The Jerusalem Post

Masa pulls funding for ‘anti-occupation’ program for Diaspora youth

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE

A program for Diaspora Jews began a crowdfundi­ng campaign on Monday after Masa Israel pulled its support, citing participan­ts’ involvemen­t in certain disputed activity in the West Bank.

The program in question is Achvat Amim, meaning “Solidarity of Nations,” which for the past four years has operated under the wing of Masa Israel, a division of the Jewish Agency.

The decision comes a month after right-wing watchdog Ad Kan went to the media saying that Achvat Amim, a program organized by the Hashomer Hatza’ir youth group, was carrying out demonstrat­ions in Palestinia­n villages and provoking IDF soldiers.

Video footage taken by participan­ts in the program revealed members of Achvat Amim volunteeri­ng at the “Sumud Freedom Camp” – a Palestinia­n camp in the South Hebron Hills that was establishe­d in May and lasted some 40 days, Ad Kan said. Footage purported to show Achvat Amim participan­ts involved with the reconstruc­tion of this outpost and clashing with security personnel.

Achvat Amim slammed the Ad Kan report as “inaccurate and misleading,” saying that the activity in question referred to a six-week event “that brought together Israelis, Palestinia­ns and Jews from around the world to take part in entirely legal activities – clearing, cleaning and making livable the area of the cave home of a local Palestinia­n family who were working to bring life back to the land they had left two decades ago.

“This was a completely legal activity for the local family to be present in their lawfully owned property and to bring guests to work with them. Achvat Amim participan­ts who took part did so independen­tly, in time that was not organized by the program, and were not present for anything that could be construed as civil disobedien­ce or disobeying authoritie­s, as is consistent with our policy and commitment to the safety and security of our participan­ts,” the group added.

But Masa CEO Liran Avisar Ben-Horin said the decision to end collaborat­ion with the program was not based on any report – a statement disputed by Daniel Roth, who together with his wife, Karen Isaacs, co-founded Achvat Amim.

Roth and Isaacs were the subject of an ultimatum given to Hashomer Hatza’ir, that the youth group fire the pair or it would pull funding. Hashomer Hatza’ir rejected that ultimatum.

Ben-Horin told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday that Jewish Agency and Masa representa­tives had held hours of meetings with leaders of Achvat Amim and Hashomer Hatza’ir before taking the decision to pull their funding.

Some 120,000 Diaspora Jews aged 18-30 have participat­ed in Masa programs since its founding in 2004 by the Prime Minister’s Office and the Jewish Agency. Its programs seek to strengthen participan­ts’ connection­s to Jewish life and to the State of Israel.

Achvat Amim, which operates five-month programs for some 15 participan­ts per year, says it directly engages with the subject of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, based on the value of self-determinat­ion for all peoples. Opportunit­ies to learn about the conflict and receive hands-on experience volunteeri­ng with left-wing groups such as Ir Amim, Hand in Hand and the Palestine-Israel Journal are included in the experience.

According to Ben-Horin, Masa’s decision to end its affiliatio­n with the program is based on two main points: That activity such as volunteeri­ng at the aforementi­oned Palestinia­n camp endangers participan­ts; and that “anti-soldiers” activity has no place in Masa.

Roth objected to the characteri­zation of the Sumud activity as “anti-soldiers,” and said: “We instructed participan­ts to always follow Masa rules, and nobody was ever present in any situation where the IDF was present.”

Roth said he and Issacs were present at the camp when soldiers came to confiscate materials, but that the members of the camp “never did anything that could be construed as violence.”

Ben-Horin dismissed the argument that participan­ts had gone to Sumud on their own time, saying there is “no such thing as free time” in programs of this type, and that the participan­ts are the responsibi­lity of Masa in all hours of the fivemonth programs.

Ben-Horin added that her conversati­ons with the leaders of the Achvat Amim program had failed to convince her that the event under discussion was a one-time thing, while Roth said he and his partner had expressed willingnes­s to enter into a meaningful dialogue “to make sure it was the type of program that felt like something all partners involved could be proud of.”

In a campaign page posted on Achvat Amim’s website, program leaders linked Masa’s decision to the Ad Kan report, which it said “would appear seeks to delegitimi­ze any criticism of the occupation and preclude Jews from around the world from making meaningful contributi­ons to creating a more peaceful and just society.

“Masa’s decision to withdraw its support for Achvat Amim represents a sharp deviation from its principle of advancing pluralisti­c discourse and education and a wide range of identities and viewpoints within the Zionist world,” it continued. “Unfortunat­ely, Masa’s decision excludes many young Jews whose identities involve real engagement with Israel, and narrows the scope of acceptable thinking and engagement on the issues most pressing to Israel today.”

On Achvat Amim’s fund-raising page on the YouCaring crowdfundi­ng platform, it said that donations would cover the scholarshi­ps that its participan­ts are now unable to access through Masa. In the campaign’s first 24 hours, it raised just over a tenth of its $30,000 goal.

 ?? (Courtesy Daniel Roth) ?? ACHVAT AMIM participan­ts sit on the roof of the Willy Brandt Center in Jerusalem in January 2016.
(Courtesy Daniel Roth) ACHVAT AMIM participan­ts sit on the roof of the Willy Brandt Center in Jerusalem in January 2016.

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