The Jewish Chronicle

Village where teen gangsters come good

- BY NATHAN JEFFAY

MORE THAN one in four Israelis of draft age will end up skipping army service, but at a Galilee institutio­n for the country’s most at-risk youth, almost all graduates will be putting on uniform.

The Nirim Youth Village is managing a feat that youth institutio­ns worldwide might envy — turning teenagers who seem to be heading towards a life behind bars into young adults with “normal” lives.

More Nirim students receive a highschool diploma than Israel’s national average.

As Nirim’s CEO, Micha Simbalista prepared the graduation ceremony of this year’s 26 leavers, all of whom are going into the army. He said: “If our children had not come to an organisati­on like ours, most of them would be in prison.”

He added: “Many come with criminal records and accusation­s of violence.” The youngsters are commonly placed at the village by the courts.

The draft rate for Nirim youth has reached 97 per cent over recent years, and many graduates have gone into the most prestigiou­s army jobs. “Most go to combat units and some even go to elite units. There are those who have gone on to become officers,” said Mr Simbalista.

The village has won the admiration of people around the world, including the British philanthro­pist Michael Gross. He is a trustee of the charity Supporters of Israel’s Dependants, which donates to Nirim. “I don’t think there’s anything like it in Britain,” Mr Gross said. He commented: “It’s remarkable that the majority of the kids there got to join society. Especially as many of them arrive with no formal education.”

The secret, said Mr Simbalista, is pairing educationa­l programmes with a range of therapies, including some that set them extreme emotional and physical challenges. One is “wilderness therapy”, with hard outdoor activities. All students go through a five-day survival in a rough desert environmen­t. Another focus is dialectica­l behaviour therapy, which helps with mood disorders and is said to improve self-image. “We make a lot of effort to enhance selfesteem,” said Mr Simbalista.

Youngsters who struggle most are given a stint in the countrysid­e. Nirim in the Mountains is a working farm located in a remote spot of the Golan Heights for those who are in crisis and find that the “already extreme Nirim programme is simply not enough”.

The farm is run on a rigid daily schedule and youth there have no accesses to phone, internet or television, in order “to encourage peace of mind and a clear space for inner work”.

Mr Simbalista suggested that the combinatio­n of therapies, and the village’s “very tight model”, whereby every minute is planned with an end in sight, are unique.

The school teaches in small classes, of up to eight students per group, and relies on lots of volunteers to supplement classroom study with individual learning activities.

There is a lot of emphasis on geology and ecology, which are taught under the guidance of the Weizmann Institute.

Beyond the 110 residents of the village, Nirim works with 350 people in cities and towns across Israel who run, among other things, after-school programmes for children. Mr Gross is enthusiast­ic about this, as well as the work in the village, saying that it gives chances to youngsters “who otherwise would be lost souls”.

If they hadn’t come to an organisati­on like ours, most of them would be in prison’

 ?? PHOTO: NIRIM.ORG ?? Building self-esteem: Nirim youngsters get “wilderness therapy”
PHOTO: NIRIM.ORG Building self-esteem: Nirim youngsters get “wilderness therapy”

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