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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsA Jewish-Arab Partnership Is Building a Young New Peace Camp in Israel
Last edited Sat Jan 6, 2024, 01:08 PM - Edit history (2)
From Haaretz. A little bit of hope this newly formed organization hopefully is the future for Israel and Palestine. Ive posted about them before and continue to be impressed with their outreach. Sometimes I need a ray of hope.
It is a very long article filled with many stories. It is so worth reading (IMHO)
Amid the war in Gaza, Standing Together is on a roll: It has 5,000 dues-paying members, the number of its student chapters has doubled, and new groups of Jews and Arabs are working to preserve solidarity and to instill hope for shared life in Israel
"You're not alone," said the Jewish woman to the Arab woman. Shedding tears, the two Israelis, who were meeting for the first time, embraced. The scene played out in the modest Lod apartment of the Arab woman, Isra Abou Laban Oudi. She's a single mother, and her 3-year-old son, Tareq, scampered merrily among the 14 strangers, Jews and Arabs, who were guests in his home.
From the beginning of the school year, Oudi says, her son, who speaks only Arabic, had attended a municipal Hebrew-speaking preschool. After October 7, when the children returned to school, Tareq too was happy to reunite with his friends after what had been a two-week break. However, Oudi says, when she heard him speaking Arabic, his teacher hit him and demanded he not use "that language."
SNIP
The whole situation left Oudi feeling helpless and very much alone. That is, until the solidarity encounter that took place in her home, when members of Standing Together an Arab-Jewish social movement that seeks to advance a beneficent, egalitarian society in Israel through joint grassroots activity came to show their support.
Three days after that visit, Oudi and her toddler son attended an event organized by the movement in the nearby city of Ramle which, like Lod, has a mixed population. There, in a banquet hall that had no banquets to host, Arabs and Jews were working side by side to prepare food packages for Jewish, Muslim and Christian families whose source of livelihood had been truncated because of the war.
Oudi and her son did not join in the activity of Standing Together ("Omdim Beyahad" in Hebrew) by chance. It's part of the "recovery plan" that the movement recommends for people who have been hurt by racism: to transform the affront into constructive activity. "It gives people the strength to translate the hurt into joint activity, restores a renewed sense of control and also brings us new and highly motivated members," explains Omri Goren, 24, who oversees the movement's activity in the Ramle-Lod area and also heads its student division.
SNIP
https://archive.is/1c3Kl]. Free Link
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2024-01-05/ty-article-magazine/.highlight/a-jewish-arab-partnership-is-building-a-young-new-peace-camp-in-israel/0000018c-daa9-d751-ad8d-ffadd6e00000]. Haaretz Link if you have subscription
Nanjeanne
(5,434 posts)Sigal-Koren, a resident of Kibbutz Pelekh, in the Misgav region, describes the solidarity visit that movement members paid her as "the most powerful and most hopeful I have experienced since all this started. The encounter touched me in a way that no other meeting in this period has," she tells Haaretz.
The Standing Together activists asked Sigal-Koren how they could help her and other families of the captives, and suddenly it occurred to her to that the campaign being conducted online and via posters and billboards calling for the captives' release should be translated into Arabic too. That was in fact speedily done with the aid of members of the solidarity squad. Sigal-Koren was subsequently invited to tell her story at a meeting of Standing Together in the Arab town of Nahaf. Speaking before an audience of 300 Arabs and Jews, she called for the return from Gaza of her uncle, Fernando Marman, and Louis Har, her mother's partner (her mother, Clara, was released on November 28).
Nanjeanne
(5,434 posts)This quote ending the article is particularly worth reading.
"In the social media," Tamar continues, "all the posts were dark and frightening, and suddenly I saw a purple-colored post, which said something about partnership, in both Hebrew and Arabic. I felt like someone had thrown me a lifebelt of grace. I wrote to the people behind the post, who were from Standing Together, to ask whether the movement had a branch in Deir al-Asad.
"They said they didn't, so I decided to take the initiative and set up a solidarity guard of Arab and Jewish communities in the Galilee. Within hours, we had 350 new members. We held our first meeting via Zoom, and the feeling was so good that we decided to continue with a face-to-face meeting."
Asadi continues: "We invited everyone to us, to the community center in Deir al-Asad. One of the people who came, from Kibbutz Tuval [nearby], apologized for having to leave early, because he had guard duty at the kibbutz 'to protect us from you,' he said and everyone laughed. I haven't stopped talking about that remark, and I understood how important what we are doing in Standing Together is.