While
Eran Schwartz was serving as a pilot in Israel Air Force, he became worried
about the inner fabric of Israeli society. “I was protecting the outside
fabric, but I saw we need to protect the inside too,” he tells ISRAEL21c. “I
decided to focus on social change and education, which I think is the key.”
Schwartz moved to the Galilee with his wife, a French
immigrant. For the last six and a half years, he has been CEO of Yigal Allon Center at
Kibbutz Ginosar near the Sea of Galilee (Lake Kinneret).The site also houses a
popular tourist attraction, the 2,000-year-old Galilee fishing boat (“Jesus
boat”) found in 1986.
“When I
arrived, my vision for this place was to focus on the future of the state and
not the past. I had to persuade the board to completely change the orientation
to one of education, mostly in the periphery, to advance leadership,” says
Schwartz. “I had zero knowledge, but I had a vision. And I was lucky enough
that the board followed me into this vision,” says the 38-year-old father of
three.
The center runs educational programs, post-high
school preparatory courses for Jews and Arabs, a program for integrating ultra-Orthodox
Jews into society, and more, all with the goal of promoting equality and
coexistence throughout Israel.
“We work with a huge variety of people, a microcosm
of what I wish Israel looked like: soldiers, commanders, officers, police
officers, Arabs and other populations that in my view are crucial to work with
in order to have a strong state,” says Schwartz.
To walk in someone else’s shoes
One innovative program was created four years ago
with the Jewish Agency — a seven-month residential leadership academy for boys
and girls after high school, in which half the members are Muslims, Christians
or Druze and half are Jews of varied backgrounds, “to set an example of mixed
leadership,” says Schwartz.
Living together 24/7, along with their counselors and
educators, gives members of the Allonim academy an impactful foundation before
the next stage of life, which for many of them will be military or civil
service.
“At the
beginning and end of the seven months you saw different people. They were both
amazing girls before, but they gained the ability to understand the other –not
to change her own identity but to walk in someone else’s shoes,” says Schwartz.
Each invited the other to spend a weekend in her
family home, truly cementing the friendship. The Jewish friend is now in the
military and the Arab one is doing civil service. They sometimes come back to
Allonim together to interact with the current cohort.
“You can imagine that politically they are on
opposite sides, but it doesn’t matter,” says Schwartz. “When they are leaders,
and I hope they will be, they will act differently because of this experience.”
Secular and religious rapprochement
Schwartz, who has a master’s degree in Jewish studies
and culture, and another in political communication, is now studying toward a
master’s degree in political science focusing on democracy.
“I am secular, but I am starting a new program with
a haredi [ultra-Orthodox] friend from Jerusalem to
help elite haredi kids who want to join
special forces units in the IDF,” says Schwartz.
“Until today they have not had that opportunity. We
want to create new leadership in the haredi sector
and help them participate more in Israeli society.”
The disconnect between secular and haredi Jewish Israelis is no less an issue than it
is between Jewish and Arab Israelis. The corona crisis only exacerbated a
mutual lack of trust due to highly publicized violations of mass gathering and
social distancing rules.
“I see a breaking point in this,” says Schwartz. “We
can’t build walls between ourselves. We are forced to find a way to live
together despite the many obstacles.”
Yigal Allon Center, with a permanent staff of about
20, gets a third of its budget from the government, a third from program fees
and a third from tourism. Of course, the latter third has suffered during the
pandemic.
Schwartz is not fazed by the difficulty of his
mission. “If it’s simple, it’s not interesting,” he says with a smile.
For more information, click here
No comments:
Post a Comment