Boca Raton philanthropists Jane and Alan Cornell recently provided financial support to the Jewish National Fund to help build a child care center at the new state-of-the-art medical center JNF has built in the Halutza region in Israel.
1. Boca couple support Israeli child care center
Boca Raton philanthropists Jane and Alan Cornell were acknowledged for providing financial support for a new child
care center at the dedication of a new medical center Jewish National Fund has built in the remote Halutza region in
the Negev Desert in southern Israel. (COURTESY)
By Randall P. Lieberman Contact Reporter South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Boca Raton philanthropists Jane and Alan Cornell recently provided financial
support to the Jewish National Fund to help build a child care center at the
new state-of-the-art medical center JNF has built in the Halutza region in
Israel.
The Cornells were honored at the recent dedication of the medical center.
Halutza is located in a remote area in southern Israel in the northwestern
corner of the sparsely-populated Negev Desert near Israel's borders with
Egypt and Gaza.
2. The communities of Halutza — Bnei Netzarim, Naveh and Shlomit — were
founded by those evacuated in 2005 by the Israeli government from the
communities of Atzmona and Netzarim in Gush Katif during Israel's
disengagement from Gaza.
These modern-day pioneers moved to this remote corner of the desert —
which had never before been inhabited or farmed — because they saw the
Negev's development as Israel's next national mission and wanted to continue
to participate in the building of the Israeli nation.
"I just admire the people who live in Halutza so much; my heart goes out to
them for what they've been through," said Jane Cornell.
While touring the new medical center in Halutza, Jane Cornell was moved
when talking about what inspired her to support this project.
"I just kept thinking about the mothers having to deal with driving hours just
to get their kids to the doctor," Jane Cornell said. "There was a lot of thought
involved in building this center to make it safe for when there are threats from
rockets.
"Supporting this medical center was important to me, but also ensuring that it
was built with the area's security needs in mind."
Alan Cornell added that Jewish National Fund's work is "changing lives for the
better every day and we wanted to be part of that story."
"Once we learned about these Zionist pioneers who chose to live in an area so
remote from any other city — a group of people who went through so much in
2005 and lost everything, and are now rebuilding their lives — we felt we
needed to do our part to help our brothers and sisters who are securing our
homeland have a better quality of life," said Alan Cornell.
3. Overcoming the emotional hardship of leaving their homes and
neighborhoods, the residents of Halutza — a region built by Jewish National
Fund-USA (JNF-USA) — restarted their lives, business and farms, and
continued their dreams of building Israel.
"These people did not lose their pioneering spirit," said JNF Chief Israel
Officer Eric Michaelson. "It is difficult to imagine how hard it was for them to
restart their lives after leaving Gaza."
Being so far from the center of Israel presented a challenge to JNF in terms of
Halutza's residents receiving basic services like adequate medical care.
Until this new medical center was built, the residents of Halutza had been
seeing doctors in Be'er Sheva, an hour's drive away, or further.
Plans were initially made to build a small medical clinic in Bnei Netzarim, but
JNF CEO Russell Robinson advised to make the center bigger to ensure it
would serve all the needs of the growing Halutza communities.
The new multi-million dollar medical center — which opened with the support
of the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust and JNF-USA —
features a dental clinic, pediatric clinic, maternity care, physical therapy
center, x-ray capabilities and many other modern state-of-the-art features.
The rooms are spacious and well-lit with most of the center being bomb- and
rocket-proof as well — a necessity for life in the border area.
Gadi Yarkoni, mayor of the Eshkol Regional Council (of which Halutza is
part), spoke at the opening.
"The fast development of this area following the evacuation from Gaza was
made possible by the support of JNF-USA," said Yarkoni. "It is a privilege to
meet the new pioneers who choose to move to this area and make it their
home."