2024 10 Spain

Spain 8,

Oct. 22, 2024,

Hi Everyone,

The spring and summer of 2024 passed so quickly and now we are in the autumn. Although I accomplished many tasks, I failed to do others which turned out to be important as well. I left for Israel in mid March and returned 2 months later in mid May. It was an experience that I will never forget but it put me 2 months behind for my sailing season. This was a small price to pay. I have been an arm chair Zionist for my entire life except for the 3 months that I worked on a kibbutz in 1970. The ‘war’ as unfortunate as it could be, gave me the chance to offer my services to Israel. My contribution however small it was, was not negligible.

I sanded and stained our deck which took the greater part of 1 week. It was a beautiful job and should last at least 5 years.

My usual boat preparation of the J24 for racing season takes 1 week. This time it took 1 month. I sanded off the old bottom paint, a filthy job that was accomplished with the help of my crew friends. I then applied 5 coats of intratect 2000E, sanding in between each coat. This paint is like the original paint which goes onto the hull of the boat when it is first built. It lasted 40 years and needed to be redone. It should last another 40 years which hopefully will be longer than me. The job follows the usual time and cost estimate. A good job takes 4 times as long and costs 4 time as much. I was not far off in my estimate.

I also took 4 weeks to renovate my Laser and 29er that have not been sailed in many years. Many of the young sailors who sail 29ers complimented me on the job and helped me to set up the boat. When I told them that I would be sailing it next year, they cautioned me that no one over 25 ever sails a 29er. We’ll see next year. I finally started racing my J24 in mid July.

I trained for the triathlon enough to get me onto next years Canadian National Team for the Worlds in Australia, but not enough to do well in this years race. I took the swimming part of the race for granted which explains my results.

My motorcycle lay dormant all summer. After the triathlon, I rented a motorcycle to tour Andalusia. I picked up the Triumph 400 yesterday and rode from Malaga to Gibraltar. I planned out the route completely on my computer in Montreal, and then transferred the data to my TomTom motorcycle unit. A motorcycle GPS costs 4 times as much as a regular GPS but it is designed for use specifically for a bike. Vibrations do not affect its use. I ruined an i-phone by using it on my bike and destroyed the camera. The GPS also allows you to choose between primary, secondary and tertiary routes. When choosing a route you can choose between hilly, very hilly and very very hilly roads. You can also choose between windy, very windy and very very windy routes.

I forgot how much fun it is to ride a bike. I choose tertiary routes, very very hilly and very very windy roads. Well….I was not disappointed. For much of the route, I drove in 1st or 2nd gear, occasionally making it up to 3rd gear. There were miles and miles of hills and curves. I could only take many of the hair pin turns at 20-30k. I started off on the wrong route at the beginning , an error that cost me 3 hours in time. I didn’t mind as I really loved the ride and the scenery. I rode for 7 hours stopping for a cappuccino break in a beautiful small town called Ronda.

The scenery was spectacular. I passed through dry, rocky mountains that resemble a desert except for the sand. Small villages, impossible for me to reach due to the steep incline dotted the landscape and appeared to hang off the mountains. They are obviously very ancient and were built for protection.

I arrived in Gibraltar 8 hours later. It’s funny, that after travelling in Spain all day, I find myself in Gibraltar, an English part of continental Europe. In Spain the food was excellent. In many countries if you cannot find a good restaurant, look for an Italian one. last night I had supper in an Argentinian restaurant and the food was great. In Torremolinos I stayed at the Fénix Hotel. The buffet breakfast had 105 different items to choose from. The cappuccino machine had 12 settings. I am at the Bristol Hotel in Gibraltar. It is a 4* hotel, with 4* prices and 1* accommodations. The ‘continental’ breakfast had 9 items to choose from including ‘fresh’ croissants wrapped in cellophane. I don’t understand the phrase ‘continental breakfast’ . On the European continent I have always been served huge, fantastic s. The term ‘continental’ should be replaced with ‘small and cheap’.

Brian

2024 10 Spain

Spain 7,

Oct. 20, 2024,

Hi Everyone,

Today was another different day. It was the last day of the triathlon but I decided to do my own thing and go for a bicycle ride down the coast. I set out for Marbella but it was 54k away and I had not a hope in getting there. I also was not sure of the rules for taking a bicycle on a bus for the return ride. I rode about 20 to 25k on the promenade and on small roads. The country side is gorgeous. The coast has been built up all along the way with condos that appear to be good quality and beautiful architecture. The beach was not encroached upon and is usually 100m wide. There is an endless supply of cafes and restaurants to choose from along the way.

I rode for 2.5 hours up and down (up and down a lot) but the bicycle is of good quality, even if the rider is not. Eventually, I stopped for a bottle of water and a cappuccino before turning back. I took a slightly different route and stopped to take many photographs along the way.

I am in the hotel bar right now, sipping a pina colada (like in the song) which, hard to believe, I have never tried before. I am meeting up with some of the Canadian team members for dinner. I came back to see the relay race and cheered for our athletes as they passed by. I have gotten over my results in the race and promised to train harder and do better for the Worlds next year in Australia. Yes, believe it or not, I have qualified for the age group 75-79 team.

I would like, personally, to thank Suzanne for what she did for me today. She is one of the finest examples of kindness, generosity and good sportsmanship that I have ever known. Hopefully, I will one day be able to return the favour to her, her family or to another member of the Canadian team. Thank you and see you in Australia next year!!! Brian

What I like about triathlons is the camaraderie and the ability to make fast friends. Everyone has 1 thing in common, the triathlon. For a short period of time nothing else matters. Will you ever see each other again? Perhaps not, or maybe at the next triathlon in Australia or elsewhere. Tonight I had the pleasure of dining with 2 lovely ladies from the Canadian team who did very well in the race. One of the ladies from Toronto will be travelling on her own for 2 weeks. That is very adventuresome as it is much easier for a man to travel on his own than for a woman. The world has changed but has not changed enough.

2 athletes died and 1 is on life support. This is unacceptable! There were not enough surfboard rescuers and motor boats in the swim part of the race. I don’t believe that they pulled the man out quick enough. 1 man died in the running part of the race. There were not enough para-medics visible to me. It is true that 80% of heart attack victims die at home or on the street because the para-medics can not arrive fast enough. This should not be true at an international athletic event. The question to be asked is were there enough para-medics present and did they have defibrillators at their disposal. Athletes participating in an international event have the right to be protected. You only have 4 minutes to survive from the moment the heart stops or goes into ventricular fibrillation. Nothing more and often less. 4 minutes make all the difference. If mistakes were made, lessons must be learned for the next race and the standard of care must be elevated to the next level.

Tomorrow I will take a short train ride to Malaga and pick up my Triumph motorcycle for the next part of my journey. I will pack lightly as I only have a small carrying case on the bike. My first stop is in Gibraltar to see ‘the rock’.

Love,

Brian

2024 Spain

Spain 6,

Oct 19, 2024,

Hi Everyone,

Today was an easy day for me. I woke up late and ate breakfast later. I walked around Torremolinos and checked out the stores. There is an endless supply of restaurants, bars and cafes. The sun was shining so I headed out to the beach. It was relatively warm with a cool breeze and cold water. I rented a beach bed and suntanned for the greater part of the afternoon. I have not yet removed my race tattoos, so they should be well imbedded on my skin, when I erase them, due to my sun tan.

Tomorrow I will take the bus/train to Marbella. I stayed there for a few days back in 1970 when it was a fishing village with only 1 or 2 bars. Apparently, there has been a big development with apartments, condos, restaurants and bars. We shall see…

I just finished off 2 margaritas, a glass of wine, 2 coquilles St Jacques and a tera miso . Tomorrow is the end of the Worlds and it is time to celebrate. I won’t talk about alcohol consumption again.

Love,

Brian

I am in the second row to the right of the flag. I am so proud to represent Canada in my age group.

2024 10 Spain

Spain 5,

Oct 18, 2024,

Hi Everyone,

Last evening I sat on the beach at a restaurant overlooking the water and licking my wounds. What the hell. I shouldn’t complain too much. I made a serious personal mistake by making the decision to swim with a wetsuit when I swam all summer in Israel in colder water without one. I let myself be influenced by my peers when I should have made my own decision as I really do know my own body. Too bad. Next year I am on the team to go to Australia for the worlds. Either I will train more with a wet suite or skip it altogether unless it is an absolute requirement.

I went to the brunch with the team at 11:00 but I was just not in the mood to stay too long. Everyone was disgusted with the officiating. Complaints will be make but they will go no where. There was one sobering announcement. 2 fellows died yesterday in the race. Both had heart attacks, 1 in the swim and 1 in the run. I didn’t see the accidents or I would have helped out in the attempted resuscitation. All of the athletes feel terrible. I can’t imagine how badly the families must feel. 1 was a Brit and the other was Mexican. I probably met both of them at some point in the day.

The air conditioning in the room didn’t work so I complained to the staff for the 3rd time. I stayed up late and watched an old version of ‘the Saint’. I didn’t feel like watching the races so I took a bike ride to Malaga. I took tertiary roads and often road on dirt roads along the beach. The sandy beach goes on for miles so it took me a while to get to Malaga. I went to my motorcycle rental shop to confirm by bike. I rented a 400cc single cylinder Triumph, a new bike that just came out this year and has had a good success. I don’t remember Malaga at all. Everything has changed so much. Eventually I rode over to the old section of town which has been made over into a pedestrian mall with no cars. I had a cappuccino and an ice cream in a small cafe.

I took a lot of pictures and stupidly forgot my bag. I rode back at whirl wind speed and found the bag where I had left it. People here are very honest. I am sipping a draft beer in my hotel bar while writing my blog.

Love,

Brian

2024 10 Spain

Spain 4,

Oct. 17, 2024,

Hi Everyone,

‘It was the best of times, it was the worst of times’ to quote Dickens.

Today they killed Sinwar. Should I be happy that a fellow human being was killed? I am sorry to say, yes. Personally, he tried to kill me twice and I take that very personally. If you have read my blog, you will see that I feel that I was personally attacked twice. My opinion never changes. A war ends when 1 side drops his weapons, puts his hands over his head, drops to his knees and says ‘nicht schissen ’. Nothin has changed since 45, and for 50,000 years for that matter.

In a war, there are 5 constants. 1, there is a winner and there is a loser. 2, the winner writes the history. 3, money changes hands. 4, territory changes hands. 5, some people have to move. This has been a rule for 50,000 years. Why does this rule not apply to Israel?

Sinwar spent many years in an Israeli prison for terrorism. He was released on a prisoner exchange and continued his terrorism. He had a brain tumour. He was operated on in an Israeli hospital where doctors saved his life. Oct. 7 was the thanks that Israel received. With him gone, Hamas should surrender and move forward with peace and rebuilding. But they would have to change the Hamas Charter which is available on the internet and which should be compulsory reading for those woke people before they continue with their demonstrations.

I am in Torremolinos, on the Canadian National Triathlon Team, Age Group 75-79 Sprint. I am very proud to represent Canada here. I took part in the Parade of Nations last evening, which unfortunately was not as well organized as in Hamburg last year. Nevertheless, the atmosphere here is electric. The streets in Torremolinos have been cordoned off for the race. We all had our start times. I was in the over 70 age group. Wet suits were an option but not obligatory. That was my first mistake as I usually don’t swim well with a wetsuit and as I am from Quebec, am used to cold water. Sometimes I don’t run well, rarely do I not swim well. Today was one of those days. I won’t go into the details as the stats are obvious. The organization here and the strict adherence to rules in difficult conditions was over the top. There were 1 foot waves, and a 750m course took 1100m. There will be many complaints. My language was not exemplary. I have never run so many ….. words together in 1 ‘sentence’.

I rented my bike until Sunday and will take a trip to Malaga 1 day and to Marbella another day. I pick up my motorcycle on Monday. I have a brunch with the team tomorrow.

Love,

Brian

2024 10 Spain

Spain 3,

Oct 16, 2024,

Hi Everyone,

Yesterday I was exhausted. I had travelled for 12 hours, 2 plane rides, 1 train ride and then 1 relatively short walk to my hotel dragging 2 suitcases. For this trip I had decided to pack lightly and wash my clothes as needed. I am staying at an older but well renovated 4* hotel right in the centre of Torremolinos. The main entrance to the hotel is half way up the mountain on the 8th floor. I am staying on the 9th floor. I have a nice view of the Med if you twist your head and turn 90 degrees to the left. If you take the elevator to the 1st floor you are at ground level which is really beach level. I am 50m from the beach.

When I first came here in 1970, Torremolinos was a small village with 1 cafe and maybe 1 or 2 restaurants. It was the hippy capital of Europe. Kids came here from all over the world and slept on the beach. It was Franco time so the Guardia Civil came by every 2 hours or so to check your passport. As long as you were not drunk or doing drugs, they really didn’t hassle you. Most or us slept in sleeping bags and cooked our food on a camping gas stove.

It was in Spain that I really learned about myself and how to travel alone. I had a motorcycle, a 200 Lambretta scooter that could to 57 mph all out. It was very reliable and except for my 3 motorcycles accidents, I really enjoyed it.

Spain is a great country. You can eat and drink well and relatively cheaply. There is a lot of history to be seen as for many centuries, Spain, ruled the world. Except for wine, there are very few natural resources. The country relies a lot on tourism. Torremolinos obviously caters to tourists but somehow the atmosphere does not give you the impression of being touristy.

I ate out in a restaurant on the beach last evening, finishing the meal off with an Irish coffee topped with whipped cream. I don’t eat much during the day to keep my calorie intake down. This morning I slept in rather late and had the buffet breakfast in the hotel. I picked up my rented bike today and was surprised that they gave me a bike computer. I then registered for the race and got my race gear. There are 4000 athletes so it took the greater part of 3 hours. The line up was pleasant as every one talked to each other. I took the bike for a 20k ride to get used to it and the terrain. It is a high quality bike and I am pleased with the ride.

This evening I met up with the Canadian team for a photo shoot. We are one of the biggest teams with 350 participants. Hopefully that will translate into multiple medals. We then lined up for the parade through the town. Spain lacks the organization that was present last year at the Worlds in Germany. In the end it all worked out. There were many photographers and the parade was on the internet. I was standing next to the Canadian flag when we sang O Canada.

I am disappointed in the recent statement by the Spanish Prime Minister. He has asked that the EU stop free trade with Israel. He seems to have forgotten the history of the Spanish Inquisition that lasted for 400 years and only ended with the invasion by Napoleon. He also has no clue about the Maranos, the Spanish Jews who converted to Catholicism but secret practiced being Jewish. If caught they were burned at the stake. 25% of Spanish people have Jewish blood. Spain now places itself into illustrious catagory of nations with Ireland, Algeria and South Africa. South Africa, that beacon of democracy has more rapes per hour than any other country in the world. UN stats.

I am writing my blog in the same restaurant as last evening. I ate dorade that the waiter told me was a filet. It was delicious but was full of bones.

Tomorrow I will race at 200pm Spanish time in the Age Group Sprint 75-79 years of age. It will be televised on the internet. I will cross the finish line even if I have to crawl to do so.

Love,

Brian

2024 10 Spain

Spain 2,

Oct. 15, 2024,

Hi Everyone,

11 years ago I had 3 heart attacks and a quadruple bypass. I was playing 80 games of hockey a year and thought that I was in great shape. Like a good doctor, I had regular blood tests every 30 years. My BP was 105/55 and my pulse was 52. How could I have cardiovascular disease. I was almost dead wrong. Unknown to me, as I didn’t have a blood test, my cholesterol was sky high. I arrived at the ER at St Mary’s Hospital after my 3rd episode of chest pain and a kidney stone. The chest pain was as described in all the texts, as a crushing pain as if someone was standing on your chest. I had to leave the hockey game, but I was not short of breath and so was not afraid. The kidney stone attack at 2:00 am brought me to the ER. The pain was unbearable. I was soon transferred to the Royal Vic for an angiogram and a bypass.

The surgeon, Dr Cecere came into the room and introduced himself. He said that he was my resident 10 years ago and assured me ‘that he was very good now’. I didn’t want a bypass. I just wanted to take aspirin and go home. He told me that if I didn’t have a bypass, that I would never play hockey again as I would have angina every time I played. He told me that as I was an ‘athlete’ playing so many sports that my peripheral cardiac circulation was terrific. He could bypass me to my peripheral cardiac circulation and that I would have a fantastic cardiac output. I could play hockey in 3 months with the appropriate post bypass cardiac training. He was right.

1 month after the surgery, I started a cardiac training program. The following year, my friend Glen, an ironman convinced me to do a triathlon. I couldn’t even spell triathlon correctly then. I entered my first sprint triathlon the following year and won a gold medal in my age group, 65-69. I was the only one in my age group. It is very hard to do a triathlon over the age of 65. I have done the sprint, olympic and half iron man relay 14 times. I usually win a medal as there were always 3 or less competitors in my age group. The sprint is 750m swim, 20k bike and 5k run. The olympic is 1500m swim, 40k bike and 10k run. The half ironman is 1.9k swim, 90k bike and 22k run. I have done all 3. I did the swim in the half ironman relay. I will do the sprint here on Thursday.

2 years ago, I qualified to be on the Canadian National Triathlon Team, age group 70-74. I competed at the World Triathlon Championships in Hamburg and came 43 out of 44 in my age group. My goal was simply to crawl across the finish line. This year I once again qualified and will compete at the World Triathlon Championships for Canada in Torremolinos, Spain, Sprint, age group 75-79. This will be my 15th triathlon. The race will by televised on the internet beginning on Wednesday. There will be a ‘Parade of Nations’ on Wed evening through the streets of Torremolinos with a large crowd cheering us on. I will race at 2:00pm Spanish time on Thursday if any of you care to watch it.

I flew to Barcelona and then to Malaga yesterday. I then took a train to Torremolinos and walked over to my hotel. I came to Torremolinos in 1970 on my motorcycle trip. In those days, it was the hippy capital of Europe. Everyone came here and slept on the beach …. The Guardia Civil came by regularly to check your passports but otherwise didn’t hassle you as long as you didn’t get drunk or do drugs. That was a severe no-no. It was a great time for me. I had a motorcycle, a black leather jacket, long blond hair and a headband. (I thought that I was an Apache). I was travelling alone, with no responsibilities and no one to answer to. I was cold, I was hungry, I was lonely. It was the best year of my life. I was free. I was enjoying a freedom that year that I would never know again.

Torremolinos is fabulous. It has of course changed a lot since my first visit here 54 years ago. I can no longer live on $3 a day. It seems more like $3 a minute. I am staying in a 4* ‘adult’ hotel, what ever that means, overlooking the beach. Torremolinos is a beach town built on the side of a mountain. The beach is endless and the water is relatively warm for this season. Hopefully I will not be obliged to wear a wet suit for the race. The older part of town has staircases instead of streets. There are shops selling whatever you care to buy. The town obviously caters to the tourist trade. However, as October is off season, the town is not over run with tourists.

There are restaurants, bars and cafes everywhere. I am staying in a 10 story older, modernized hotel with a beautiful view of the town and the beach. The hotel has several terraces with cafes and restaurants. Both the 8th floor and the 1st floor have entrances onto a street. I had supper at the hotel restaurant last evening as I was too tired to go out. This morning I had breakfast at the hotel restaurant as well. Both times I ate out on the terrace overlooking the town. The view is ‘to die for’. I could easily feel comfortable retiring here or coming and staying here for a month, parking my yacht in the harbour. The menu both times was an endless buffet with everything that you could dream of. The Spanish have developed tourism down to a ‘T’. I can never get enough of life in Spain.

I am sitting at a table on the beach , in a restaurant, sipping my cappucino watching with surf role in. I am writing my blog, my second entry for the day. I have already received 10 responses from my readers.

Tomorrow, I will meet the Canadian team and do the final registration for the race. I will read up on the rules today. I packed lightly and very carefully so as not to forget anything. I forgot my bicycle helmet so I will purchase one today. I pick up my bicycle tomorrow. I rented a high quality racing bike rather than going through the hassle of bring my own. Last year some of the competitors bikes came too late for the race or ‘folded’ in two. That must have been somewhat of a disappointment.

Love,

Brian

2024 10 Spain

Spain 1,

Oct 15, 2024,

Hi everyone,

The greater part of this post will be a general review of what circumstances brought me here today. For some of my readers, this will be a review that you may wish to skip through briefly. I graduated from Mcgill University in 1970. My marks were above average but not good enough to get me into medical school. Some of my patients reading this blog may not wish to know this fact. In any case, I decided to go on a trip to Europe with my friend Bram. Our first few days in Paris were a bit strange as we didn’t really know what travelling was all about. Eventually we decided to hitch hike to Marseille. Hitching was legal and safe in those days in Europe, everyone did it. We split up for various reasons on the way and met up at the youth hostel in Marseille. The rules for successful hitching were simple: 1. Always hitch with a girl. That provided her with safety. Motorists would easily pick up a couple. 2. 2 guys alone would never get a lift. 3. You could get a lift as a single guy but it could take a little longer.

We stayed in Marseille for a few days, drinking cheap wine and lying on the beach. It was my first taste of meeting youth travellers from all over the world. Youth hostels in those days were cheap, safe and a good method of meeting people and learning the ropes of successful travelling. We decided that hitching was time consuming and that we need ‘wheels’ for the trip. Many kids bought old VW vans if they were travelling in a small groups. They often slept and cooked in the vans. We hitch hiked to Milano and bought 200cc Lambrettas.

I had my first of several motorcycle accidents in France. I was riding alone in the dark and it was raining heavily. I slid off the road on small stones and went over the handle bars. I was not wearing a helmet as it was not obligatory. I was scraped everywhere except for my head. A French teacher came by and took me to his house. He gave me oily salve for my wounds. I stayed with his family for 3 days while he arranged to have my bike fixed. This was the first of many kindness’s that I got from strangers over the year that I travelled.

I met up with Bram several days later. Bram then had his own motorcycle accident, a little more serious as he was taken to a hospital and the bike was destroyed. That put him off on travelling. He went home in 6 weeks and I returned home in 6 years, with 1 year spent travelling, 5 years in a French medical school, French friends whose friendship I have maintained for life and a beautiful French bride.

My time in Spain was a real eye opener. I had never travelled alone in my life and had no experience riding a motorcycle. Necessity is the mother of invention and I learned fast. I was in Spain and Portugal for 2 months. I loved Spain then and am happy to be here now again. My budget then was $3 a day. $1 for gas, $1 for food and $1 for a hotel. I slept out on beaches, parks and often in a ditch on the side of the road. Anything to save money. I road across North Africa and took a ferry to Italy. The bike was stolen in Italy. I hitch hiked for 6 months. I skied for 2 months in Austria, Italy and Switzerland. I hitched through Italy and Greece eventually ending up in Israel. I slept on the beach for 1 month and worked on a kibbutz for 2 months. At the end of the year, I went to France where I stayed for 5 years studying medicine.

My parents and my girlfriend kept my letters, eventually giving them to me and one day I will write my memoires.

Love,

Brian

2024-03 Israel

Israel 49,

May 8, 2024,

Hi Everyone,

This is my last day in Israel as I fly out late this evening to New York for a stop over and then on to Montreal. Am I sorry to leave Israel? Yes. Am I happy to be returning to Montreal? Yes. A dichotomy, yes. Will I return in the near future? Yes, in 6 months, in 1 year? I don’t know. Will I volunteer again with Sar-El and the IDF or will I try to exchange my temporary licence for a permanent licence that will permit me to practice in a hospital? Even though everyone speaks English here, I will study Hebrew this year allowing me to communicate with my Israeli friends in their language.

I spent 2 days with MDA on the ambulance as usual and had a great experience with 2 different teams. I have never met a more dedicated group as the MDA Para-Medics. I was able to speak with Moshe and Vickie who were instrumental in obtaining my place in MDA. Most of the cases were quite routine except for 2 that stand out and are worth a mention. We were called to the beach in Bat Yam where some one had hurt himself while swimming. It was chilly in the morning and I was wearing a sweat shirt. The sea was rough with a lot of breakers and the water had not yet warmed up. An 82 year old man, while swimming with his buddies of the same age, was washed up onto the rocks, banging himself up and receiving several cuts. We took a history, bandaged him up as best as we could and transported him to a hospital. What impressed me the most was that this group of 80 year old men had risked going out early in the morning, in unfriendly conditions for their morning dip. It seems that they do this every morning rain or shine.

The second case involved a 28 year old female with end stage cancer. She was cachectic, unconscious, lying on the floor of her mother’s house with 1 of her brothers present. As she had not signed a ‘do not resuscitate form’ and as per her family’s wishes we were obligated to perform CPR for 20 minutes before calling a physician with a full Israeli licence to get permission to stop. I only have a temporary licence that does not allow me to pronounce someone as dead. In Canada, the resuscitation orders seem to be more clear. Afterwards, I discussed the ‘end of life’ possibilities in Israel. It does not appear that this is routine in Israel. ‘End of life’ decisions can be made by the patient after going through a committee and has been possible for about 5 years in Canada. 13,500 patients chose this way of terminating themselves in Canada this year.

2 evenings ago, I took the train to Jerusalem and stayed the night at a downtown hotel. I was advised not to stay in the old city. Jerusalem is rather cold in the evening but this did not stop many people from eating outside with over head heaters. Yesterday, I went to Vad Vashem, the holocaust museum, for the first time. The architecture by Safdie is wonderful while at the same time sober and respectful. I planned to visit for 2 hours but in the end I stayed for 6 hours. I could have stayed much longer and spent more time visiting the grounds but I had to get back to Tel Aviv.

Visiting the museum is of course a very moving experience. My grandparents and great grandparents came from Russia in 1903-1905 during the pogroms. My parents were both born in Canada and my father served in the Canadian Army. I have no direct relationship to the holocaust although I have met people who went through that era. My father liberated a Polish Camp in Germany but would not talk about it. I have never spoken directly to a holocaust surviver. Visiting the museum is a very sobering experience. It takes you through the rise of anti-semitism in Europe leading up to the holocaust. It then describes what took place in the various camps. There are exhibitions on the Warsaw Ghetto up risking and on the Jewish partisans who fought against Germany. 500.000 Jews fought in the Russian army. 550,000 fought in the American army. 17,000 Jews out of a Jewish population of 168,000 at that time, fought in the Canadian army. It also showed the efforts by different countries and individuals who risked their lives by hiding Jews. There is a wall with names of the Righteous Among Nations honouring those individuals. Schindler and Wallenberg are mentioned, to name two. There are many films and interviews with holocaust survivors which I viewed. I will return again on my next visit.

At 1 point a group of 20 soldiers entered a room where I was watching an interview with a survivor. I leaned over and told the soldier beside me that ‘I felt very proud to be sitting with a group of Israeli soldiers’. The man asked me where I was from. I told them that I was from Canada and had been in Israel for 8 weeks volunteering with the IDF and MDA. He thanked be profusely and shook my hand as did 2 other soldiers who had over heard the conversation.

2 days ago I was in Holon, on Holocaust Memorial Day. At 10:00 AM the sirens went off. I was in the waiting room of a hospital, having just delivered a patient, watching the TV ceremony. They showed many clips of politicians, and various areas in Israel. Israel stops for 2 minutes! Everything stops!! I saw movies of streets filled with cars stopped in the middle of the road with people standing at attention beside their cars. In Canada, on Nov 11, at 11:00, it is sad to say that many people go about their routine without even stopping for 1 minute. We have forgotten the sacrifices that the generation of our parents made 80 years ago.

We say, ‘Never Again’. We say ‘Forgive, but do not Forget’. There were Pro-Palestinian demonstrators, demonstrating in front of Auschwitz. They are clueless. These are the people that ‘don’t want to know’. Anti-semitism which lay dormant for 80 years is now on the rise all over the world. Why? I can’t answer that question.

This will probably be my last entry in my blog unless I choose to write an addendum at a later date.

Love,

Brian

Clinics and hospitals

MDA

Vad Vashem

2024-03 Israel

Israel 48,

May 5, 2024,

Hi Everyone,

In Sept. 1973, I had just returned from my 2nd year in medical school in France. I was standing in front of the synagogue on Rosh Hashanah morning. It was a good place to meet some of my old friends and perhaps to meet some girls. I certainly had no intention of going inside as that would have been against my ‘religion’. A gentleman of about 40-45 years of age approached me and asked me ‘what are you doing here?’ Me; “same as you, standing at the corner watching all the girls go by”. Him; ‘you should be in Israel’. (The Yom Kippur war was going on) Me; ‘why’. Him; ‘you should be there fighting for Israel’. My father was standing beside me and over heard the discussion. My father; ‘ tell me, you are the same age as me’. Him; ‘so what has that have to do with anything’. My father; ‘you were never in the army and if you were you certainly didn’t go overseas’. Him; staring at my father ‘hmm’. My father; ‘it’s always the same with these guys, always willing to send someone else’s boy, forgot to go when it was his turn’. Him; ‘huff and puff’ and walks away. Me… proud of my father!!

From this story we can easily draw the parallel with what is going on in Gaza today. The 3 leaders of Hamas are living safely in Qatar in luxury. They are multi billionaires who made their fortunes on the backs of innocent and poorly informed Gazans. You don’t see them in Gaza leading the charge. It is easy for them to say ‘keep fighting, your sacrifices will be rewarded in the after life’. ‘Always willing to send someone else’s boy…’ Sinwar surrounds himself with kidnapped Israelis, using them as human shields. He knows that he is safe while he pushes his troops forward. The Hamas fighters use their women and children as shields. They hide their artillery in mosques, schools and hospitals. They fire and launch rockets with impunity and complain about international law when the Israelis fire back saying that the mosques, schools and hospitals are under attack.

Sar-El is an organization that usually sends 4000 volunteers to Israel to work on IDF bases taking the place of soldiers. This year they have sent 40,000 volunteers. Over 50-100,000 volunteers have come to Israel to help Israel defend herself. 30% of these people are Christians. Non of these people are involved in fighting. As for the Pro-Palestinian demonstrators, it is very easy to demonstrate in front of synagogues and scare elderly men and women. It is very easy to demonstrate in front of Jewish schools and scare 12 year old children. It is easy to demonstrate in front of a building at McGill called the Bronfman Building. Has a Muslim ever been refused entry to the management program because of his religion? Is there a Mohammed Building at McGill? The same is true about the demonstration that took place in front of the Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto that was founded by the Jewish population in Toronto. Has a Muslim ever been refused treatment at the hospital? Has a Muslim ever been refused a position as an employee at the hospital? A quick survey of the patients and the staff would immediately prove the contrary. Why have 50-100,000 volunteers not come to either Gaza or the West Bank to help their good friends the Palestinians? It is true that 7 workers were killed delivering food in Gaza. Unfortunately this is collateral damage that occurs in any war. The difference is that if you heard the interview given by the wife of one of the victims, you would have understood that these workers were highly paid workers who went into a war zone knowing the dangers. They were not in any sense of the word ‘volunteers’.

Pro-Palestinian demonstrators are now camping out on campuses in the US and Canada. They want the universities to follow the BDS movement. They want the universities to boycott, divest and sanction Israel, as well as companies and universities that do business with Israel. But, are they willing to do this themselves or would this be too much trouble to ask? Tel Aviv is the 2nd largest IT development city in the world next to Silicone Valley. Will they no longer use Waze to find their way around? Will they no longer buy Dell Computers because of the inventor? Will they not use USBs, an Israeli invention? Will they not drink Soda Stream, an Israeli company, that was purchased by Pepsi? Will they not drink Pepsi products? Will they not go to Hollywood movies because all of the major companies were founded by Jews and everyone knows that ‘Hollywood is controlled by ‘Jews’? Will they divest themselves from purchasing Nvidia products, many of which are developed in Tel Aviv? Will they no longer play ‘Israeli developed games’ and avoid AI? Jews represent 0.2% of the world population but have received over 22% of Nobel Prizes and are represented in all categories. This is 110 times what you would expect given their numbers. Will they divest from using Jewish made products invented by Novel laureates or their modern derivatives? Which medicines will they not take as they were developed by Jews?

I am very disturbed to see what is happening on the college campuses in the USA and Canada. In the 60s, the French students and the American students had something personal to complain about. What have the students in the universities now have to complain about? Is anyone sending them into battle to fight someone else’s war? Has there been prejudice against Palestinian students on campus here? Why have the students taken the side of the Palestinians? Why has this degenerated into severe antisemitism. Why is there a call for intifada? Why are Jewish students being harassed on campus? Why do the Pro-Palestinian demonstrators feel that Jew=Israeli=Zionist? If this is not the case, why are they demonstrating in front of ‘Jewish institutions’? Why are they telling us to leave Palestine and go back to Poland? Have they never heard of WW2 and the Holocaust or do they believe that the whole thing is a hoax and that the numbers are exaggerated?

During a discussion that I had at dinner in my Tel Aviv hotel, I asked my colleagues, ‘what is woke’ and am I woke’? I was told that I am the opposite of woke. I suppose, seeing the crowd that I was with, I should take this as a compliment. We recently received a notice from the Royal College that as physicians we should be striving for DEI. Really? I finished ‘school’ at age 33 when I passed my final Royal College exams to receive my fellowship and was allowed to write, MD and FRCS after my name. Is that what we want in medicine today, DEI? I always thought that excellence was what we should be striving for in medicine to fight cancer and take care of trauma among other things. I have always practiced medicine with RAMQ Medicare and I personally don’t want to practice any other way. Medicare should be free and education should be given at a low cost to allow students for all backgrounds to educate themselves and improve their social status. I went to medical school in France where education was quasi free and state supported.

It is most unfortunate but I feel that we have raised a generation and a second generation that is 100% ignorant of history. How else could the university students support an organization, Hamas, that wishes to make Palestine into a country modelled after other countries in the Middle East where the rule of law is not supreme in the land? Which country in the Middle East except for Israel is a democracy that votes for its leaders? Which country does not have a dictator, a king, an emperor, iatolla, or a system based strictly on religious or ethnic terms?

Many of our students raised my us or by our children’s children, fall into the ‘don’t know because they don’t want to know’ category of my previous essay. Ask them a question and they pull out a cell phone and immediately give you an instagram or tic-toc answer. I would be most happy to engage in a discussion with one of these enlightened demonstrators but not to play tit for tat in 3 minutes. I would want to discuss the current Israeli-Hamas/Palestinian conflict on a level playing field for 1 hour with people who have read and understand what I am about to write.

What does ‘from the river to the sea’ mean? Which river and which sea? What does ‘free Palestine’ mean? Do you wish to return Palestine to a free Palestine like it was before Oct 7 with Hamas and the Palestinian Authority in control? When was the last election in Gaza? When was the last election in the West Bank? Are elections supposed to take place every 4 years or every 19 to 25 years? How many political parties are there in Gaza? How many political parties are there in the West Bank? If there are no political parties, who will be the king, emperor, dictator or iatolla? Which county will the government be patterned after, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Egypt or Algeria to name a few?

Now let’s discuss some history. What were the boundaries of the Ottoman Empire? Who divided up the Ottoman Empire after WW1. Who made the boundaries of the countries to their advantage? What is the Sykes-Picot Agreement in 1916? What was the San Remo Conference? What happened at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 which gave us the Treaty of Versailles? How did the Paris Peace Conference end up being a major cause of WW2 30 years later. What were the boundaries of the Palestine Mandate? How was given the power to oversee the Palestine Mandate? Where and when did the name Palestine come into being? When and why was Cis-Jordan split off from Trans-Jordan to form Jordan? What was the Arab revolt? Who was Lawrence of Arabia and what did he want? What was the Balfour Declaration and why did the British come out with it? What was the Faisal-Weizmann Agreement and what was pencilled in at the last moment? What was the Peel Commission? This is crucial to understanding the present conflict. What were the goals of the British? I will give you the answer. It was to protect the Suez Canal and the Iraq-Haifa Pipeline!! What did the French want and what did they get? What was a Jewish Homeland meant to be? What was the decision of the UN to the partition of what remained of the Palestine Mandate? Who accepted the partition and who refused the partition? When was the State of Israel declared? Why was Palestine not declared as a state? Which 5 countries invaded the fledging State of Israel? Who took over Gaza in 1949? Who took over the West Bank in 1949? If you do not know this history, you can not discuss the present situation with any intelligence at a university level? Why is this so hard to understand? Yes you will have to do some homework if you want to discuss the current situation with me.

Man has been at war for over 50,000 years and for 5000 years of written history. There are 5 common rules of conflict. 1) There is a winner and a loser very rarely a cease fire. 2) The victor writes the history. 3) Money changes hands. 4) Territory changes hands. 5) People are forced to move from 1 place to another. The only conflict where these rules don’t tend to be followed is in the 75 year saga of the on going Middle East conflict. I once heard an Israeli general speak He said, ‘we live in a rough neighbourhood. We have enemies on 3 sides and another set of enemies without a touching border. We are out numbered 100 to 1 and their birth rate is higher than ours. The Mediterranean is our 4th border. The Arabs can lose 100 wars and the Arab countries will still exist. If Israel loses 1 war, they will drive us into the sea and nobody will stand up for us. They never have in the past 2000 years and they never will. Israel stands alone and must look after themselves or we will cease to exist’.

Love,

Brian