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Opinion

A prize-winning relationship

October 24, 2011 09:29
2 min read

Israel has once again proved its academic excellence with the Nobel Prize in Chemistry awarded to Professor Dan Shechtman of the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology. Professor Shechtman's Nobel takes Israel's total to 10, half of them for science. This is remarkable for a country which has been in existence for only 63 years and has a population of a mere eight million.

Nobel Prizes are hard to come by. Prof Shechtman won his by discovering a new form of crystal 30 years ago, for which other scientists ridiculed him and caused him to be expelled from his research group. Quasicrystals have since been found in certain forms of steel and can be used in frying pans or diesel engines. It took outstanding courage for him to stand up for his beliefs for so long.

This attitude of never giving in to the status quo represents the backbone of Israeli scientific endeavour. Israel is now globally recognised for creating products which have a life-changing impact on people everywhere, irrespective of their religious or political beliefs. Despite the global criticism Israel endures on a regular basis, it dedicates its resources to going out and helping those in need. When Haiti suffered a catastrophic earthquake, Israeli search-and-rescue teams were among the first to fly in and respond on the ground to the injured, while millions of people in Africa and China have been saved through the development, in Israel, of a biological control for mosquitoes and black flies to combat malaria and river blindness.

A strong relationship between the UK and Israel has never been as important as it is now. Young people in schools and universities, whatever their background, should be given an understanding of Israel's scientific achievements, helping to promote a positive perception of Israel beyond the world of politics. Likewise, academic ties between our universities are crucial. Sharing scientific knowledge will strengthen those ties and inevitably bring about faster advances in science.