SPRING 2017
IN ACTION NEWSLETTER Seeds Voices Bridging divides between women in Israel Israeli Seed, GATHER Fellow, and attorney Keren on her venture to improve equal access to support for all women in Israel. The GATHER Fellowship represents Seeds of Peace’s investment in changemakers with the greatest potential to transform conflict. Many people have this sexist notion about women; they like to think of women in cat fights, or as constant enemies of one another. The truth is, most women know collaboration and relationships are the only way to survive. I am the Director of ‘Shutafot,’ a coalition of 16 women’s organizations from all backgrounds in Israel, focused on promoting economic equality. In Israel, despite progressive laws to ensure gender equality, discrimination against women is entrenched in society. At every age, place and cultural background we find women and girls receiving fewer opportunities
and resources than boys and men. The more marginalized the group, the wider the gaps are in pay, representation in management positions, employment rates, and more. Feminist and women’s organizations have been fighting—some for decades, and some for months—to improve the lives of women on every front. The feminist sector is booming with activities, hotlines, training, shelters, advocacy, protests, support and representation. However, most of the public isn’t aware of them. The organizations must do more to
convince the public of their legitimacy and impact so that women know where to turn in crisis. Surprisingly, there is no comprehensive collection of information on all the awesome activities and services being offered. My venture, supported by the GATHER Fellowship, seeks to create the online infrastructure for that exact information: an interactive website where women can discover we are there for them in all walks of life. Organizations can discover one another to collaborate, and in turn, women can find ways to help one another. In this way, we will be helping to create a more sustainable, collaborative portal, so that every woman in Israel is supported in the very best way. Essentially, we are attempting to build a bridge between women in all corners of the country and the organizations that are available to advance them.
Touring UK with Solutions Not Sides
LONDON | Our partners at Solutions Not Sides ran a tour in Manchester in February with Palestinian Seed Yasser and Israeli Seed Seffy. The goal of the program was to reduce polarization and prejudice among British students and community groups related to attitudes on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Through 14 sessions and events reaching around 600 people, these two Palestinian and Israeli Seeds educated participants about the complexities of the situation on the ground for their respective societies, and promoted a solutions-focused approach to the conflict. YASSER (2009 Palestinian Seed)
Reflecting on negotiation and mediation seminar led by Harvard Law School staff JERUSALEM | Thirty-six Palestinian, Israeli, American, and UK Seeds took part in a fourday mediation and negotiation seminar led by Harvard Law School faculty near Jerusalem in January. Here are reflections from two of the participants. Muaz (2014 Palestinian Seed) I have many goals which Seeds of Peace is helping me to achieve, and participating in this seminar was one of them. I learned many skills during the seminar such as strategies that lead to fruitful achievements in the process of negotiation and mediation. I also learned important principles of any negotiation and mediation process, like active listening skills and the ability to understand the situation from the point of view of the other side. After participating in the negotiation and mediation seminar, I do believe that the idea of “my way or no way” is a mistaken idea because there is always a middle way. Since I hope to improve the situation here in Palestine, I started to apply the skills I learned in this seminar in my community. I started doing this with my friends at the university by trying to reconcile their views and showing that they have many common aspects, despite the divergence in their political views.
Bayan (2015 Israeli Seed) I thought about applying for the Harvard negotiation and mediation seminar more than three times. I thought it won’t be any different from other academic seminars I’ve been to (just some boring lectures that aren’t interesting or useful), but this seminar was unique. I felt I gained so much; the lectures were so interesting and fun and we practiced real life examples. The Harvard Law School lecturers were amazing and the way they presented the information was exciting to me. I enjoyed the activity on the last day the most! They gave us a real conflict scenario and divided us into groups. Each one of us assumed a different role and we had to negotiate. The roles and the conflict were so similar to the Israeli-Arab conflict, which was the best part. I also enjoyed the activity when they separated us into pairs and one of us was a listener and the other was the speaker and the listener had to play the role as a bad listener and then we switched the roles to learn from each other. This seminar made me want to know more, to study more, and, of course, negotiate and mediate more in real life. Now I’m an active participant in a negotiation program in my school and I’m rocking it!
As a Palestinian who was born in Cairo but spent the majority of my life living in Gaza and Ramallah, I am able to look at the complexities of the conflict from both the inside and the outside. I also brought my experience with Seeds of Peace to the Solutions Not Sides educational tour. The program looks for leaders who can help in creating a safe space to discuss the conflict in a balanced, nuanced, and solutions-focused way. Through these various sessions, we humanized both Israelis and Palestinians. This encouraged the students to look at the conflict in a different light, resulting in them asking deep and thoughtful questions, and showing they had gained a greater understanding of the complexities and the histories of the conflict. Meeting pragmatic and inspirational Israelis and Palestinians was the first and perhaps greatest step in empowering these kids to better understand the multifaceted political, religious, social, and ethnic identities that Israelis and Palestinians hold. I hope that by humanizing the situation, we can be the first people that they think of in times of upheaval in Israel and Palestine, rather than the extremists and the politicians whose actions cause suffering and pain to the citizens. We need to end the violence first and look beyond it to a future full of potential. continueD (OVER)