midwifed by CIIRDF, that are referenced in the report: in wireless technology, wearable technology for ath-letes, training surgeons, improvements in cardiac imaging devices, satellite data transmission and more.

As far as Rothschild is concerned, the future is bright and going to get brighter.

“The real story, in an age of innovation, is that Israel is a partner of choice for the world, and that is true of Canada,” he said.

That collaboration helps both sides in developing current business projects and in opening doors for ventures in Europe, China and the United States, he added. ■

Henry RothschildAvi Hasson

We need to expose the capabilities, interests and gaps of each country to each otherAvi Hasson, Israel’s chief scientist