
By Doug Seserman
David Ben-Gurion, Israel’s founding father and first prime minister, famously said that “Israel’s future lies in the Negev,” the southern desert region comprising 60 percent of the country, with today just 10 percent of the population.
Why, 70 years into Israel’s existence, is it important to reflect on the vision of Israel’s first leader and worldly statesman?
Because his prophetic words, “It is in the Negev where the creativity and pioneering vigor of Israel shall be tested,” are being realized today. This is underscored in Ben-Gurion, Epilogue, the documentary film based on a recently discovered lost interview with Ben-Gurion that reveals his vision. The film has been shown around the country and is being screened at Temple Beth Hillel-Beth El in Wynnewood on Dec. 16.
The Negev, anchored by Ben-Gurion University (BGU) in Beersheva, is the geographical center of Israel and is, by most accounts, uncontested land.
Moreover, this region, once a vast desert, today represents a Zionist rebirth of Israeli pioneering — full of university scientists, farmers, entrepreneurs, new immigrants and an ever-growing presence of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), all of whom are working to secure Israel’s future. This is David Ben-Gurion’s Zionism transplanted and reinvigorated to the 21st century.
Through word and deed, Ben-Gurion spearheaded the nation’s commitment to the region. When he retired from public life, he served as a personal role model by moving to Kibbutz Sede Boqer, a small agricultural community 30 miles south of Beersheva.
Rainfall is scarce in the Negev. In the past, its presence was cause for celebration. Every tree, crop and field was a hard-fought victory, and every drop of water was precious. Ben-Gurion envisioned Jewish Israeli research scientists desalinating the sea and harnessing energy from the sun long before both were a possibility, never mind a reality.
Today, desalination technology developed at Ben-Gurion University is producing a surplus of water for Israel, quenching a parched California and even helping neighboring Arab and African countries where water shortages decimate food supplies and create civil upheaval. In fact, Israel is now the only country in the world that is actually shrinking its drylands due to an unparalleled expertise in water research and technology that is making the desert bloom.
Ben-Gurion’s vision of Zionism, as depicted in the film, examines how crucial science, education and a moral compass are for the Jewish state, not just for its survival but to be a light among nations. The state of Israel will prove itself not by material wealth, not by military might or technical achievement, but by its moral character and human values, said Ben-Gurion.
To that end, 21st century Zionism in the Negev is also about tikkun olam (repairing the world) through community service and outreach. Beersheva has absorbed many of the olim (new immigrants) who resettled in Israel. Ben-Gurion University not only shares the late prime minister’s name but also his vision. Many BGU students volunteer to live among these families to help serve as mentors as part of a community outreach program run by the university.
BGU’s medical school was the first in the world to train doctors to treat the patient holistically and to focus on underserved communities in Israel, in the United States and globally — a model that is widely emulated today. And, Israeli environmental research students work in African villages to provide low-tech solutions for farming, irrigation, soil management and safe drinking water without electricity.
The IDF is moving its elite intelligence groups, including the prestigious 8200 Intelligence Unit, to a high-tech campus adjacent to the university that was once an arid field of dirt and sand. It’s part of an innovation ecosystem that involves a unique collaboration between academia, industry, government and the IDF.
The Ben-Gurion University campus will soon double in size to meet the needs of this unprecedented growth in the region.
Beersheva has become the Cyber Security Capital of Israel thanks to BGU. And, global companies are now setting their sights on the Negev to acquire technology and invest in start-up innovations. All this is proof today that Israel not only has a right to exist but has proven that it adds value through its existence. The world is simply better off because Israel is in it.
Indeed, the past is prologue in Ben-Gurion, Epilogue. “The difficult we do first; the impossible takes a little longer,” Ben-Gurion famously said.
His vision in the past — of impossible circumstances overcome — is a Zionist vision we can embrace today. His dream transcended politics and conflict. It’s a belief we can all rally around.
Doug Seserman is CEO of American Associates, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. Ben-Gurion, Epilogue was made possible when the interview soundtrack was found in the university’s Ben-Gurion Archives.
When the left ruled Israel with Tsena, five-year economic planning and unions owned the land and anyone competing with it was destroyed by strikes. It is also the signing of the deadly Oslo agreement that gave away the heartland of the ancestral land of the Jewish nation. MAPAI thankfully is dead and buried, but remnants are still in the upper echelons of the IDF with the predictable terror at the fence of separation with Gaza and still supplying everything needed to continue making missiles and burn agricultural fields.