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Nonprofit Helps Hundreds of Ethiopian-Israelis Launch High-Tech Careers

Ozzy Bitew, a program developer for the website platform Wix, was born in Lod, Israel to parents who immigrated from Ethiopia in 1977. Socioeconomic disadvantages have made high-tech careers difficult to achieve for many Ethiopian-Israelis. But Bitew was able to overcome those obstacles thanks to Tech-Career, which provides specialized courses of study developed by and for Ethiopian-Israelis.

After completing an intensive 10-month developers’ course in 2013, Bitew was on one of the first teams to enter Tech-Career’s 10-month entrepreneur incubator, launched in November 2015 with core funding from the US-Middle East Partnership Initiative. His team’s startup, Service Locator, is a Facebook Messenger bot that helps users find crowd-recommended technicians in real time.

“I still need to do a college degree to go further in my career, but I can tell you Tech-Career changed my life,” Bitew told ISRAEL21c. “I learned a lot about myself and it prepared me for real life.”

Oozy Bitew, head of the Service Locator team, and a software developer at Wix. Photo by Benny Woodo/Camera Brush

Oozy Bitew, head of the Service Locator team, and a software developer at Wix. Photo by Benny Woodo/Camera Brush

Today, more than 600 professionals trained by Tech-Career are pursuing careers in Israeli high-tech firms.

“In the last three years, 93 percent of our graduates are working in high-tech, and about 40% of each Tech-Career course is composed of young women, so Tech-Career is smashing more than just one glass ceiling,” said Avigail Harel, Tech-Career’s resource development director.

With the support of Israeli and international high-tech firms and philanthropies, the program offers a choice of five nationally accredited technological courses in computer programming, quality assurance, and data communication, lasting eight to 10 months. Participants also spend 200 hours in career-prep and personal development workshops, and are matched with personal mentors to help them get a foot in corporate doors.

Tech-Career grad Haim Atalai, head of the startup My Business Helper and a quality assurance engineer at the Bank of Jerusalem. Photo by Benny Woodo/Camera Brush

Tech-Career grad Haim Atalai, head of the startup My Business Helper and a quality assurance engineer at the Bank of Jerusalem. Photo by Benny Woodo/Camera Brush

In past years, Tech-Career accommodated up to 80 students each year. It will soon accept 110 once it moves to larger quarters in Lod after 14 years at Kibbutz Nachshon in central Israel. Vying for those slots are some 300 candidates aged 21 to 30, often the relatives of past graduates.

“Our students come from all over Israel and stay in dormitories, detached from social and familial obligations so they can totally focus on their studies,” explains Naphtali Avraham, 48, Tech-Career’s executive director since 2015. “The classes run from 8:00 to 5:00 and afterward they meet with mentors, past graduates and high-tech executives.”

Tech-Career participants meeting with local business people. Photo: courtesy

Tech-Career participants meeting with local business people. Photo: courtesy

Avraham emigrated as a teenager, journeying through Sudan to reach Israel. After serving as an officer in the Israel Defense Forces, he earned degrees in mechanical engineering from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology and Tel Aviv University, and is now earning a second master’s degree in education.

“When Tech-Career started, there were only four Ethiopian-Israelis working in high-tech, and they had been trained in Ethiopia,” says Avraham, “so obviously this population, which only arrived mostly in the 1980s, needed the right tools to be part of the startup ecosystem in Israel.”

Just as important, he continues, is cultivating the self-image of Ethiopian-Israeli young people. “We develop our candidates to realize they have the abilities and talents to work in every field of employment. They have to be encouraged to believe that they can overcome the barriers.”

Bitew came to Tech-Career after more than four years in the army. He estimates that between classwork, homework and lab time, he put in 15 to 17 hours every day. Even before his course of study was finished, he got a job offer from a high-tech firm that went on to employ additional Tech-Career alums.

“A year and a half later I switched to Wix—the best company I ever worked for,” says Bitew. “At that point Tech-Career opened the entrepreneur incubator and it gave us the tools we need to create a startup. I had a lot of app ideas but didn’t know how to start a business.”

The teams visited companies such as Microsoft and Outbrain, met with entrepreneurs, and were assigned mentors.

“We’re working super hard to get investment to finish our business and marketing plan and launch. I start work at Wix at 7:30 in the morning and work on the startup at night,” says Bitew, whose team was one of three to present at an event last September sponsored by the U.S. Embassy.

Tomer Avera, head of the Za-atoot team and QA software engineer at DSP Group. Photo by Benny Woodo/Camera Brush

Tomer Avera, head of the Za-atoot team and QA software engineer at DSP Group. Photo by Benny Woodo/Camera Brush

Avraham has shared Tech-Career’s model with other NGOs, including initiatives to prepare young adults from ultra-Orthodox and Israeli-Arab communities for careers in Israel’s high-tech economy.

“True integration begins when Israel’s high-tech industries include professionals from all walks of life,” he says.

(via Israel21c)

[Photo: Israel21c ]