Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli high-schooler wins silver in international computer competition

The Jerusalem lad competed remotely in the prestigious, Indonesia-based Olympiad in Informatics, against students from 90 countries.

Indonesia Student
A high school student competes at the International Olympiad in Informatics in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, last month. Source: Facebook.

A student at the Jerusalem College of Technology’s Torah U’Mada Yeshiva High School won a silver medal in the world’s most prestigious computer-science competition for high school students.

Eitan Elbaum, 17, was one of four Israelis participating in this year’s International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI), held in Yogyakarta, Indonesia last month. A total of 346 students from 90 countries took part.

“I never thought that I would reach the level to be a member of the delegation and represent Israel, and I certainly did not imagine that I would be able to bring back a medal together with my friends in such an excellent delegation,” said Elbaum.

“I learned that if you invest, work hard and believe, the impossible does not exist. As Eyal Yifrach said, ‘If we want to succeed as much as we want to breathe, any summit is possible,’” he added, referring to one of the three Israeli teenagers kidnapped and murdered by Hamas terrorists ahead of the IDF’s “Operation Protective Edge” in 2014.

Each day of the Olympiad, participants were presented with three questions that they were to solve in under five hours using their skills of problem analysis, design of algorithms and data structures, programming and testing.

Elbaum has participated in computer science competitions since seventh grade and the Olympiad was the fourth time he has represented Israel internationally. Since Israel and Indonesia have no diplomatic relations, the Israeli team participated via Zoom while other high school students competed in person.

“I’m so proud to represent Israel, especially considering the host country doesn’t recognize its existence,” said Elbaum. “While it would have been nice to be there in person since that’s a big part of the experience, competing on Zoom actually helped us focus on the questions at hand and I think ultimately helped our performance.”

Torah U’Mada Yeshiva High School combines Torah study with a high school education for grades 7-13. Graduates receive an academic degree in science and technology from the Jerusalem College of Technology.

In July, Torah U’Mada student Ori Frankel won a silver medal in mathematics at the 63rd International Mathematical Olympiad in Oslo.

“The Democratic Party has changed,” David Wecht said. “Hateful anti-Jewish invective and actions are minimized, ignored and even coddled.”
The opinion piece, written by columnist Nicholas Kristof, parroted “cartoonishly evil Hamas propaganda that would make Goebbels blush,” Eitan Fischberger, a Middle East analyst, stated.
The state said that it is giving its 2025 Montana Exporter of the Year Award to a company that exports "$5.4 million worth of products to Canada, Egypt, European Union, Japan, Kuwait, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, United Kingdom and United Arab Emirates.”
A new documentary by Abner Benaim is a personal project that takes viewers to the terrorist attack against Alas Chiricanas Flight #901 and explores the aftermath on the families of the victims, including Benaim himself.
The department “will continue to deprive the regime of funding for its weapons programs, terrorist proxies and nuclear ambitions,” the U.S. treasury secretary said.
“This is yet another hateful incident meant to intimidate Jewish New Yorkers and divide our city,” New York City officials stated after swastikas were discovered in Highland Park and Forest Park.