Posts tagged "coexistence"

How to bring peace to the Middle East? Duh…How about a football (soccer) match?

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Somewhere in the West Bank….the small Jewish community of Beit Arieh inaugurated its new soccer field on Sunday and it celebrated by inviting their Palestinian neighbors and residents of the neighboring village Al-Laban for a friendly football (or soccer for those in the U.S.) match in celebration of the new field.

The game was the latest in a series of cooperative activities that have taken place between the two communities over the last several years, The newspaper Maariv reported on Tuesday.

The Beit Arieh team beat Al-Laban 11-0, but one member of the losing side was quoted as saying, “What do the numbers matter? This is for fun, for sport and for friendship. We’ll win the next game.”

Fundraiser event for Israel’s Arab-Jewish Youth Orchestra

                                                                               Ahinoam Nini/Photo: Ronen Ackerman

Ahinoam Nini will be the guest of honor at a festive evening celebrating the Arab-Jewish Youth Orchestra on May 17, 2012 at the Holon Theatre.

The Arab-Jewish Youth Orchestra is composed of talented young musicians, aged 16 – 26, from all over Israel. Celebrating a decade of music, the orchestra was founded in 2002, through the initiative of Dr. Meir Wiesel, Director of Youth and Music Israel.

The orchestra combines Middle Eastern and Western instruments and musical genres to create new forms and wonderful sounds, rooted in the Arab and Jewish musical traditions of the past and reaching out to the future, as contemporary Arab and Jewish composers have created works for the orchestra.

The orchestra has performed all over Israel and Europe, and in 2010 was awarded the prestigious Wuerth prize (Germany), in recognition of intercultural dialogue between Arabs and Jews.

The concert will be a benefit for the orchestra, to support its performances in the peripheries, and its unique role in fostering creative collaborations, dialogue, and co-existence. The evening is sponsored by the Municipality of Holon. Additional information about the orchestra can be found on the Youth and Music site.

Tickets and information: Youth and Music, 050-6449820; 03-5622701
Holon Theatre, 11 Kugel Blvd. Box office: 03-5023001-2-3

Hip-Hop culture and music coming to Jerusalem to unite Israel’s Arabs and Jews

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This cool organization, ARTS! By the People, is bringing two of their teaching artists, Gus Gauntlett and Bisco Smith to Jerusalem to work with 25 Israeli Arab and Israeli Jewish teenagers at the Hand in Hand School. “The workshop will focus on some of Hip Hop’s prime elements for the purpose of uniting people, of all backgrounds, through creative expression and performance. With the power of the process as our main emphasis, we aim to form friendships between the students and break cultural and economic barriers, naturally, through the language and arts of Hip Hop culture.”


Here are the program outline and goals:

·      Instill self-confidence in program participants

·      Expose world communities to Hip Hop and emerging art forms

·      Strive to overcome cultural and economic barriers

·      Foster creative bonds between students

·      Promote the benefits of creative expression

·      Create international relationships between young people

 

For more information contact: Info@artsbythepeople.com

 

Israel’s emergency medical service hires its 1st female Muslim ambulance driver

I loved seeing this story because it goes to show what I already know on the ground. The media wants to show how Arabs and Jews are fighting, but the reality on the ground is different. There is much cooperation, although there needs to be more, between Israeli Jews and Israeli Arabs.

This woman, Sherian Kihia, is an outstanding example of someone taking a step in the right direction in trying to resolve this issue.

Hopefully, I’ll see more of these stories to come.

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Israel’s MDA hires its 1st woman Muslim ambulance driver

קיחיה. התגברה על הביקורות (צילום: שלומי כהן)

Kihia. Overcoming criticism (Photo: Shlomi Cohen)

Thanks to family’s support, Israeli-Arab Sherian Kihia overcomes internal criticism and puzzled looks by Arab and Jewish patients on the way to fulfill her dream. ‘I engage in saving lives, not in questions of religion,’ she says

 For years, 24-year-old Sherian Kihia of east Jerusalem dreamed of volunteering with the Magen David Adom emergency organization. In order to realize her ambition she had to overcome internal and external criticism about working alongside men and until the small hours of the night.

Now, after being admitted by MDA and making history as the organization’s first female Arab ambulance driver, she says with complete confidence: “I engage in saving lives and don’t get into questions of religion or nationality. I’m actually receiving a lot of support from other Arabs.”

There were quite a few difficulties on the way. “Friends and family asked me why would I want to volunteer with Magen David Adom (the Israeli medical volunteer service) and not with the Red Cross, for example. But my parents helped me move on and make progress in the professional courses offered by the organization.”

If you ask Kihia, this isn’t her last stop in the rescue organization – one day she would like to become a paramedic. In the meantime, she receives all the possible support from her family members, and particularly from her new husband whom she married several months ago. “One of the problems was the fact that I get home late, which is unacceptable in my sector,” she shares, “but my family supported me and so did my husband. He said, ‘Do what you want. You have my support.’

The other MDA volunteers, she says, appeared unmoved by the fact that she’s a Muslim. “They treat me well and like me here, despite the language difficulties,” she says. In the meantime, she is getting puzzled looks on the street when people recognize her as part of the emergency crew.

“The Arabs are very surprised to see me driving an ambulance. They can’t believe that I have a driver’s license and that I’m a medical assistant,” she says. “After they understand, they actually compliment me.”

Kihia receives a lot of encouragement from the other side as well. “On Yom Kippur I was stationed outside a very big synagogue in Jerusalem, with thousands of worshippers. All the women there were very excited to see me, especially in light of the fact that I’m Arab,” she recalls. “They treated me well and showed me a lot of respect.”

Murad Salman, director of the east Jerusalem team, concludes: “We hope that Kihia’s decision to join us will raise awareness for volunteer work among other young people from the Arab sector.”

To see the rest of the story, click here.

Last night in Jerusalem I checked out this amazing band called ACollective. They totally rocked the house last night. Who would have thought that Jerusalem would have such a cool, hipster scene? 

What’s even crazier is that next to me there was this guy I met named Ali, he’s from Abu Gosh, a predominately Arab neighborhood near Jerusalem. I’m sure he’s an Israeli-Arab, but I didn’t ask, because it didn’t matter. We were all here together to jam and enjoy the music. He told me he always travels to Tel Aviv just to hear the band and he directed me to their website where you can hear their songs for free…

Check the band out: http://joinacollective.com/

Looking forward to checking out of more their shows…

Both our peoples knew extraordinary partnership for many years in ancient times, during the Middle Ages, and in the modern era, with…quarrels and disputes being few and far between. Unfortunately, we have documented the disputes one hundred times more than the periods of friendship and cooperation. I dream of the day when, thanks to the collaboration among us, this region will become a home overflowing with the light of learning and science, and blessed by the highest principles of heaven.

Egyptian writer Naguib Mahfouz in a letter to an Iraqi Jewish writer

So we’re not the only ones eating Chinese food on Christmas…

Jews and Muslims team up on Christmas to volunteer in Detroit’s busiest soup kitchens…it sure beats all the calories of eating Chinese food and watching movies…


In the U.S., Detroit’s Jewish community continued their annual tradition of working side-by-side with their Muslims neighbors to volunteer together at over 40 social service agencies, such as local soup kitchens, helping the local population in need celebrate Christmas.

About 125 Muslims joined about 800 Jewish volunteers on Christmas to celebrate Mitzvah Day, the single largest day of volunteering by the Detroit Jewish community. It’s the third year for the team-up between Jews and Muslims.

The Jewish Community Relations Council of Metropolitan Detroit has sponsored Mitzvah Day for more than 20 years. This will be the third year that Muslims have joined the effort. Mitzvah means “commandment” in Hebrew and is generally translated as a good deed.


My peace-seeking plans have competition…a bikini model…

So I was reading how an Israeli-Arab women, Huda Naccache, won the title of Miss Israel in the international Miss Earth Beauty Contest…while I never heard of this competition before (obviously since it doesn’t star Donald Trump’s hairpiece), I thought it was pretty interesting that an Israeli-Arab is representing Israel. Naccaache said that she “hopes to create a program that will combine both the environment and politics for Israeli and Arab children to work together, and it would be called ‘Earth for Peace,’” she wrote on the Miss Earth web site.

So while her project may be getting more attention than my little blog, most likely due to the fact that she’s posing in a bikini and I’m sitting in my pajamas writing this, I hope that she wins the Miss Earth title and uses her fame and notoriety to help start this Environmental Peace program.

I think having her represent Israel will bring awareness to the fact that Israel has 1.2 million Israeli-Arabs who go to Israeli schools and universities, work, have their own homes, have political members in the Knesset (Israeli Congress). People think that it’s just a war-zone here, with everybody killing each other,  but in reality I see with my own eyes that there are numerous Arabs and Israelis living peacefully, side-by-side in every city.

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Kosher BBQ competition is a hit with Jews and Muslims

If there’s anything that can bring the Jews and Muslims of Tennessee together, it would be barbecue.  

The 23rd annual Kosher BBQ Contest and Festival began with local Tennessee Jews who wanted to participate in the nearby Mississippi River City famed World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest, but the meat consisted of overwhelmingly Pork dishes, that neither Jews nor Muslims eat.  So a group of local Jews decided to start their own BBQ Cooking contest with Kosher meat. So when the Memphis Islamic Center found out, they wanted to participate and asked to join the Kosher BBQ festival. I read that throughout the day, the Jewish and Muslim cooks ended up chatting and discussing all the similarities and differences of the laws governing halal and kosher meat.

  BBQ as a new tool for bridging cross-cultural diplomacy? Maybe that’s what we’ve been missing in Israel…More BBQ….okay now…who’s going to man the grill?


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