Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

War-wounded soldiers and civilians touch the southern Israel skies

In addition to providing a moment of joy during the Iron Swords War, the flights represented a respite from each patient’s complex battle with disability.

ADI Takes to the Sky
In an act of resilience and catharsis, more than a dozen rehab patients from ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran took to the southern Israel skies with pilots from “Ananim: Flights for the Community,” on Sept. 6, 2024. Credit: ADI.

More than a dozen rehabilitation patients from ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran took to the southern Israel skies on Sept. 6 with pilots from the partner organization “Ananim: Flights for the Community” for an uplifting experience that set the tone for the new year. With residents from sister center ADI Jerusalem looking on, Ananim founder Shay Shimon and 30 other pilots gave personal aerial tours of the Negev Desert to exuberant war-wounded soldiers and civilians who are rehabbing at the Kaylie Rehabilitation Medical Center at ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran, the first and only rehabilitation medical center in Israel’s south.

In addition to providing a moment of joy during the ongoing Iron Swords War, the flights also represented a respite from each patient’s complex battle with disability and a metaphor for hope, progress and reaching beyond one’s limitations to uncharted potential.

“This event and partnership is perfect because empowering those with challenges and providing them with opportunities to feel equal is exactly what we do at our ADI centers,” said Maj. Gen. (Res.) Doron Almog, founder of ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran and chairman of the executive of the Jewish Agency for Israel.

“Today, we did something truly special by allowing those in the middle of their rehabilitative journeys to touch the sky, giving them a glimpse of what’s possible with hard work and dedication and reminding them that they aren’t alone,” he said.

ADI Takes to the Sky
A war-wounded IDF soldier rehabbing at the Kaylie Rehabilitation Medical Center at ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran is carefully lifted from his wheelchair into the cockpit of a propeller plane ahead of the aerial tours on Sept. 6, 2024. Credit: ADI.

One of the rehabbing heroes is Michael Gottesman, a resident of the southern Israel village of Shlomit, who came to the aid of the residents of nearby Pri Gan on Oct. 7, fighting valiantly against the Hamas terrorists who infiltrated their village. After hours of intense fighting, Gottesman was shot in the arm and had to be evacuated under heavy fire. Following surgery and a period of healing, Gottesman was transferred to the Kaylie Rehabilitation Medical Center at ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran for continued treatment.

Having suffered significant damage to his arm, Gottesman has worked diligently with his physical and occupational therapists to regain full functionality and range of motion. After months of hard work, he was elated to be able to help pilot a plane.

ADI Takes to the Sky
Maj. Gen. (Res.) Doron Almog, founder of ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran and chairman of the Executive of the Jewish Agency for Israel, bestows wings upon an ADI Jerusalem resident ahead of the aerial tours on Sept. 6, 2024. Credit: ADI.

“This morning’s flight was thrilling and provided me with much-needed closure. The last time I was airborne, I had just been shot and was being airlifted by helicopter to Soroka,” reflected Gottesman. “To see our beautiful country, this land that we are fighting for, from above is an exhilarating experience.”

“At ADI Negev, we focus on taking small steps towards our goals. But this is a very significant day in a long process when we are able to make a giant leap and even fly. It was extraordinary being able to share this overwhelming sense of accomplishment with other patients and our therapists, all of whom I consider friends and members of my family.”

Since Oct. 7, the 72-bed Kaylie Rehabilitation Medical Center at ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran has assisted the war effort by providing the highest-level medical, rehabilitative and emotional care for dozens of war-wounded IDF soldiers and civilians. With the help of Jewish National Fund-USA, ADI Negev is adding another 36-bed ward to the medical center, which will be completed by the spring, bringing the hospital’s capacity to 108 beds, enhancing care for the hardest hit communities in southern Israel and easing Israel’s national rehabilitation crisis.

By reimagining rehabilitation, ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran is advancing ability for all—empowering children, adolescents and adults with severe disabilities and pioneering cutting-edge therapeutic and recovery services for anyone touched by disability. ADI provides its residents and special-education students with the individualized growth plans and specialized services they need to grow and thrive, its rehabilitation patients with the inpatient and outpatient treatments and therapies they need to heal and return to their lives, and the community at large with tangible opportunities for encountering disability, raising awareness and promoting acceptance.

ADI Takes to the Sky
Ananim founder Shay Shimon and 30 other pilots gave personal aerial tours of the Negev Desert to war-wounded soldiers and civilians rehabbing at the Kaylie Rehabilitation Medical Center at ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran on Sept. 6, 2024. Credit: ADI.

About & contact the publisher
ADI (pronounced <em>ah-dee</em>) is the Hebrew word for a “radiant and multifaceted jewel,” a name that reflects our expansive vision and broad scope of activities, including disability care, rehabilitation, research, employment, education, community services and <em>tikkun olam</em>. It also speaks to the importance of our mission to care for the most precious members of our society: those who cannot care for themselves. Understanding that all individuals deserve the best available care and every opportunity to reach their greatest potential, ADI provides comprehensive rehabilitative solutions for children, adolescents and adults with severe disabilities and complex medical conditions, as well as pioneers cutting-edge therapeutic and recovery services for anyone touched by disability, all in a dignified, warm and loving atmosphere.
“It’s a great victory for the First Amendment right to free speech, including the right to draw attention to bigotry and hateful speech,” Paul Eckles, of the Brandeis Center, told JNS. “We commend our client for having the courage to speak out.”
U.S. President Donald Trump appears to have precipitated the move by demanding congressional action in a social media post earlier on Wednesday.
JNS sought comment from Aria Fani and received an autoreply, “On leave until September. Will not check email with capitalist frequency.”
A spokesman for the Ivy told JNS that the school believes being required “to create lists of Jewish faculty and staff, and to provide personal contact information, raises serious privacy and First Amendment concerns.”
The new program adds “America First foreign policy lectures” and shifts focus to merit and core diplomatic skills.
Police officers found evidence that Dejaun Angelo was running a marijuana business in his apartment and “hundreds of ammunition boxes” in a storage unit.