EL AL’s Flight Training Simulator Becomes Wheelchair Accessible For Good Deeds Day (Video)

By Staff Reporter
Posted on 03/16/21 | News Source: Arutz-7

In honor of Good Deeds Day, the pilot’s seat of EL AL’s Boeing 737 flight simulator was replaced with a wheelchair.

On Tuesday, March 16, in honor of Good Deeds Day, the pilot’s seat of EL AL’s Boeing 737 flight simulator was replaced with a wheelchair to give Israelis with disabilities the opportunity to feel like pilots for the day. A joint initiative of EL AL’s ‘Fly Card’ credit card and Frequent Flyer Club and ADI, Israel’s most comprehensive provider of residential and rehabilitative care for individuals with severe disabilities, the special event allowed four ADI residents to fulfill their dreams of flying an aircraft and made them the world’s first wheelchair users to train in an advanced simulator.

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Guided by EL AL Captain Eran Lichter, the four residents, including one young woman and three young men from ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran and ADI Jerusalem, each enjoyed 60-minute flight instruction simulations, smiling brightly from takeoff to landing. After touchdown, the ADI trainees received their wings and a certificate of course completion from EL AL Fly Card and Frequent Flyer Club CEO Lior Tanner in the presence of Major General (Res.) Doron Almog, Founder and Chairman of ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran, and Shlomit Grayevsky, Director of ADI Jerusalem.


“I am so proud of this wonderful Good Deeds Day initiative that highlights the importance of disability inclusion, equity and access. ADI works tirelessly to promote inclusion, integrate people with disabilities in all areas of life, and break down thick walls of prejudice and stereotypes, so this is a very significant step forward for our residents, their families and the entire ADI family,” said Major General Almog following the event. “We are so grateful to Mr. Lior Tanner for his partnership and for making this powerful and meaningful experience a reality. When it comes to integrating people with disabilities into society, the sky is definitely not the limit.”

In addition to completely removing the co-pilot’s seat from the Boeing 737 flight simulator, a ramp was built to provide the ADI residents with direct access to the cockpit. Mr. Tanner explained that other than these minor adjustment, the simulator was not altered in any way and the ADI residents enjoyed the same experience as everyone else. Read more at Arutz-7