Dear colleagues in Palestinian-Jewish relationship building,
Wednesday, March 14, 2001 was a day in the week of "Worldfest 2001 -- The Worlds We Come From, The Worlds We
Make" at Palo Alto High School, in California.
The day offered the students diverse enrichment from
"The Power of One" to "An Auschwitz Survivor" to
"Child Labor and the Global Village" to "Bridging Borders in
Silicon Valley: The Immigrant Experience" to "Change the World, Do It
Now!" You can see the sophisticated program at:
http://www.paly.net/html/description.html
Ninety attentive, informed students, and some
teachers, chose to attend two different, 75-minute panels -- "A
Palestinian-Jewish Dialogue."
Each panel had 2 Jews and 2 Palestinians -- women and
men, ages 30s to 70s. They told their stories of moving from limited
identification to inclusiveness, then entered into dialogue with the
students. The youth opened their minds, participated fully, and seemed
grateful for the presence and model of the mature dialogue
presenters.
This remarkable week was co-chaired by Darsha Davidoff, and our room was warmly hosted by Dr.
Lorraine Luft. Both women plan to participate
in the newest, soon-to-begin Jewish-Palestinian dialogue in Silicon Valley.
You can see PHOTOGRAPHS of the students and panelists
at:
http://www.shutterfly.com/my/os.jsp?i=67b0de21b311c5e9c489
This was an inspiring day. We hope it can happen
in more communities, here and in the Middle East.
For your interest, below are brief descriptions of the
seven dialogue participants who provided the two panels for the students.
===================
Eight years ago, people said: "It isn't the right
time to begin dialogue." "It's impossible." "It
will take too much time." "It wont'
make a difference."
It is always the right time. Especially
today. Ever-widening circles of Palestinian-Jewish dialogue do, and will,
make a difference. --L&L
===================
Panelists at Palo Alto High School were:
Elias Botto was born in
Jerusalem, Palestine. In late 1947, due to increasing violence in the region,
his family moved to Bethlehem, in the West Bank. Elias was a clothing
manufacturer serving Esprit, Levi Strauss, and other smaller manufacturers
nationwide. A 32nd degree Mason, Mr. Botto
supports the medical assistance work of the Shriners
and is active in the United States Organization for Medical and Educational
Needs (USOMEN), providing needed humanitarian services to people in the Middle
East.
Jacob Mandelsberg grew up in
a traditional Jewish family in Chicago and attended Hebrew school. In
1938 his father's family had fled Germany and the torching of synagogues and
increasing anti-Jewish violence. Jacob lived in Israel for 12 years and
served in the IDF. He is presently a freelance Web developer, serving the
San Francisco Symphony and Bay Area School Reform Collaboration.
Arnon Moscona
served with the Israel Defense Force in Ramallah, West Bank. Arnon graduated from Tel Aviv University in Mathematics and
Computer Science before moving to the U.S. in 1991. He is a software
architect for DigitalBees, a Silicon Valley Internet
infrastructure company. In 1991 Arnon received the
"Best Electronic Support" award of the software industry's Customer
Support Association.
Said Hisham Nuseibeh studied at Reed College, Oregon, and at Bir Zeit University,
Palestine. He is an Architectural and Fine Art photographer whose 1996
176-page book, "The Dome of the Rock," was called "the most
detailed and complete visual documentation" of this profound spiritual
sanctuary in Jerusalem. Said is a member of the Middle East Studies
Association and of the United Muslims of America. He is a Board Member of
the Arab Cultural Center of San Francisco, which honored him with their 2000
"Millenium Award" for his "significant
contribution to a better understanding of the Arab World."
Melek Totah
was born in Des Moines, Iowa. Her father grew up in Haifa, Palestine, in
the 1930s and '40s before fleeing in 1948. Melek
graduated from Drake University in 1988, majoring in International
Relations. She later earned her M.B.A. in International Business. Melek was volunteer Chief Financial Officer for the
non-profit Grady Community Council in Atlanta, Georgia, to establish pre-school
programs for inner city children. Melek is now
Manager of Financial Planning and Analysis for a large Silicon Valley software
company.
Gladys Wagman was born in Philadelpia. Her father's family had fled to the
United States from Czarist Russia when their village's first-born Jews
were being killed during the pogroms. Gladys attended Hebrew school and
grew up in a traditional, observant Jewish family. Gladys was Regional
President of ORT -- the Organization for Rehabilitation Through Training,
initiated by Jewish women to serve both Jewish and non-Jewish boys and girls
worldwide. She is presently on the Board of Directors of the Jewish
Community Center of San Francisco.
Miriam L. Zimmerman, Ed.D.
is Chair of the Department of Communication, College of Notre Dame. She
is a member of the International Association of Business Communicators
(IABC) and of the National Communication Association. Since 1987 Miriam
has been a columnist for the National Jewish Post & Opinion. She
studied at the International School for Holocaust Educators at Yad Vashem, Jerusalem, and since
1996 she has chaired or co-chaired the North Peninsula Yom HaShoah,
Holocaust Rememberance Day. Miriam is a member
of the Jewish Community Relations Council and of Peninsula Temple Beth
El.