The Jerusalem Post

Major protest movements enlist in volunteeri­ng effort

- • By ARIELLA MARSDEN

For nine months, The Students’ Protest movement joined the weekly demonstrat­ions against the government and the judicial reform, and then October 7 happened.

When Hamas terrorists invaded Israel and began massacring Israelis, launching a war, the movement realised that its efforts were needed elsewhere.

“From the moment it all started, we started helping locally wherever we were needed,” said movement leader Nadav Zalzberger. “We decided we weren’t waiting for the authoritie­s to get organized, we were just going to do what we can where we can.”

The movement’s members are spread out across the country and started volunteeri­ng where they could locally last Saturday while in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, the movement set up bases of operations for organized volunteeri­ng.

Joined by other major protest groups like Brothers in Arms, Building an Alternativ­e, the Hi-Tech Protest, Hitorerut, One Heart, Common Home, and others, the Students’ Protest has helped host families from the south and the north, collect equipment for soldiers, provide psychologi­cal care, and more.

The Students’ Protest took upon itself also to provide help with education and childcare by babysittin­g, teaching classes in hospitals, and running day camps in hotels where families have been evacuated to.

In areas where the government or local authoritie­s have organized a system, the volunteeri­ng movements have relinquish­ed control, but they will continue to provide any other help necessary.

The protest movements, however, are not alone.

“There has been an inspiring rate of commitment and mobilizati­on to help,” said Zalzberger. “We are getting help and support also from ultra-Orthodox people and religious Zionists.”

Labor MK Gilad Kariv visited one of the bases of operations last week and said it was empowering.

“I wish all the evacuees from the areas near Gaza could see live the thousands of people who work around the clock so that they could understand the extent of the support and concern for them,” he said. “This place is further proof that the massive democratic protest has been dedicated from its first moments to the State of Israel and its future.”

But while they have seen people who used to protest against each other come together, Zalzberger said that “there are still people from the edges of society trying to sow hatred and negativity, and we cannot let them succeed.”

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