Arab-Jewish center honored for 'peacemaking efforts'
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ALIZA APPELBAUM and SARINA ROSENBERG, THE JERUSALEM POST
Jun. 24, 2006
When she moved to Israel six years ago, Fatini Spiliopoulos didn't speak a
word of Hebrew and worried about making friends in her new Jaffa neighborhood.
But after a cousin brought her to the Arab-Jewish Community Center,
Spiliopoulos, 19, said she had found a family. Now a pianist in the center's
musical ensemble, Spiliopoulos said she valued the time spent with her
Christian, Muslim and Jewish peers.
"A lot of kids come to the center," she said. "Poor, rich - it's a place
where everybody gets along, as if everyone is a brother or sister."
Located atop a hill overlooking the Mediterranean Sea, members of the diverse
Jaffa community work, play and learn there together. Co-founders Hadas Kaplan
and Ibrahim Abu Shindi received the Victor J. Goldberg Institute of
International Education Prize Thursday for their grassroots effort.
Victor Goldberg, former vice chairman of the institute, said he designed the
prize to recognize joint peacemaking efforts of Israeli Jews and Arabs.
An international board of seven corporate, political and academic leaders
chose Kaplan and Abu Shindi out of 11 applicant pairs to be the second
recipients of the award.
"Their selection highlights the importance of uniting the Arab and Jewish
citizens of Israel," Goldberg told some 100 Jaffa community members and
political leaders.
Abu Shindi, a lifelong Jaffa resident, said he had approached the Tel Aviv
municipality with the idea for a center that would encourage face-to-face
contact in the troubled community. The city donated a centrally located plot to
the project, which has been operating for 13 years.
"You can't change prejudice in one year," Abu Shindi said. "If you want to
change it's got to be through intensive coexistence projects."
Founded on the belief that tolerance should begin at a young age, the center
provides a wide range of venues for Jews and Arabs to interact - everything from
soccer and day care to computer classes and political speakers.
Kaplan said she hoped the success of the project would inspire others. "Art,
music, dance helps," she said. "Not just to speak but to do something together
is really great."
Several people at the event, including Abu Shindi, said Jaffa was an ideal
location for such community-building projects because it comprised diverse
communities living side-by-side, interacting and coexisting peacefully on a
daily basis.
"This city is a symbol for democracy, pluralism and tolerance," said Tel Aviv
Mayor Ron Huldai, adding that the center was a "small step toward a better
future."
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