Archive for 'Israel'

Nimrod’s Coffee of Love

by on April 30, 2008 at 12:00 pm

Rosh Pina in Tel Aviv’s Port. The below is a story of Nimrod’s Coffee house which was opened in 2007 with the purpose of immortalizing the heritage “The Good Life” that Nimrod left his sister in his death. Below is the background of the creation of Nimrod’s Coffee of Love.

Nimrod’s sister writes. I admit. I didn’t believe in love. Actually I was one of those who didn’t believe love existed until Nimrod married Iris. And then everything changed. I needed that my only brother would get married in order to believe that true love existed. “What’s the secret of happiness?” I asked him. “The Good Life,” he answered in his simple way.

We left Rosh Pina. Nimrod became a high-tech manager at Microsoft and I moved to America. In my visits, I discovered Nimrod was having a dilemma which was more preferable; to go with his beloved Iris and little Omer and Vick, to our childhood village, Rosh Pina, or take them to the harbor in Tel Aviv.

What is love? Nimrod taught me. In love, there are no boundaries, no barriers. It’s an endless flow.

I had a tour contract in Mexico and Nimrod was in the middle of preparations to the annual Microsoft convention in Israel when the Second Lebanon War started. My parents and I begged: “leave everything and come over to Mexico.”

Nimrod was drafted, as a reserved soldier with a special emergency call. Before he left home for Lebanon, he wrote his beloved Iris a poem:

At about midnight they called me.
It was the telephone announcing machine.
Her voice said: Soldier – Gathering Spots!
You yelled you weren’t ready
Even though you were –
In your sleep –
To pay the price.

I said, pretty thing. It’s routine.
Every soldier-citizen has to go.
I kissed her, I calmed her as if for real.
I hoped to be back before Fall.

When the tank entered the land of Lebanon
I put on my armour,
Praying you wouldn’t call me on the phone.

A simple high-tech man from Ramat Gan
Taking his children to school.
Fighting terrorists at night.

Tell me, will all this help
Tomorrow or the day after
When I come back
And all this business will be over –

In the end you fight to live.
In the end you fight like animals.
For the silence within.

On August 19 of the Hebrew month of Av, the Hebrew Valentines Day, the announcing officers knocked on Iris’s door.

More on Ayelet Noff interview: Miriam Schwab

by on April 29, 2008 at 12:00 pm

Well-know Israeli blogger  Miriam Schwab was among the myriad people who have had trouble getting authenticated to post comments on my blog (sorry), so I am posting this note for her re my interview with Ayelet Noth:

“I’m sure Ayelet didn’t quite mean what it sounds like she said, but in
any case I would like to point out that women can have kids and be very
entrepreneurial. In fact, giving birth can (strangely) act as a
catalyst for making sweeping and exciting changes in one’s professional
life.

I got married really young, and had a bunch of kids by the time I was
25/26. Not only did I not quit and park myself in my kitchen, each kid
pushed me to make changes in my career. I had three kids while in
university. After the third was born I decided to get my first real
job. The next one led me to quit and start my own biz. The next led me
to discover and explore the world of blogging and social media, and
turn my business into a social media marketing service provider.

There is enough of a stigma in the workforce against women with kids,
so we women should watch our words and make sure that it is very clear
that we can have kids and careers. Actually, the fact that we have
personal lives, I think, contributes to our value at work. We don’t
mess around (too much), and are very efficient and focused.

As someone once said to me: “if you ever need something done, ask a
busy person.” Women with kids are busy, and we’ll get things done. “

Hagai Segev on Art, Design & Architecture

by on April 29, 2008 at 12:00 pm

Hagai Segev, an Israeli friend of mine recently edited and translated the book Improvisation: New Design in Israel by designer Mel Byers. Hagai was a foreign exchange student near my hometown in the early eighties and 23+ years later, we’re still in touch.

Hagaisegev

Hagai is an international art curator in Tel Aviv, where he spends some of his time doing shows for up and coming Israeli artists and some of his time editing design and art books. He started his career as a curator at the Israeli Museum in Jerusalem where he primarily focused on archeology and architecture.

This led him to conduct historical tours of old Jerusalem, including some of the greats in art and literature like Hungarian nobel prize winner Umbrae Curtis, Umberto Eco, Paul Auster and Irish writer Iris Murdoch.

He planned a large exhibition of art history in Jerusalem for the 3000th anniversary in 1995 and for awhile, was also the Director of the Gallery at the Technion Institute of Technology in Haifa. He grew up on Kibbutz Nahal-Oz near the Gaza strip, not that far from Kibbutz Zikim, where I spent time on in the mid-eighties.

Like Zikim, It was also a kibbutz that had separate houses for children, meaning the children were separated from their parents for chunks of time and slept apart even though they lived in the same community.

Today, he is married to a woman who has three translation companies based on one of the Goddesses of Syria. I spent Shabat with them this year, an evening I won’t forget anytime soon. Sadly, I missed Anat’s exquisite chocolate cranberry cake since I had a redeye to catch.

Hagai gave me an overview of some of Tel Aviv’s history, which included a long slow walk down Rothchild Boulevard. The infamous Bauhaus Architecture from the 1930s and 40s remains, although they apparently moved some of these buildings forward and built larger more modern complexes behind the Bauhaus houses.

Bauhaus_architecture_from_the_1930s

Bauhaus_architecture_from_the_193_2

Below are examples of some of the designs from the Improvisation book that were publicly displayed at trendy shop LeEla on Bait Banamal in the Port area of Tel Aviv.

Israeli_designers_presented_at_le_6

Israeli_designers_presented_at_le_7

Israeli_designers_presented_at_le_5

Israeli_designers_presented_at_le_8

Israeli_designers_presented_at_leel

Israeli_designers_presented_at_le_3

Israeli_designers_presented_at_le_4

Israeli_designers_presented_at_le_2

Twitter: Not Mainstream, but Seeping Out of the Echo Chamber for Sure

by on April 28, 2008 at 12:00 pm

One major flaw in Kara’s informal survey: Equating this wedding she was at with “outside the Silicon Valley echo chamber.” I’ve been stunned how quickly people outside the Valley have started following me on Twitter. My in-laws asked my husband if it was an invasion of our privacy to “follow us” and while I was out of town my parents– who use absolutely zero social networking or social media sites and are doing good if they read anything I write — sent an email to my husband that read, “What is a Twitter? Is it just like a one-line blog?” I was floored. And, let’s not forget international. Every time I travel outside the U.S. I’m stunned by Twitter’s ubiquity. After all, mobile apps are much stronger outside the U.S. In my own informal polls, people in Europe and the Middle East rank Twitter among the most global companies in the Valley, well above Facebook even.

In short, Twitter isn’t mainstream, but it’s getting outside the echo chamber fast. The problem is it’s not necessarily in predictable ways. It’s in random spurts.

Hertzel Street

by on April 28, 2008 at 12:00 pm

Hertzel Street in southern Tel Aviv. I loved this building. It reminded me in some ways of the buildings in the old mill town where I grew up in upstate New York. Today, after the leather factories are no more, the delapitated buildings live on.

Hertzel_street_in_southern_tel_aviv

Hertzel_street_in_southern_tel_av_2

Hertzel_street_in_southern_tel_av_3

Hertzel_street_in_southern_tel_av_4

Hertzel_street_in_southern_tel_av_5

Hertzel_street_in_southern_tel_av_6

A Slow Walk Through Old Jerusalem

by on April 27, 2008 at 12:00 pm

I had a marvelous slow walk through old Jerusalem last week. Bear in mind that this is a city which has been conquered thirty-seven times, controlled successfully by Jews, Babylonians, Assyrians, Romans, Byzantines, Arabs, Crusaders, Ottomans, and during World War I, the British.

Below is a sample of what I captured from a total of over 1,000 shots.

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_34

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_37

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_38

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_41

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_76

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_100

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_48

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_93

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_51

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_53

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_57

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_39

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_99

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_60

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_89

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_90

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_6

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_97

Church_of_the_holy_sepulchre_2

Inside_old_jerusalem_april_08_46_2

Church_of_the_holy_sepulchre_14

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_17

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_19

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_56

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_81

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_14

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_64

Inside_old_jerusalem_april_08_46

Church_of_the_holy_sepulchre_3

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_18

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_29

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_31

A_walk_through_old_jerusalem_8

Inside_old_jerusalem_april_08_18

Inside_old_jerusalem_april_08_62

Inside_old_jerusalem_april_08_4_2

Inside_old_jerusalem_april_08_61_2

Old_jerusalem_stairs_not_far_from_b

Inside_old_jerusalem_april_08_11

Inside_old_jerusalem_april_08_26

Inside_old_jerusalem_april_08_66

Recent Works of Haya Ran

by on April 27, 2008 at 12:00 pm

Below are recent works of Israeli artist Haya Ran. These paintings were based on photographs of family members from the twenties and thirties when they lived on a kibbutz in the south. Her fixation with legs in these paintings was apparently due to the fact that she saw an emphasis on young girls legs in the photos and wanted to highlight them in her work to demonstrate this point.

The_works_of_hayaran_israeli_artist

The_works_of_hayaran_israeli_arti_2

Integrating Waldorf Education

by on April 26, 2008 at 12:00 pm

My Tel Aviv friends Hagai and Anot are sending their kids to a Waldorf School. I had heard about the Waldorf philosophy over the years, but don’t know anyone in the states who has gone that route. Alas, not only did I learn the pros through their eyes, but by also watching their children in action.

Waldorf Education integrates the arts and academics for children from preschool through twelfth grade. It encourages the development of each child’s sense of truth, beauty, and goodness, and provides an antidote to violence, alienation, and cynicism.

Apparently from ages 7-14, you focus on emotional development, including the basics, like how you treat others. Ages 14-21 are key for developing your physical body. Children are encouraged to physically act out what they learn. One example they gave me was ‘walking the letter B before and after saying it and writing it.’

Instead of reading through an entire novel or a chapter on the History of Ancient Greece, children are encouraged to draw what they hear and learn. I saw notebooks from third and fourth grades that showed the Waldorf approach to mathematics. Their kids did their multiplication exercises on artistic pads using pastels and brightly colored crayons. One of the kids encircled his homework with a creative colorful jagged edge.

Here are a few examples:

Waldorf_school_homework

Waldorf_school_homework_4

Waldorf_school_homework_9

Waldorf_school_homework_8

Waldorf_school_homework_7

Waldorf_school_homework_3

Tel Aviv Market

by on April 26, 2008 at 12:00 pm

A stroll through Tel Aviv’s market

Tel_aviv_market_23

Tel_aviv_market_4

Tel_aviv_market_13

Tel_aviv_market_61

Tel_aviv_market_59

Tel_aviv_market_16

Tel_aviv_market_5

Tel_aviv_market_7

Tel_aviv_market_51

Tel_aviv_market_56

Tel_aviv_market_57

Tel_aviv_market_20

Virtual Worlds….Really?

by on April 25, 2008 at 12:00 pm

We have a few pieces posting on Tech Ticker today and Monday that parse through a lot of the first quarter venture capital data. I’ve never interviewed that many people in studio at once and not sure how good of a job I did 🙁  (Video on the jump and more on TT)

Anyway- among the biggest surprises to me was how hot virtual worlds were in the first quarter. (and how hard it is to say “virtual worlds”) Wha???

I heard a lot about virtual world companies in Europe and Israel, but
my impression was it wasn’t a US phenomenon any longer. Some bets were
made, Club Penguin did well, Second Life– eh, we’ll see. I just don’t
think virtual worlds are like social networking where everyone will one
day use one in some way. In short, because they’re don’t meld your
online self with your offline self– it makes them more distinct. That
seems so at odds with how the Web is developing to me.


I’m sure there are some niches and some good bets, but $185 million worth in one quarter? Sheesh. Do you want
to lose money, Sand Hill Road? Assuming it has mostly been momentum
chasing the kids space, which is an untapped area of development
online. Still…let’s get our heads back in reality here.