Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery

by American Friends of Neve Shalom/Wahat al-Salam
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery
Breaking Down Borders: Youth Self Discovery

Project Report | Sep 30, 2011
Sharing experiences from past Journeys

By Dort Shippin | Project Director

As the staff is working on preparing the next Massa-Massar Journey, we wanted to share what Dorit Shippin, who is in charge of the project, wrote after the last day of a previous Journey:

"The concluding session was, fittingly, a farewell session. Statements by the participants suggest that they underwent a meaningful experience. Nearly all the youngsters mentioned "firsts": They said it was their first visit to holy places in Jerusalem, or their first visit to such places as part of a mixed Jewish-Arab group. Muslims entered a mosque with Christian friends for the first time; all the Arabs were visiting the Western Wall for the first time. It was the first time the Arab youngsters met a Jew wearing a kippah who defends Palestinians and, in the name of his faith, struggles for justice for all. It was the first time the Arab participants heard about the Holocaust from the perspective of the suffering of children, and the first time the Jewish participants had shared this pain with Arabs. And so on and so forth.

"The Arabs in the group were older and hence more able to express themselves and were expecting more self-disclosure from the Jews. The Jewish participants were surprised by how articulate the Arabs were and by their joie de vivre. One of the participants noted that the encounter itself was the most interesting part.

"Here are two sets of quotes from a Jewish girl and an Arab girl in the group:

"Jewish girl: It was hard to get up early every morning. We were in all kinds of special situations with the Arabs, and that was a chance to see how they really are. I understand that they are like us; they want contact and we really were able to make contact despite the distancing between the two groups. We spent a week as if on another planet, like in a greenhouse. Every one of you is smart, amazing and beautiful.

"Arab girl: In the Holocaust museum, I identified strongly with the terrible things that happened to the Jewish people. It was written beautifully there: "Our love was like the wind, we did not see it but we felt it. The hatred passes, but the love always remains." And I say: even though there are conflicts between our peoples, they will pass – and the love between people will always remain.

"One of the chaperon’s told the members of the group, "As you were together on this Journey – that is how the world should be." Thus ended the Journey; the journey of life goes on. We hope that each of the participants will take this experience with them, back to their lives, with respect and appreciation for those who are different from them and with respect and appreciation for themselves; and we hope that they will want to work toward a more beautiful and more just world."

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Associate Director
United States

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