Israel's delegation numbers 35 strong. Paltiel explains that participants
aged 17 to 21 were selected by ORT Israel, the Hebrew University and Israel
Scitech - a leading science and technology network of high schools and
colleges - with the cooperation of the Ministry of Education, the
Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Tel Aviv University and the Weizmann
Institute of Science.
It was a point of pride for Paltiel to get the camp hosted in his own
country.
"I was in Mumbai for the camp two years ago, and thought, ‘Why not here in
Israel?’ so I applied to the international advisory committee of seven or eight
Asian Nobel laureates, and got their consent," he says.
While Egypt and Jordan chose not to participate, he adds, "we do have
participation from Indonesia, which has no diplomatic relations with Israel and
is probably the largest Muslim country in the world. And we got a very positive
response from Turkey. In fact, we've allocated larger quarters for the Turkish
and Indonesian delegations."
Young scientists on the Hebrew University campus (Photo: MFA)
Students also came from New Zealand, Australia, the Philippines, China,
Taiwan, Japan, Vietnam, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand, India, Myanmar, Nepal,
South Korea, Kazakhstan, Georgia and Turkmenistan.
Paltiel says the kids were in touch before meeting in Israel, using English
as their universal common language. "One aspect of the camp is to encourage them
to collaborate. For the poster competition, delegates from different countries
were assigned to form teams and start preparing weeks ahead of time. They were
intensively interacting via Facebook and email. That way, they got to know each
other ahead of the program and continued their interaction through the
camp."
Paltiel was eager for the Israeli students to meet their Asian Pacific peers,
who may one day be among the top scientists in the world. "Science in these
countries is really improving dramatically, and we'd like all the participants
to know each other and possibly stay in contact, perhaps even collaborate in the
future," he says.
Previous Asian Science Camps were held in Taiwan, Bali, Japan, India and
Korea. The Israeli camp was funded jointly by the Israel Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and the Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of Israel and The
Hebrew University of Jerusalem.