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Happy International Women (Activists) Day!

Friday, March 8 was International Women’s Day. In honor of this day, the local Jerusalem newspaper, Yediot Yerushalayim, ran an article (in Hebrew), listing the “35 Most Influential Women who Changed Jerusalem in the Past Year.”

Among those listed – our own Michal Sherez Shilor, Director of Multicultural Activism. 0202 translated her section in this Facebook post in English:

“At a certain point I understood that I live in a certain Jerusalem, and I don’t even know what goes on with my neighbors that live in a different Jerusalem. That’s why I founded the 0202 non-profit foundation, which provides access to points of view from East, West and Haredi Jerusalem to each other, in Arabic and Hebrew, through Facebook, guided tours, meetings etc’ – with no specific interpretation of events or biased filtering of facts.

“Just like that, simply by seeing the other side. Incidentally, today we are celebrating our 4th year on air and this year we launched a new program for activities in Arabic and citizenship classes, using current affairs in Jerusalem. The foundation’s staff includes 45 people – Jews, Arabs, Haredi, ex-Haredi and secular – in short, a mini-Jerusalem.

[…] “Jerusalem is the world’s capital of tolerance. There are already many residents who promote tolerance and multi-culturalism in our city. We now need for people from within and from outside the city to see and know about this initiative, so that they can proudly say that there are many cultures and public spheres of common good in Jerusalem. We now need to spread the message for it to be heard above all the city’s rooftops, all over the country, and be seen by all eyes watching Zion.”

The full interview with Michal, and the other 34 women who were chosen, can be found here.

 

We work with many of the others listed as well. All the women were asked, what’s it like to be a woman in Jerusalem?

Fay Sukenik, with whom we work on a number of issues, including involvement in the Haredi community, said:

“It’s being in the heart of action, in the heart of the conflict. To be in a fertile place of social entrepreneurs and cooperation between sectors. A city with conflicts is a challenging city that enables action and growth. We don’t need to be afraid of it…To live in Jerusalem means to live in a place where anything can happen, if you only believe and work hard toward that goal.”

Efrat Givaty, who works with us on The Little Prince – Cleaning Up Jerusalem Together, said:

To dream and to do the impossible in a city full of possibilities.

Aliza Meir-Epstein, who we work with on the Good Neighbors project in Abu Tor, said:

Jerusalem women have a critical role in designing the city, which directly impacts the face of the entire nation. Jerusalem is a microcosm of the State of Israel. Many of the country’s central issues are concentrated here and receive a louder and more extreme flavor here. It is in our hands to influence the discourse, the approach and to find innovative and creative solutions.

Ariel Markose, with whom we work on the Jerusalem Model, said:

It means to exist with many identities, and each one is a world in and of itself. I think it’s not only among women – to be a Jerusalemite means to have a number of layers. A woman in Jerusalem is a complex thing, because everything in your life is associated with a part of your Jerusalem-ness. Your neighborhood, your religion, your political identity, your work, your volunteering. The very fact that you live in Jerusalem expresses your choices, because no one is in Jerusalem by chance. So to be a woman in Jerusalem is to be very nuanced, which is fascinating and part of the richness I feel in my life in this city.

And there were many more. Here’s a link to the Internet version of the article, in Hebrew.

Article first page

Article first page

Here’s the Facebook post in Hebrew from the Jerusalem Tolerance Facebook page:

Congratulations to all those listed, and keep up the good work!

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2020-06-18T04:39:27+00:00March 18th, 2019|Blog, Effective Activism, Promoting Tolerance in Jerusalem|

Little Prince – Learning from Success

Part of learning about how to make Jerusalem a clean city is also learning about what works. One of the goals set out in the Little Prince’s one-year anniversary celebration last July was to learn from other successes. And Rishon Lezion is ranked the cleanest city in Israel according to national indicators.

Jerusalem residents and city officials learning from Rishon Lezion

Jerusalem residents and city officials learning from Rishon Lezion

So we went to Rishon Lezion to learn what they do well.

We went with a group of Municipality officials – both elected and professional – including David Zohar, a city council representative from the Haredi Degel Hatorah party.

We discussed the actions that the Rishon Lezion municipality takes in order to keep its streets clean – the amount of resources it dedicates to the field, the number of sanitation works, the number of overseers, the level of enforcement, (They give out 4,600 tickets each year, just to people who don’t clean up after their dogs!)  – all of which are significant, and significantly higher per capita than many cities in Israel, including in Jerusalem. There is a great deal of planning and strategic thinking, both within municipal departments and in cross-department cooperation. Residents are also considered full partners in the effort to keep Rishon Lezion clean. As a result of hard work and careful planning and cooperative work, the Director of Rishon Lezion’s Environment Division has been able to instill a sense of pride among sanitation workers, which is rare for that municipal branch. There is even a mechanism for measurement and reward for outstanding workers.

It was fascinating and inspiring. Next step – Jerusalem!

Here’s what the Playback Theater had to say (at the Trash Party we had recently) about the comparison between Jerusalem and Rishon Lezion (Hebrew):

Many thanks to the Rayne Foundation for their support of the Little Prince. And to the Jerusalem Foundation for its support of activism throughout Jerusalem.

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Trash Party! Celebrating Clean Targets in Jerusalem

Congratulations Little Prince! As a result of all its hard work, the new city administration has chosen a Clean City as a main, central objective! This means that all Department Directors are now busy writing work plans on how to implement Clean City programming in their departments – from sanitation to city beautification, enforcement to education, welfare to culture, public buildings, and more. In addition, the Municipality has received an additional 52 million NIS to the Clean City budget, and Mayor Lion is addressing the target of a Clean City from a range of angles – not only garbage collection, but also public gardens, courtyards, enforcement, supervision, education and awareness-raising, improving infrastructure, improving procedures, and more.

Celebrating Clean Targets in Jerusalem

Celebrating Clean Targets in Jerusalem

We had to celebrate that accomplishment. So on February 4, we rented a party room at the Inbal Hotel, with a rich variety of refreshments. Activists from the Arab, Haredi and ‘general’ Jewish sectors spoke about their experiences thus far, and their visions for the future. We also invited the Playback Theater, which gave a fantastic performance! Who knew trash could be so funny?

Here’s a taste of the performance (Hebrew):

 

Many thanks to the Rayne Foundation for its support of the Little Prince. And to the Jerusalem Foundation for its support for encouraging activism in Jerusalem.

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Saying Thank You to Window to Mount Zion

We’ve been working with the Benedictine monks at the Dormition Abbey, as part of the Window to Mount Zion project, since the project’s inception.

Father Daniel, telling the Dormition Abbey's story

Father Daniel, telling the Dormition Abbey’s story

On Thursday, February 21, they wanted to say thank you.

View from the Dormition Abbey's tower

View from the Dormition Abbey’s tower

They invited project volunteers for cake, coffee, and a tour of the Dormition Abbey. Led by Father Daniel, who is in charge of relationships with the Israeli community, the 20 participants enjoyed stories from within the Abbey – about the monks’ daily lives, about the artwork that adorns the walls and halls. Father Daniel also told of his experiences as a Polish monk in a German monastery. We also enjoyed the view from the top of the Abbey’s tower.

Telling about the artwork and daily life

Telling about the artwork and daily life

It was important for the monks to express their thanks to the hard-won feeling of cooperation and teamwork among volunteers and Mount Zion residents that enables all groups and religions to share Mount Zion in peace.

Views of David's Tomb, from the Dormition Abbey tower

View of courtyard in David’s Tomb complex, from the Dormition Abbey tower

Thank you Father Daniel – and the rest of the Dormition Abbey community – for opening your home up to us. It was a fascinating visit! Thanks also to all our partners on Mount Zion – it’s amazing to look back and see how far we’ve come!

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2019-03-11T07:36:48+00:00March 3rd, 2019|Blog, Mount Zion|

Atta’a – Success with a Little Help from Our Friends

The Atta’a Assistance Center for the Rights of East Jerusalem Residents has a variety of activities that aim to advance rights realization – from one-on-one assistance, awareness-raising lectures, help online. One of its main channels in recent years has been making the wealth of information accessible to East Jerusalem residents – especially online – via the Internet and social media.

Sometimes it just takes one Facebook post to reach the huge impact you were looking for.

From the Atta'a Facebook page

From the Atta’a Facebook page

We were asked by the National Insurance Institute (NII) to write a post about the new location of the East Jerusalem branch of the NII. On the one hand, it was a simple post, basically “The National Insurance Institute has announced that the public will be received at its new branch. The new building is located on the 16 bus line (Highway 1), next to the Sheikh Jarrah medical center. You can reach it via the light rail.”

On the other hand, this information is so important to the 350,000 Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem who need to contact the NII. They posted it on their Facebook page, and over 13,000 (!) people viewed that post on their Facebook page alone! They also posted to other popular East Jerusalem Facebook pages, where even more residents saw it.

Here’s the original post in Arabic:

It’s always great to see when Atta’a’s activities have an impact. You can read more about that impact here.

Many thanks to the Leichtag and Jerusalem Foundations for their support of Atta’a.

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2019-03-22T20:07:21+00:00March 3rd, 2019|Attaa, Blog, Palestinians/Arabs|

The Little Prince – For a Clean City Platform

We’ve described here and here some of our latest efforts to make Jerusalem a clean city, thanks to the efforts of the Little Prince – Cleaning Up Jerusalem Together initiative.

Last Friday, on February 22, 2019, Shlomi Buchnik published this opinion piece on the MyNet web site, which is associated with the popular Ynet web site. You can read the Hebrew here. As we can read, the buzz of the Little Prince is deep into this new municipal administration! Hope the buzz will turn into actual outcomes in the streets soon!

Here’s an English translation of the piece:

Three Months after Leon was elected, I feel Positive Winds of Change from Safra Square

The truth is, I did not believe any of the promises of Moshe Leon’s election. I must admit there is something in his clean vision that even bored me. But perhaps after Barkat’s dramatic roller coaster, this silence is blessed.

I remind you of my sins today: I did not believe any of the promises of the municipal elections that accompanied us in the past year, and especially not those of Moshe Leon. I read them with a mocking smile. After every promise I hastened to explain why I did not believe them. I could not believe it when he talked about free parking, and certainly not the one that promised to improve cleanliness. I did not think he would get rid of garbage in the streets, and it seemed absurd to me that he would evacuate garbage daily in areas where people go out.

I must admit that there is something in Leon’s clean vision that even bored me. How do you compare the excitement of Formula 1 or the Marathon to thrill of an empty trash can? In my shallow eyes, I preferred the approach of his predecessor, Nir Barkat, who sometimes did not seem interested in the daily troubles of the Jerusalem resident, but at least he gave us the feeling that we live in a European capital.

The problem is that, like Cinderella, at midnight (and perhaps a little before) we returned to reality. Barkat did invest in a revolutionary program to clean up the city, but the Machane Yehuda Shuk remains dirty. The ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods were filthy, and the garbage activists were often forced to replace the Jerusalem Municipality. When a Jerusalemite wanted to solve the local garbage problem, he preferred to turn to the Little Prince and Jerusalem of Garbage, groups that the residents established to solve the problem.

This week I sat down to talk to an old friend who has been an activist for clean streets even longer. In recent years, the conversations with him were stinking, literally and figuratively. They dealt with the sorry state of municipal garbage, which bothered him more than the access highways to the city or the housing problem. “I live in an ultra-Orthodox neighborhood and feel that I live in a perpetual garbage dump,” he always said.

This week my friend smiled when he talked about the garbage situation in the streets. This hasn’t happened in a decade. He explained that since Moshe Leon was elected, the response to sanitation complaints has changed. He has been invited to meetings that deal with the subject in local community centers, and even takes care of dog feces. “Do not be mistaken, there are still quite a few things to do, but I feel that if we continue like this, we’re moving in the right direction,” he explained to me.

City sanitation workers speak enthusiastically about the changing atmosphere. They tell of direction from above that cleanliness is more important than anything. Some explain that Nir Barkat began this last year, but everyone is aware that Leon accepts no compromises. “In the past month, we have been cleaning areas that we have not been in for years. We’ve found trash that’s ten years old,” said one of them.

Leon’s hundred days of grace ended this week. I promised myself that I would not criticize him during this time. I was convinced that at the end of that time I would stand with a bag and criticize him for everything he’s done. Like many of the city’s residents, I was afraid as well. Less because of an increasing religiosity of the city and the alliance with the ultra-Orthodox, and more because of fears of ethical practices.

Today, three months after he was elected, I can say that I feel positive winds of change from Safra Square, especially in the area of cleanliness. There are no strikes that threaten the Finance Minister, no struggles with the heads of community centers, and even the mini-drama in the Shuk ended long before it was exciting.

Moshe Leon still isn’t a visionary. He has no dreams that will excite the Jerusalemites. It’s also clear to me that three months is too little time to completely believe in him, and I promise to be there to make sure he does not fall and does not tire of keeping his morals. But perhaps after the dramatic roller coaster provided by Barkat, this silence is blessed. And perhaps this is our opportunity to give a first and clean opportunity to Moshe Leon.

Many thanks to the Rayne Foundation for their support of the Little Prince, as well as to the Jerusalem Foundation, for their support in developing activism in Jerusalem.

 

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Course for Medical Interpreters in Jerusalem

Have you ever waited for a doctor’s appointment at an outpatient clinic and the nurse comes out and asks, “Can someone help us in translating into Arabic / Russian/ Amharic / French?” Usually, a passer-by will volunteer to help translate the conversation between the specialist and the embarrassed patient, whose secrets are now being exposed to an inexperienced stranger at best. Research tells us the chances are that the quality of translation will be poor, and the chances of making a mistake in such a non-professional translation are very high. And who knows what the quality of health care will be like?

Culturally Competent Medical Interpreting Course held at Sha'are Zedek Medical Center

Medical Interpreting Course held at Sha’are Zedek Medical Center

In January 2019 we opened another course for medical interpreting (i.e. oral translation) skills for medical professionals and volunteers in Jerusalem hospitals. There, the 30 participants are learning to do it right. (because even the Russian and Hebrew-speaking nurse will interpret poorly if he or she hasn’t learned best practices, ethics and proper terminology.) Participants come from Hadassah, Sha’are Zedek, ALYN Rehabilitative Hospitals. There are also some independent participants.

30 participants, from throughout Jerusalem

30 participants, from throughout Jerusalem

Our Dr. Michal Schuster, who has led with us the field of Cultural Competency for over a decade, is leading the course. She’s noted, “One of the things I most like to do in these courses is to take things apart and build them back up. To deconstruct existing viewpoints (either conscious and unconscious) about language, translation and interpreting, and, together with the participants, build a strong basis for proper and more accurate interpreting. It’s not an easy process at all – neither for me nor for them – but it is very rewarding.”

The team working with Michal are the language experts: Tanya Voinova, Salih Sawaed and Messale Mamo.

Learning what medical interpretation is, its main challenges, and why it is so complex

Learning what medical interpretation is, its main challenges, and why it is so complex

One more step in making Jerusalem friendlier – and more culturally competent and culturally sensitive – to all its residents.

Many thanks to our partners

Many thanks to our partners

This course could not have taken place without the partnership of the Jerusalem Foundation, our strategic partner in Cultural Competency for over a decade. And many thanks to our partners in action Sha’are Zedek Medical Center (who are graciously hosting the course), Hadassah Medical Center, and Alyn Pediatric and Adolescent Rehabilitation Center.

Here’s the Facebook post written by our Director, Hagai Agmon-Snir:

And Michal’s post:

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2019-03-02T12:43:12+00:00February 24th, 2019|Blog, Cultural Competence, Cultural Competence in Health Services|

Cultural Competency – The Prime Example of Successful Management

What is the secret to successful management? Cultural Competency, of course!

Dr. Maurit Be’eri, Director of the ALYN Rehabilitative Hospital, was recently a speaker at the 4th annual Women and Business conference, which was held on January 16, 2019 in Tel Aviv. More than 700 women, ground breakers in their fields of business, entrepreneurship and leadership, took part in the day-long conference. This was the largest conference for women in business in Israel. Here is her 6-minute presentation (in Hebrew):

Dr. Be’eri spoke about female leadership in medicine as both an allegory and a challenge. The challenge – the fact that there are only 4 directors of public hospitals throughout Israel. Or the fact that there is another – male – Dr. Be’eri who is a Department Director, and he is referred to as “Dr. Be’eri” while she is referred to as “Dr. Maurit.” But the lesson? The main example she brought as successful lesson of female leadership – was Cultural Competency, which we’ve been privileged to be a part of since ALYN began the process more than 10 years ago. Her main message: Women manage differently than men. When we allow ourselves to manage as women, we are more flexible, open and sensitive. When we keep lines of communication open between administration, staff, and patients and their families, asking for opinions and input – and fostering Cultural Competency – together, the hospital will move forward.

Thank you, Dr. Maurit, for showcasing Cultural Competency at this important conference.

Thank you to the Jerusalem Foundation for its continuous support of cultural competency since its inception. Want to learn more about the conference? You can read more here.

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2019-11-16T11:06:48+00:00February 16th, 2019|Blog, Cultural Competence|

Window to Mount Zion – Ceremony for Praying for Church Unity

On Thursday, January 24, Window to Mount Zion volunteers again helped local Christian clergy, followers and tourists celebrate the ceremony of Praying for Church Unity.

Praying for church unity in the Cenacle - Room of the Last Supper

Praying for church unity in the Cenacle – Room of the Last Supper

In the past, people who’ve gathered outside actually disturbed the ceremony inside.

Protesting outside

Protesting outside

Fortunately, since the Window to Mount Zion project began, the ceremony has been held without major incident. You can read about it here and here. You can watch a few moments of the ceremony here:

There were still protesters, but it didn’t bother the ceremony.

Unique processes on Mount Zion

Unique processes on Mount Zion

This year, in addition to thanks from the monks themselves, the Jerusalem Center for Jewish-Christian Relations (JCRC) wrote a great post, thanking the project for the change it has instilled. It was written in response to the following signs that were displayed by two protesters:

Protesting at David's Tomb

Protesting at David’s Tomb

The English sign says, “According to law in Israel you are not allowed to perform any Christian rituals in King David’s tomb.”  In Hebrew it says, “Here is King David’s tomb, which is holy to us, not a Christian church.”

Here’s a translation of post:

Kind David’s tomb has not been a church since 1521, when the Muslims converted it into a mosque. But it was built as a church during the Crusader period on the foundations of the Byzantine Hagia Zion church.

Despite the English sign, there is no law in Israel forbidding a Christian ceremony at David’s Tomb, but since 1948 David’s Tomb has been run by the Religious Affairs Ministry (the National Authority for the Holy Places). It is usually used as a place of Jewish worship, and allows members of different religions to visit. Once a year, the State of Israel allows the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate to visit David’s Tomb as part of the Shavuot procession on the second day of the festival.

So what caused the two people to stand with these signs last Thursday near the entrance to the Tomb of David?

The second floor!

On the second floor of the building, which was built as a Crusader church on Byzantine foundations, became a mosque in the 16th century and was expropriated by the State of Israel after 1948,  is the Room of the Last Supper and the Holy Spirit. It is a very important site for Christians of all denominations.
Since the site is managed by the State of Israel (the Ministry of Religious Affairs and today the Ministry of the Interior), the State of Israel has continued the status quo and enabled Christians to visit the site, a short and quiet prayer (as explained at the entrance) and several times a year they can hold short prayers on relevant days.

The State of Israel also allowed the Christians to hold a joint prayer for the unity of the churches that has existed for decades.

But in recent years, in the light of the Franciscans’ appeal to allow them to pray under certain circumstances in the Room of the Last Supper, a request that, by the way, had not yet been answered, rumors circulated about the requests of various churches regarding the Last Supper Room. Some of the rumors have also spread to the first floor and people can still be heard about how the Vatican sought to buy David’s Tomb or whether the pope made his 2014 visit conditional on receiving the keys to the tomb. But there was nothing to those rumors.

The Franciscans had already tried to return the site to their control under the British Mandate – since they had bought outright in 1333 – and failed. At the moment there is no change in the status quo regarding the prayers on the spot.

The tension generated by the project led to the creation of the Window to Mount Zion project (https://www.mountzion.org.il), which aims to create a dialogue among residents on the mount, promote an atmosphere of mutual respect between the citrus and the visitors, and deepen our knowledge and understanding of the complex.

Every year, volunteers from the window to Mount Zion arrive on these sensitive days, where Christians are permitted to hold a short prayer in the Room of the Last Supper, and help the policemen maintain a calm and dignified atmosphere. They talk to those who come to protest, explain to the surprised tourists why the site is closed for visits during the prayer, and talk to the local Christians who are happy to see that Israeli Jews care about them, the Jewish worshipers and Jerusalem.

And here’s the original Facebook post in Hebrew:

Thanks to the many volunteers who make this project possible!

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2019-03-02T12:37:42+00:00February 10th, 2019|Blog, Christians, Mount Zion|

JICC and Jerusalem Foundation in Der Welt Newspaper

We are proud of our accomplishments throughout the city, and especially proud of our accomplishments over the past few years here at our home on Mount Zion (You can read more here). An article was recently published in Der Welt, a nationally published German newspaper, about this. Here’s the original article in German, and here’s a translation:

The article in Der Welt

The article in Der Welt

Today, We No Longer Fight about Parking

By Gil Yaron

Mount Zion in Jerusalem is sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims – for centuries they have been neglected as neighbors. A group of activists could now resolve this dispute, and thus become a role model for all of Jerusalem.

As the dean of the ecumenical year of study of German churches on Mount Zion in Jerusalem, Professor Ulrich Winkler usually speaks mostly of charity. But when he looks at the sacred hill right outside the window of his workplace, it reminds him of the opposite of the Christian message: “If at some point the third world war broke out, it would be because of a dispute over parking here on Mount Zion,” says the former Salzburg resident.

He used to be forced to run out in pajamas in the middle of the night, when there had once again been bickering between Christians, Jews and Muslims outside the gates of the school .

And that was not the only type of dispute that was part of everyday life here: “Garbage was thrown into the garden, our doorknobs were smeared with feces,” says Winkler. Other times car tires were punctured, priests and students harassed. But now much of these tensions have become a thing of the past, thanks to the energetic efforts of a small group of Israelis who have set themselves the task of mediating between the people in the Holy City. It has been surprisingly successful.

“When we moved here in 2006, we ourselves were very scared of this mountain,” says Dr. Hagai Agmon-Snir, director and founder of the Jerusalem Intercultural Center on Mount Zion. “All the neighbors here were neglected for centuries. Anyone who interfered threatened to become the target of hostility. ”

Hardly a hill of Jerusalem – with the exception of the Temple Mount – is more controversial than Mount Zion. As early as the 4th century, the Mount housed a Byzantine church or synagogue, which after the conquest of the Holy Land in the 7th century was transformed into a mosque by Muslims. The Crusaders again made it a church and declared the feudal room on the first floor to be the place where Jesus is said to have taken his last supper – the Cenacle.

At the same time, they located the tomb of the legendary biblical King David on the ground floor, transforming it into a sanctuary of the three monotheistic religions.

The Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent expelled the monks in 1524 from the building, which from then on served as a mosque. It was administered by the mighty Dajani family, long-established Jerusalem Arabs who can trace their family tree back to the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad.

When the State of Israel was proclaimed in 1948 , the mosque became a synagogue. The supposed grave of King David became the holiest place in the Jewish state, which was cut off from the Temple Mount and Wailing Wall until 1967.

Today, four different churches and monasteries, a huge Yeshiva, a Holocaust museum and a Muslim cemetery are struggling to help shape the narrative of this mountain.

The tensions reached a climax a few years ago: graves were abused, graffiti attacks became an almost weekly incident. This ultimately spurred Agmon-Snir and his crew to take action. They organized a gathering of all inhabitants of Mount Zion: “There had never been anything like that before,” says Snir.

Islamists and settlers together

In fact, it was in the garden of the Jerusalem Intercultural Center where all the parties came together. It was actually an advantage that Greek Orthodox monks, German priests, Armenians, Arabs and Torah students do not speak a common language: “If everything has to be translated endlessly, that reduces the communication to the necessary minimum. So there was barely any dispute and it was very efficient, “smiles Snir.

Why could he succeed where others failed so far? “We only deal with everyday problems that all stakeholders are interested in solving,” says Agmon-Snir. As a non-governmental organization funded by the Jerusalem Foundation and donations, Snir represents a credible apolitical agenda: “We can work with all city dwellers,” says the former neurobiologist.

The radical Islamic Hamas and militant Israeli nationalists have different, mutually exclusive visions about the future of Jerusalem. “But when it comes to clearing the garbage, fighting noise, or repairing roads, we sometimes bring Islamists and settlers together, and they cooperate,” says Snir.

The dialogue operated by the Center is now beginning to see clear benefits: “There has been no incident on Mount Zion for a long time,” confirms Brother Matthias of the Dormition Abbey. For the last three years, the Yeshiva students helped clean  and repair Muslim and Christian cemeteries. All the organizations and neighbors on the mountain jointly condemned violent attacks when they occurred.

Once, special ceremonies used to cause real problems. On Easter, a special staircase is opened for the Greek Orthodox Patriarch, so that he can descend from the Cenacle to David’s Tomb. At the same time, Orthodox Jews used to protest loudly, calling it an attempt to desecrate their sanctuary or even take it away. In the past two years, however, it remained calm, and there were no incidents: “If you know each other personally, the provocation sometimes loses its legitimacy,” explains Snir.

It does not mean that everything is rosy: “Many still spit on the floor when they see a procession with a cross on the way to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher,” says Matthias.

Someone filed a complaint against his monastery after a rumor circulated that the monks secretly dug tunnels to David’s Tomb. The police, the city council, the antiquities authority and the park authority were then all forced to search the abbey to investigate the complaint. “But we have nothing to hide,” says Brother Matthias.

And yet Winkler says, “The Jerusalem Intercultural Center has proved to be the most beneficial organization here.” Thanks to the dialogue, he and the director of the Yeshiva finally greet each other in the street, instead of ignoring each other with suspicion. And recently, no more parking spaces are quarreled over in front of his office at night. In fact, the Center, together with all Mount Zion neighbors, has made it possible for a barrier to be installed that provides access only to residents – a simple, jointly conceived practical solution to a decade-old problem.

The successful de-escalation on the mountain has led Agmon-Snir to help groups in other parts of Jerusalem reduce tensions. Ironically, the embattled Mount Zion is a model for the whole Jerusalem conflict.

Many thanks to the Jerusalem Foundation for its continued strategic partnership over the years.

 

 

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2019-01-28T10:42:03+00:00January 25th, 2019|Blog, Christians, Mount Zion|
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