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Interview: Professor Yonatan Halevy

Israeli A&E, paid for with £12 million of your money

May 14, 2009 11:56
Dr Yonatan Halevy (in white coat) tends a patient in Shaare Zedek’s emergency room. “British Jew have given disproportionately,” he says

BySimon Round, Simon Round

4 min read

The next time you find yourself waiting for three hours at your local accident and emergency department with a badly sprained ankle, you might wish to compare the experience with that of your Israeli counterpart.

Jerusalemites, for example, tend not to have to wait ages to have their injuries tended to, particularly if they attend the state-of-the-art facility in the city’s Shaare Zedek hospital. Its director-general, Dr Yonatan Halevy, is proud of the treatment he can offer, but he is also very grateful — because the situation would be markedly different without the help of British Jews.

“Our emergency department is the largest in Jerusalem and one of the largest in the country,” he says. “It was built from scratch for $20 million [just over £13 million] of which $12 million [almost £8 million]came from British Jews. During my 20 years at Shaare Zedek, British Jews have given disproportionately, certainly compared to the Americans.”

So given that our own health service is struggling and money is, let’s face it, a little tight at the moment, why should the British community be funding healthcare in Jerusalem? The answer lies in the anachronistic position of hospitals in the Israeli capital. Because of the centrality of the city of Jerusalem to the three monotheistic faiths — Judaism, Christianity and Islam — voluntary organisations invested in the city long before the declaration of the state of Israel. A group of German and Dutch Jews decided in 1873 that a modern hospital outside the walls of the Old City was needed. It took them 29 years to raise the money to build the hospital in Shaare Zedek. So, long before the establishment of the state, healthcare in Jerusalem was funded on a voluntary basis. “The Israeli government decided that it was convenient to leave things as they were,” says Halevy with a wry smile.