Above left: "Setting up a research institute in a backward land" — Rehovot in the early Thirties. Above right: Dr. and Mrs. Weizmanniwith Dr. E. Bergmann, first director of the Sidi Institute. Why Weizman chose Rehovot Ab .ove: M. W. Weisgal and H. Davies with Dr. Weizmann in his laboratory. Below: The Sieffs with the early staff "WITHIN Palestine, Rehovot seemed to me the right place for a beginning. It was the seat of the Agricultural Experimental . Station; we would have on the premises botanists and plant physiologists who were already well acquainted with the country. There remained the.. question of means – and of getting, together - a group. Of' scien- tists:.. The reader will recall how,'.in the early I litter years in Germany, large numbers of first-rate scientists were driven-- from the German uni- versities. Some of them, like 'Dr. Ernst David Bergmann, his brother Felix and other chemists of - distinc- tion, joined our group. With these, and with my old colleague Mr. Harold Davies, with whom I have now been•working for over 35 years, we began the work. • "The whole experiment of setting up a research institute in a country as scientifically backward as Palestine is beset with pitfalls. There is, first, the risk of falling into the somewhat neglectful habits of oriental coun- tries; a second danger is• that of losing a sense of proportion because of the lack of standards of compari- son. One is always the best chemist in Egypt or in Palestine when there are no others. Also, if one turns out a piece of work which in America or England would be considered mod- est enough, one is apt to overevalu- ate it simply because it has been turned out in difficult circumstances. The standard and quality of the work must be watched over most critically and carefully. Many of the publica- tions issued by scientific institutions in backward countries are very much below the level required elsewhere, but the contributors of these publica: tions are very proud of them simply because the local level is-not high. "I made up my mind that this sort of atmosphere should not prevail in the Sieff Institute, and that it should live up to the highest standards. There were Several ways of combat- ting the dangers I have indicated. First, there was the proper selection of the staff, and the infusion into it of the right spirit – that of maintaining the highest quality. Every member was enjoined to take his time over his piece of work, and not merely have publication in view. Second, it became our policy to keep the work- ers in the Institute in touch with what was being • done in Europe and America; not merely by providing a good library, where they could read of the researches of others in scien- tific journals, but by arranging per- sonal contacts. We made it a rule to invite scientists froimother institutes to come and lecture in Rehovot, spending a few. weeks in the labor- atories, sharing their experiences with us, and criticizing the efforts of the young research workers. "We also worked' in the reverse direction, sending our workers abroad, to the universities. Of I I* senior workers, four have been out in Paris, Ottawa, New York, Chica- go and Berkeley. As one returns. another leaves, and so continuous contact is maintained with the great scientific world. The building and - organization of • the Sieff Institute. was, even for Palestine, a unique case of pioneering. Apart from the psychological difficulties of main- taining a high standard, there was the physical difficulty of scientific organization... "There were problems of another kind. When the Institute was built, on the piernises of the experimental station, it looked at first as if we were going to sink into a sea of sand. The buildings of the station were quite neat, as far as their external appear- ance was concerned, but there was not a tree or a blade of grass to adorn the vast courtyard in which the• two institutions were housed. and I had before my eyes the green lawns of English and American universities and scientific academies, and thought that we would be showing a lamentable lack of esthetic feeling if we merely planked down the build- ings and did nothing with the sur- roundings. I therefore set about building roads to connect one part of the institution with another. to plant trees and lay Out lawns... "The Sieff Institute has gradually won a good name for itself. both in the scientific and Jewish world... I feel that on the whole the standard of our publications is high, and our papers have always been accepted in the best journals of England and America. The name of Rehovot is familiar to every research chemist in these countries. and we receive quite a few applications from scientists who wish to come and work with us. "The Sieff Institute has proved to be only a beginning." Excerpts from Chaim Wei:mann's autobiography Trial & Error.