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 Gaza's race car students “inspirational”
	   By Stuart Littlewood Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 27, 2011 “We didn’t give up. As Palestinians, we look for plan B all 
	  the time.”
 Stuart Littlewood tells the remarkable story of 
	  Palestinian students from Gaza who are competing in an international 
	  competition to design and build a racing car, which thanks to the medieval 
	  Israeli siege they are doing using domestic water pipes and parts 
	  scavenged from disused vehicles.The challenge
 Imagine a handful of 
	  engineering students imprisoned in the tiny Gaza enclave taking on the 
	  cream of Europe's technical universities in a competition to build a race 
	  car and compete with it.
 
 They did it last year. And they’re 
	  planning to do it again this year – at least that’s what their students’ 
	  union tells me, and I’ve been trying to get confirmation.
 Formula Student (FS) is a challenge to 
	  university students around the world to design and build a single-seat 
	  racing car, which they must then put through its paces at the Silverstone 
	  Circuit in the UK in a series of static and dynamic tests.
 The aim 
	  is to inspire young people and boost skills in advanced engineering. In 
	  Europe the competition is run by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE). 
	  America has a similar student competition run by the Society of Automotive 
	  Engineers (SAE).
 
 Students have to pretend they’ve been engaged by a 
	  manufacturing firm to produce a prototype car for evaluation. In addition 
	  to technical skills, the exercise teaches management, marketing and people 
	  skills. The motor sport industry regards this as an ideal standard of 
	  achievement for students making the transition from college to workplace.
 
 Last year’s Class 1 winner was the University of Stuttgart. Stuttgart, 
	  of course, is home to Mercedes-Benz and Porsche, and the University is 
	  renowned for its advanced automotive engineering. Gottlieb Daimler himself 
	  was a student there, and Wilhelm Maybach received an honorary doctorate 
	  from the University at the age of 70 – names to conjure with!
 
 This 
	  gives some idea of what the Gaza lads, who are starting in Class 2, will 
	  eventually be up against. Peter Leipold, 26, Chief Executive of the 
	  winning Rennteam Stuttgart, said:
 
		  Formula Student gives you 
		  the chance to learn much more than you ever could through studying, 
		  internships and diplomas. You have to deal with ideas and concepts, 
		  design, manufacturing, costing, materials, testing, logistics – 
		  there’s such a huge range of work you have to do. I don’t think 
		  there’s any other competition in the world in which you can learn so 
		  much. Construction of the car itself has to conform to nearly 30 pages of 
	  stringent rules and regulations. A four-stroke piston engine no larger 
	  than 610cc must be used, but this is enough to catapult the car from 0 to 
	  60mph in just a few seconds. Electric only or hybrid vehicles are also 
	  allowed.Blockaded and starved of resources
 Further rules cover judging. The cars are judged in a 
	  series of tests such as technical inspection, cost and sustainability, 
	  presentation and engineering design, solo performance trials and high 
	  performance track endurance.
 
 The rules even cover "unsportsmanlike 
	  conduct".
 
 The competition has been running in the UK since 1998 and 
	  Silverstone has been the venue since 2007. Nowadays Silverstone, besides 
	  being the home of Formula One racing, incorporates a technology park and 
	  is a very different world from the old aerodrome circuit many of us 
	  remember from the 1950s and 1960s.
 The Khan Younis 
	  Training Centre (KYTC), located near Rafah, at the southern end of the 
	  Gaza Strip, was set up by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency 
	  (UNRWA) in 2007 to provide training for Gazan refugees and to inject 
	  skilled labour into the local economy. One of the programmes it offers is 
	  Autotronics, which includes diagnosis, maintenance and repair of 
	  automotive systems, injection and ignition systems, and electronics and 
	  electrical systems. 
		  
			  | 
				  
					  | “It really is inspirational to see a team working so 
					  hard with the odds stacked against them like this. Formula 
					  Student is a massive challenge in its own right, but to be 
					  working with almost entirely recycled parts in one of the 
					  most deprived areas in the world is remarkable. “ Dr Colin Brown, Director of Engineering at IMechE |  |  Ever since Hamas won the 2006 elections in Palestine and enforced their 
	  right to govern the Gaza Strip this tiny coastal enclave has been 
	  viciously blockaded by Israel, turning it into a prison. Nothing gets in 
	  or out without Israel's say-so. Although the siege is illegal under 
	  international law, the international community does nothing. In 2009 
	  KYTC’s first Autotronics class, frustrated at the lack of workshop 
	  materials for hands-on automotive experience, set about building a race 
	  car from recycled parts. The following year the students decided to go 
	  further and build a car to the exacting standards of Europe's Formula 
	  Student contest. Eleven students eventually travelled to the UK last June 
	  with their high-octane creation. Entered in Class 2, the team won third prize for their business plan 
	  and came ninth with their financial report. But they were docked a huge 
	  number penalty points for missing the deadline for their design and 
	  specification report. This was because Israel’s illegal blockade prevented 
	  special parts from Italy reaching them. The team had to improvise with 
	  recycled items from Gaza. Had they been awarded just an average score for 
	  the design and specification section they’d have finished in the top half 
	  of the results table along with Bath, Budapest, Brunel and Edinburgh.
 Dr Colin Brown, Director of Engineering at IMechE, said:
 
		  A chassis made of domestic water pipes and powered by an old 
	  motorcycle engineIt really is inspirational 
		  to see a team working so hard with the odds stacked against them like 
		  this. Formula Student is a massive challenge in its own right, but to 
		  be working with almost entirely recycled parts in one of the most 
		  deprived areas in the world is remarkable.
 These students 
		  epitomise the spirit and inventiveness of those who take part in 
		  Formula Student.
 Who are these remarkable youngsters and who 
	  encouraged them to get involved? UNRWA says: 
		  The 11 youngsters that 
		  make up the Formula Student team are following a course in autotronics, 
		  designed to give a solid practical grounding in automobile 
		  engineering. In educational terms, it equates to an A Level or 
		  Ordinary National Certificate (ONC). Many are from a background that 
		  the United Nations describes as “abject poverty”, which means families 
		  who do not have the financial resources to provide for the very basic 
		  necessities such as food, clothing, and hygiene… The principal of the KYTC, Dr Ghassan Abu-Orf, was aware of the 
	  then-fledgling Formula Student competition while teaching at the 
	  University of Sunderland in the UK. When he returned to Gaza, he reckoned 
	  that building such a car locally would be an ideal project for his pupils.
 According to Emel, the Muslim lifestyle magazine,
 
		  once the team had made the 
		  plans for the car and identified the necessary parts they needed, they 
		  set about contacting various suppliers around the world to see where 
		  they could be acquired from. After many companies turned them down, 
		  the students found an Italian company that was willing to work with 
		  them. But even after the parts were sent, the Israeli authorities 
		  refused to let them enter the Gaza Strip. “We didn’t give up,” a member of the team told Emel. “As Palestinians, 
	  we look for plan B all the time.”
 So the students checked old cars 
	  and machinery in the Gaza Strip and salvaged the parts they needed. The 
	  engine came from a used Honda motorcycle and the chassis was fabricated 
	  with domestic hot water pipes. “Unfortunately we didn’t have the tools, 
	  machines and parts necessary to give us the best possible results — 
	  technology in Gaza is still quite primitive and out of date in comparison 
	  with international standards. But our mission was different, and remains 
	  different.”
 
 Sahar Mousa, writing in Rotterdam4gaza, said:
 
		  Complacency of Palestinian officialsFor us the Formula Student 
		  competition is more than a prize, its more than a competition to win, 
		  it’s not related to being famous or to get any material reward. When 
		  we think about the competition we think about Palestine, we think 
		  about the Palestinian people wherever they are, we think about a 
		  message we need to send for the world. We need to tell everybody that 
		  we are a part of this world and we deserve our place in this world. We 
		  are able to be active and Palestinian Youth are able to create, 
		  innovate, and compete.
 Yes we can make it, we are strong enough 
		  to do it, because it’s for Palestine and it’s for every Palestinian.
 Sadly, I’m posting 
	  this article without any contributions from the main players – the General 
	  Union of Palestinian Students UK who hosted the Gaza team while in 
	  Britain, the Palestinian embassy in London and the team itself. The 
	  reason? After several requests the union said it was “too busy” to give me 
	  the team’s contact details.
 The embassy has not, as far as I know, 
	  issued any press releases or briefings, although it did reproduce a 
	  Daily Telegraph report on its website last June. I have written twice 
	  asking the ambassador’s office for information and contact details only to 
	  be ignored. After combing the internet I found a general email address for 
	  KYTC. Two emails have been sent but not acknowledged.
 
 So this 
	  amazing story is scraped together from other sources. Had I known about it 
	  last summer, I’d have been at Silverstone cheering the lads on.
 
 What I’d now like to know is:
 
		  While in the UK the team visited Parliament and presumably other 
		  places besides Silverstone. Did they manage to establish any helpful 
		  links to the performance car industry (constructors and R&D) or liaise 
		  with likeminded education and training establishments?Have they arranged a programme yet for their 2012 visit?For 2012 what changes are they making? Will it be the same car 
		  modified or an entirely new one? The same team or a new one?These were among the questions sent to the principal, although he 
		  might not have received them. I also asked for pictures. Again 
		  nothing. The 2012 event is only three month away. If the KYTC lads read this and 
	  wish to update me on their preparations I’ll be happy to do a follow-up. 
	  But I hope they appreciate that writers and reporters need to wrap up 
	  their stories and move on. If unable to get a timely reply or make proper 
	  contact they soon lose interest.
 As for the Palestinian embassy in 
	  London, its prime task is surely to represent all Palestinians in a good 
	  light, showcase their achievements and help open doors to opportunities. 
	  This year, if indeed these remarkable youngsters are coming back, let us 
	  hope the ambassador and his staff are on the ball and actively engaged.
 
 
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