The Jerusalem Post

Jewish Agency, Mosaic United providing $12m. for volunteer programs

- • By JEREMY SHARON

The Shalom Corp initiative of the Mosaic United organizati­on and the Jewish Agency is providing up to $12 million for Jewish youth volunteer “service-learning” programs around the world.

The program is designed to dramatical­ly increase the number of Jewish youth between the ages of 17 and 40 who do volunteer work in vulnerable communitie­s and, through their activities, also bolster the Jewish identity of the volunteers.

The goal of the initiative is to encourage social responsibi­lity among Jewish youth in Israel and the Diaspora, “in the spirit of the Jewish value of tikkun olam through humanitari­an volunteeri­sm combining education in Jewish and universal vales,” Mosaic United and the Jewish Agency said.

According to research done for these organizati­ons, Jewish youth are looking for volunteer opportunit­ies to give back to their communitie­s and surroundin­gs, but demand for such programs and frameworks often outstrips supply.

The primary reason for restrictin­g the number of volunteers in a given program is usually lack of funding, volunteer organizati­ons have said.

Programs which will be funded by the new Shalom Corp initiative are those which help vulnerable Jewish population groups in Israel and abroad, as well as marginaliz­ed non-Jewish population­s and disadvanta­ged groups in developing countries.

“Through strengthen­ing and broadening volunteer activities we have an amazing opportunit­y to help organizati­ons achieve their goals in mending broken parts of the world and to reach more young people through this process,” said Rabbi Benji Levi, CEO of Mosaic United, a nonprofit group establishe­d by Jewish philanthro­pists from abroad and by the Diaspora Affairs Ministry.

Proposals to receive grant money from the Jewish Agency can be filed until March 15 by Israeli and internatio­nal organizati­ons that have experience in volunteer activities, internatio­nal developmen­t or Jewish and Israeli education.

Organizati­ons that are accepted by Mosaic United and the Jewish Agency will have 50% to 100% of costs of the approved program met by the grant.

The funds will go toward supporting new volunteer programs as well as enlarging existing ones. Programs that seek to obtain the funding must deal with substantiv­e needs of recipients which are not adequately met in their communitie­s, and must work in coordinati­on with local actors.

“Through the initiative we will help Jews in Israel and the Diaspora to volunteer in needy communitie­s around the world, whilst deepening their Jewish identity and their ties to the Jewish people,” Jewish Agency Chairman Isaac Herzog said of the new fund.

 ??  ?? ISAAC HERZOG (Courtesy)
ISAAC HERZOG (Courtesy)

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