Bar Pereg
Bar Pereg, CEO of PollyLabs, is a visionary leader driven by a passion for leveraging technology to address pressing global challenges and drive purpose-driven growth. With a diverse background spanning various industries and roles, Bar has witnessed firsthand the untapped potential of technology to drive positive change. This realization prompted the founding of PollyLabs, a groundbreaking think tank and centre studio focused on repurposing technology for good.
Throughout her career, Bar has worked with Fortune 500 executives, startups, governments, and NGOs, advising on growth strategy, technology integration, and social impact. With extensive global experience and a track record of leading diverse teams, Bar is dedicated to pioneering innovative solutions that promote equity and improve the human experience.
Bar holds an MBA from the MIT Sloan School of Management, where she specialized in finance and sustainability. Her educational background includes a Bachelor of Arts in Business Management and Sociology from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. With a deep understanding of business strategy, technology, and social dynamics, Bar is committed to driving meaningful change and shaping a more inclusive future for all.
Sameer Arshad Khatlani
Sameer Arshad Khatlani is a journalist with Hindustan Times, India’s second-biggest newspaper. He was a senior assistant editor with the Indian Express until June 2018.
Born and raised in Kashmir, Khatlani began his career with the now-defunct Bengaluru-based Vijay Times in 2005 as its national affairs correspondent. He joined the Times of India in 2007. Over the next nine years, Khatlani was part of the newspaper's national and international news-gathering team.
He has reported from Iraq and Pakistan, and covered elections and national disasters. Khatlani has a master's degree in history from Jamia Millia Islamia in New Delhi.
He is a fellow with the Hawaii-based American East-West Center and the author of The Other Side of the Divide, A Journey into the Heart of Pakistan, Penguin eBury Press, March 2020.
Join Us to Celebrate the Release of Our New Album this Friday
Click here for livestream link
To All My Family and Friends Far and Near
Please join us to celebrate the release of the new album on NAXOS this Friday!
February 9 @ 7 pm EST
Ukrainian Institute of America / YouTube Livestream
INVITATION: Preventing Jewish-Arab Violence within the Green Line
In May 2021, a period of fear and violence shook Israel: A conflict that started in Jerusalem expanded into Gaza, and soon boomeranged and escalated inside the Green Line. Interethnic violence erupted in Israel’s mixed cities, where the country’s Jewish and Palestinian citizens live side-by-side, leading to death and destruction. Following the devastating October 7 attacks, however, there has been no repetition of intercommunal conflict inside Israel, in spite of the efforts of those seeking to incite racism and violence.
What has Israeli civil society learned from the past to prevent such violence and how might it apply those lessons in the future so that Jews and Arabs can come together across differences?
To discuss these questions and more, join us on Wednesday, February 28, at 9am PT / 12pm ET for a webinar discussion featuring our Co-Deputy CEOs, Shahira Shalaby and Ruth Lewin-Chen, and moderated by Partners for Progressive Israel board member, Professor Sam Fleischacker. There will be time at the end for audience Q&A. Register here to take part in this crucial conversation, which is cosponsored by Partners for Progressive Israel and The Abraham Initiatives.
I hope to see you there!
Sincerely,
Lydia Woolley
North American Program Director
RSVP HERE
Shahira Shalaby is Co-Deputy CEO at The Abraham Initiatives, where she oversees our work in mixed cities. She is the former Deputy Mayor of Haifa, a former city councilor, and was among the founders of the Palestinian Feminist Movement in Israel. She has established several initiatives and organizations working to improve the status of Arab women in Israel and has consulted for social change organizations on issues of leadership, strategic thinking, teamwork, developing and managing resources, and community work. She is a group facilitator, specializing in dialogue, conflict resolution, and facilitator training. She holds a Masters' degree in religious studies and a Bachelor's degree in social work.
Ruth Lewin-Chen is Co-Deputy CEO at The Abraham Initiatives, and previously led The Abraham Initiatives' Mixed Cities program. Her skillset comes from her experience directing conflict resolution programs and advocating for the representation of women in decision-making positions in the local council of Mevasseret. For the past decade, Ruth has been promoting a shared society in Israel, mainly through the facilitation of dialogue groups of Arab and Jewish youth and by developing knowledge on social movements with Shatil. Ruth holds a Bachelor’s in Psychology and Comparative Literature and a Master’s in Organizational Sociology from Hebrew University.
Please do not hesitate to reach out to lydia@abrahaminitiatives.org with any questions.
Resilience, Resistance, Renewal: Two years of the Full-Scale War in Ukraine
This is from tonight's talk at Cooper Union--and I would invite you to scroll to 15' (fifteen minutes into the film) to listen for 10 minutes or so to the winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, a lawyer, war crimes documenter and friend of Victoria Amelina's, Oleksandra Matviichuk: she spells out very clearly what's happened and what's at stake:
Jewish Currents
Wednesday, February 28th at 1pm ET:
Gaza is the deadliest place in the world to be a journalist today. More than 75% of media workers killed worldwide in 2023 have died in Israel’s assault on the besieged enclave. In the occupied West Bank, too, Israel’s jailing of Palestinian journalists has reached an all-time high, with the Committee to Protect Journalists raising the alarmabout Israel’s harassment of reporters and the silencing of their coverage.
Join us for a discussion on how this lethal environment for journalists is impacting our ability to understand what’s happening on the ground, what it says about the future of covering conflict zones safely, and the latest efforts to hold the Israeli government accountable for these attacks. We will also discuss the challenges that journalists around the world face in covering Israel’s war on Gaza accurately and ethically.
This event is sponsored by Just Vision, Institute for Middle East Understanding (IMEU), +972 Magazine, the Arab and Middle Eastern Journalists Association (AMEJA), and theCommittee to Protect Journalists.
SPEAKERS:
Fadi Abu Shammalah is a Palestinian journalist from Gaza who was recently evacuated with his family to the US via Egypt, and who still has colleagues trying to report what is happening on the ground as Israel closes in on Rafah. He also serves as a Just Vision outreach associate. You can read more about his experience in this New York Times op-ed.
Karen Attiah is a columnist at The Washington Postwho has written and posted extensively about the impact of Israel’s war on journalists and other civilians (“Where is the outrage over Israel’s killing of journalists in Gaza?”). Karen was the winner of the 2019 George Polk Award as well as the 2019 Journalist of the Year Award from the National Association of Black Journalists. She has been a fierce advocate for accountability and justice since agents of Saudi Arabia killed her late colleague, Saudi-American journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Gypsy Guillén Kaiser is the advocacy and communications director for the Committee to Protect Journalists, which is investigating and documenting the plight of Palestinian journalists. Their most recent reports are available here.
Haggai Matar is the executive director of +972 Magazine, an independent, nonprofit online magazine run by a group of Palestinian and Israeli journalists. He is also co-director, together with Just Vision’s Suhad Babaa, of the Hebrew-language news site Local Call, and serves on the board of the Union of Journalists in Israel.
Julia Bacha (moderator) is Just Vision’s creative director and a filmmaker who directed movies includingBudrus (2009) and Boycott (2021).
Join Us On Wednesday, February 28th
CB Bhattacharya
CB Bhattacharya is the H.J. Zoffer Chair in Sustainability and Ethics at the Katz Graduate School of Business, University of Pittsburgh. He is a world-renowned expert in business strategy innovation aimed at increasing both business and social value. His research and teaching focus specifically on how companies can use underleveraged “intangible assets” such as corporate identity, reputation, corporate social responsibility and sustainability to strengthen stakeholder relationships and drive business and societal value.
Prof. Bhattacharya has published over 100 articles and has over 45,000 citations per Google Scholar, placing him among the top 50 cited marketing academics per Google Scholar and the top 1% of marketing academics per a Stanford University study. His latest book entitled Small Actions Big Difference: Leveraging Corporate Sustainability to Drive Business and Societal Value was published by Routledge in 2019. He is co-author of the book Leveraging Corporate Responsibility: The Stakeholder Route to Maximizing Business and Social Value and co-editor of the book Global Challenges in Responsible Business, both published by Cambridge University Press. He has served on the Editorial Review Boards and served as Editor of special issues of many leading publications. Prof. Bhattacharya is the founder of the Center for Sustainable Business at Pitt as well as the ESMT Sustainable Business Roundtable, a forum with more than 25 multinational members, aimed at discussing opportunities and challenges in mainstreaming sustainability practices within organizations. In 2007, he started the Stakeholder Marketing Consortium with support from the Aspen Institute.
Prof. Bhattacharya is part of a select group of faculty members that have been named twice to Business Week’s Outstanding Faculty list. He is on the #thinklist of the University of Bath, a list of influential faculty thinkers on issues of responsible business. He has won several best paper awards, teaching awards and research prizes. He was also a finalist for the Aspen Institute’s Faculty Pioneer Award in 2007. In addition, he received the Emory Williams Distinguished Teaching Award in 1995, the highest teaching award at Emory University.
He received his PhD in Marketing from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in 1993, his MBA from the Indian Institute of Management in 1984 and his Bachelors (with Honors in Economics) from St. Stephens College, Delhi in 1982. Before joining ESMT in 2009, he was the Everett W. Lord Distinguished Scholar and Professor of Marketing at the School of Management at Boston University. Before joining Boston University, he was on the faculty at the Goizueta Business School, Emory University. Prior to his PhD, he worked for three years as a Product Manager in Reckitt Benckiser plc.
Prof. Bhattacharya has conducted research and consulted for many organizations such as Allianz, AT&T, Bosch, Eli Lilly, E.ON, General Mills, Green Mountain Coffee, High Museum of Art, Hitachi Corporation, Procter & Gamble Company, Prudential Bank, Timberland and Unilever. As an expert in corporate responsibility and sustainability, he is often interviewed and quoted in publications such as Business Week, BBC, Forbes, Financial Times, Fortune, Newsweek, The New York Times and The Economist and on TV stations such as Times Now, CBS and PBS. He frequently delivers keynote speeches or brings in his insights as a panelist at company, industry, and academic conferences and conventions.
Advocating for Another Way - American Friends of Combatants for Peace
I write to you from on the road. Over the last week, a delegation of four Palestinian and Israeli CfP activists, Rana Salman, Avner Wishnitzer, Souli Khatib, and Chen Alon, traveled to Washington, DC to meet with policymakers on Capitol Hill as well as with State Department and White House officials.
This AFCFP delegation was planned in partnership with Win Without War, a diverse network of activists and organizations working for a more peaceful U.S. foreign policy. Since last Tuesday, CfP and AFCFP leadership sat down with Rep. Tlaib, Rep. Raskin, Rep. Schakowsky, Rep. Jayapal, and Rep. Schatz’s, Rep. King’s, Rep. Coon’s, Rep. Warnock’s, Rep. Smith's and Rep. Ossof’s teams.
CfP activists shared their powerful stories of transformation and joint efforts to co-resist the occupation and co-create a new reality where all are safe and free. They sat down face-to-face with House and Senate members and urged them to support an immediate ceasefire and efforts to impose sanctions and visa restrictions on violent settlers and their enablers. CfP also advocated for urgent humanitarian aid to Gaza and an immediate release of hostages and prisoners held in arbitrary detention.
Additionally, they stressed the needs of their respective societies - most notably security, liberty, and dignity. They discussed how any political arrangement must be measured against these needs and they explained to lawmakers that the conflict can no longer be "managed." They emphasized that a military solution will not bring security or safety for Israelis nor Palestinians.
We know that the occupation can no longer be tolerated and there is no military solution. Diplomacy and a viable political settlement remain the only hope to avoid further catastrophic violence and ensure equality and safety for both peoples.
While in DC, our team also participated in a briefing with reporters, participated in an NGO and Civil Society Roundtable, hosted a screening of Disturbing the Peace at Busboys and Poets with producer and director Stephen Apkon, and spoke at places of worship.
This weekend, we connected with our wonderful Philadelphia AFCFP chapter, met with the Quaker community in Philadelphia, and hosted powerful events at Congregation Rodeph Shalom and Westtown School with Israeli activist, Iris Gur, and Palestinian activist, Souli Khatib.
It was a joy spending time with so many of our beloved supporters and I hope to see many more of you soon. Please click the button below to view and register for upcoming in-person events in New York.
Register for In-Person Events in New York
We are deeply strengthened by our community's steadfast support. Thank you for standing with us and fueling the movement.
Daniel Ades
Daniel Ades is the Founder and Managing Partner of Kawa Capital, a hedge fund and asset manager based in Aventura. Daniel has been responsible for overseeing the firm’s investment decisions since inception in 2007, and continues to lead the firm to this day. He has a B.A. in Economics and International Relations from Tufts University, and a Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy (MALD) from The Fletcher School, with a focus on economic development. He has been a board member in several community organizations and his interests are primarily focused on education and affordable housing. Most recently, he founded the Jewish Leadership Academy, a college-preparatory Jewish Day School in the Miami area that is need-blind and focused on developing leaders with a broad range of perspectives. An avid sailor, he was born and raised in Sao Paulo, Brazil and has been living in Miami with his wife and three children since 2003.
Ahmed Benchemsi
A global rights watchdog’s spokesperson and comms director, Ahmed Benchemsi is an award-winning journalist, media entrepreneur, opinion writer and public speaker turned Human Rights advocate. Fluent in French, Arabic and English, his expertise is in human rights, individual freedoms and secularism within Islamic societies, media and social media in North Africa and the Middle East.
As the primary spokesperson for Human Rights Watch on the Middle East and North Africa, Ahmed gave 1200+ interviews to international media in three languages, including CNN, PBS, BBC, France 24, Al Jazeera, Deutsche Welle, and more. As HRW's MENA Communications and Advocacy Director, he initiated and led global campaigns including on freedom of speech, individual freedoms, women's rights, and LGBT rights.
As a journalist, Ahmed was published in TIME magazine, Newsweek, The Guardian, Le Monde, Le Nouvel Observateur, Jeune Afrique, and other global publications.
Ahmed started his career in Morocco in the mid-1990s as an investigative reporter, with a passion for defending democracy, secularism and individual freedoms, exposing corruption, and heralding cultural empowerment, especially for the youth. At 26, he founded TelQuel, a French language weekly news magazine covering politics, society, and culture that became the market leader in four years. In 2006, he founded the Arabic language news magazine Nichane, which, in turn, topped the national magazine market (even surpassing TelQuel) in just over a year. The TelQuel Group, of which Ahmed was CEO and editor-in-chief, soon became Morocco’s #1 magazine publisher (combined circulation, including of several offshoot mags, peaked at 500,000 readers) with 100+ staffers, USD 10 million annual revenue and USD 1 million profit. TelQuel and Nichane were hailed as “groundbreaking,” “innovative” and “pioneering,” including in TIME magazine, The Guardian and The Economist and reaped numerous international awards, including the CNN award for African journalists, the Press Now prize and Reporters Without Borders prize.
Such success attracted attention, which also meant adverse feedback from Moroccan authorities. Ahmed and his colleagues were arrested and brought in for interrogation many times, then prosecuted, sentenced to suspended prison terms and heavy fines for speech offenses including “undermining official institutions” and “disrespecting the king.” The police raided the printer’s plant several times, destroying tens of thousands of copies. Even though a market leader, Nichane suffered a government-led advertisement boycott campaign that drove down its ad revenue by 80%. Ahmed had to close it in 2010, resign his position in the publishing company and sell his shares to dissociate himself from TelQuel, thus allowing the company to survive and the magazine to continue (it still exists today, though with a different editorial line.)
In 2011, Ahmed left Morocco and moved to Stanford, California, where he was awarded a visiting scholar fellowship. During 2 years, he studied the “Arab Spring” tidal wave that shook the Middle East and inspired transformative movements around the world. While in Stanford, he contributed academic articles for the Journal of Democracy, the National Endowment for Democracy, the Middle East Institute, the Cato Institute, the French political science quarterlies Pouvoirs and L’ENA Hors Les Murs. He was also a co-author of “Taking to the streets: The Transformation of Arab Activism” (2014, Johns Hopkins University press,) and in Arabic, “February 20: The Outcomes of Democratization in Morocco” (2018, Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, Qatar), two anthologies that examined the roots of the Arab Spring.
But academic work didn't cut it for Ahmed. Publishing long articles in savant journals was a fine thing, but wasn’t enough engagement and made little real impact. The media man in him took over. Originally meant to be a book, his Stanford fellowship project turned into an online platform, FreeArabs.com, that was designed to be a springboard for the ebullient “Arab Spring” generation. The Beta version was a success, praised by his Stanford mentors. But as the hope for democratic change faded, so did the interest of venture capitalists in funding it.
After 2 years of unsuccessful fundraising efforts to transform freearabs.com into a media venture (2 years during which he also continued his journalistic work, with publications in The new Republic, Foreign Policy, Le Monde, Harvard’s Nieman Report, Politico, Salon and other outlets,) Ahmed joined Human Rights Watch in 2015. Since then, he has been honing his advocacy skills by helming the organization’s communications efforts to fight injustice in a region with no short supply of it. His job is to convey the findings of a 40+ team of researchers and other human rights operatives into digestible, media friendly pitches, media interviews, and social media campaigns.
In the course of his career, Ahmed was awarded “Best investigative Journalist in the Arab World” twice by the European Union (Brussels, Belgium in 2004, and Beirut, Lebanon in 2007). He was also keynote speaker for the Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism network (Amman, Jordan in 2009 and 2011) and the Oslo Freedom Forum (Oslo, Norway in 2011 and 2012,) and gave multiple conferences and seminars, including in Stanford, Harvard, Tufts, Georgetown, and other universities, and spoke publicly about the Arab Spring, Freedom of Speech, Secularism and individual freedoms in the Muslim world in various international venues in Europe, the Middle East, India and North America. he was also recognized by fellowships in Newsweek (New York, 2005 and 2008) and the Los Angeles Times (LA, 2005), and was invited twice to tour the US by the State Department’s International Visitor Leadership Program (2000, 2008). Early in his career, he was awarded “Best Investigative Journalist in Morocco” at age 22 by the National Syndicate of Moroccan Press.
Ahmed holds an MPhil (eq. French “DEA”) in Political science from the Institut d’Etudes Politiques (aka “Sciences Po”) in Paris, a master’s degree in development economics from The Sorbonne, and a bachelor’s degree in finance from Paris VIII University.
Ahmed also served as Communications and Media adviser to Morocco’s Secretary of State for Environment (1998). A dual Moroccan-American citizen, he lived in Casablanca (Morocco,) Palo Alto (California,) Washington D.C. and New York, and currently resides in Paris.
Ahmed and I have known each other for over a decade, working together with the Human Rights Foundation and consultations over MENA affairs. He has been a warm friend and valuable mentor to my community, especially its students. We share a passion for vibrant democracy. I admire his courage and integrity and value his friendship — Sherman
In Warren, R.I., new millennial-owned manufacturer is latest to bring metal fabrication back to US
The newest endeavor of my magnificent daughter-in law, Kelly Ward.
Read more here highlighted in the Boston Globe!
Ward’s Manufacturing is a new metal fabrication business which fiber laser cuts and CNC press brake bends custom metal parts. We are a woman-owned, family business with equipment that can handle thick cuts, tight tolerances, and unique metals, all manufactured in Rhode Island.
Their launch event, taking place on March 27, 2024, plans to follow this schedule:
Meet Kelly and Kiffin Ward, sibling co-founders who grew up in Rhode Island and are passionate about supporting manufacturing in their state
A congressional delegation will give remarks
See a demonstration of our state-of-the-art fiber laser cutter and computer numerical control (CNC) press brake
Connect over drinks and light refreshments with key stakeholders in Rhode Island’s manufacturing ecosystem
Sara Terry
Sara Terry is a documentary photographer and filmmaker whose work in recent years has focused on class and economic equity. She is a Guggenheim Fellow in Photography, a member of VII Photo and a Sundance Documentary Fellow. Her most feature-length documentary, A Decent Home, explored the wealth gap through the landscape of mobile home parks and aired on PBS in March 2023. Terry began her career as a print reporter for The Christian Science Monitor, where she also helped start the Monitor's public radio show. She moved from there into freelance magazine writing, with her work appearing in The New York Times Magazine, Rolling Stone, Boston Globe Magazine and other publications. She was also a frequent guest host for the national public radio, To the Point. She picked up a still camera in the late 1990s at a time when she lost her faith in words and never looked back.
Her early photography work, covering post-conflict Bosnia (“Aftermath: Bosnia’s Long Road to Peace”) led her to create The Aftermath Project, a grant-making photography non-profit based on the idea that “War is only half the story.” The Aftermath Project has been giving grants to photographers working in post-conflict settings around the world since 2007. She led three Aftermath photography workshops for students from the Institute for Global Leadership in Uganda, India, Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, and Houston, Texas.
One of her most recent ongoing projects is 1in6by2030.
What if Regulation Makes the AI Monopoly Worse? by Bhaskar Chakravorti
Apart from being artificial intelligence’s breakout year, in the race to steer the technology’s development, 2023 was also the year when the AI community splintered into various tribes: accelerationists, doomers, and regulators.
By year’s end, it seemed as if the accelerationists had won. Power had consolidated with a handful of the largest of the Big Tech companies investing in the hottest of start-ups; generative AI products were being rushed out; and doomers, with their dire warnings of AI risks, were in retreat. The regulators were in hot pursuit of the accelerationists with uncharacteristic agility, unveiling bold regulation proposals and, with a year of many elections and an anticipated surge in AI-powered disinformation ahead, corralling bills to rush into law.
Ironically, though, the regulators may have added to the wind on the backs of the accelerationists: New regulations may inadvertently add to the accelerationists’ market power.
How can it be that regulators tasked with preserving the public interest could take actions that might make matters worse? Do we now need different regulations to rein in an even more powerful industry? Are there creative alternatives for safeguarding the public interest?
Consider, first, the reasons why the AI industry is already primed for concentration.
Felix Bhattacharya
I am a current Junior at Tufts University pursuing a degree in International Relations and Civic Studies. While I was originally born in Newton, Ma — I moved to Berlin, Germany when I was 6 and grew up there most of my life. I moved back to the US for high school, and lived in Pittsburgh, PA for those four years. Being half-German and half-Indian, I have always loved to travel and explore the world. Academically, I have found a profound interest in international law and its purpose, as well as AI and how we will have to assess both its potential and risks.
Outside of class, I play tennis, act on the stage, and compete on the Tufts Mock Trial team. This past summer, I worked in Berlin on a new global forum called Berlin Global Dialogue — which brought together leaders from the public and private sector. I love finding opportunities for dialogue across different opinions, and believe dialogue and collaboration can lead to a better understanding of the world and its primary issues.
My love for theatre and tennis, have taught me about teamwork and collaboration — the importance of trusting your partner, whether it be on the stage or courts with partners or in everyday life. My life experiences have taught me to never make assumptions about individuals and always trying to enter a conversation with an open mind.
Learning more about the IGL and its mission, through taking EPIIC (‘23) and being the Vice-President of Tufts Amnesty International, has shown me the power of a wide international network. I joined Trebuchet as an intern to learn more about the power of collaboration and dialogue, and how it can help make the world a better place.
I am a rising junior at Princeton University pursuing a degree in sociology with minors in cognitive science and creative writing. I was born and raised in New York City before briefly living in Cambridge, Massachusetts towards the end of high school.
David Rubin
I am a rising Senior at Dartmouth College studying International Relations and Geography. My time in school has focused on subjects of nuclear non-proliferation and geopolitical conflict with my regions of interest being the Middle East and Russia. At Dartmouth, I have been named a War and Peace Fellow at the Dickey Institute of International Understanding.
These academic interests and a family connection led me to Sherman, who introduced me to Trebuchet and Student Pugwash USA. With Sherman’s guidance, I have created a Pugwash Student organization at Dartmouth with the goal of creating a community to reflect and discuss subjects of Nuclear and advanced weaponry technologies and their implications on geopolitics. Our meetings involve dissecting publications put forward by the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists or the International Security Journal, in addition to exploring recent headlines surrounding International Security and WMDs. Our group is currently 25 strong and highly motivated!
I am also involved with the Dartmouth varsity Squash team. As a returning senior and 4 year varsity letter winner, I will be at the helm of the team next year as one of its captains.
As a dual citizen of America and France, the ability to navigate two languages and cultures is my strong suit. In the spring of 2021, I took a gap year to live in Paris, where I worked as a paralegal at Gobert et Associes, a French real estate law firm. My duties at the firm involved judicial research and the management of dozens of British homeowners in France participating in a class action suit. This opportunity provided me the opportunity to navigate a fully professional francophone environment.
With my head now geared towards the foreign service, being a member of the Trebuchet team is an honor. The Trebuchet’s goals of creating meaningful dialogues amongst people of various opinions and backgrounds is essential to tackling multinational issues. I look forward to furthering these dialogues and to growing the Trebuchets vast network of avid and like-minded individuals.
Josh Hirshberg
I am a rising senior at Newton North High School in Newton, MA, planning on pursuing a degree in International Relations in college. Ever since I was little, I was always fascinated by the intersectionality of the world. I would find myself diving down rabbit holes relating to history, geography, politics, astronomy, environmental issues, and other various topics that piqued my interest. Nowadays, I’m specifically interested in how governments use physical resources to gain leverage over others. For territorial, economic, and environmental reasons, the growing disparity in global resources is actively shaping the world we live in.
I am involved in my school community, where I am a varsity Nordic Skier, statistician of the varsity Football team, officer of the Film club, and am a member of the Plant Parenthood (gardening) and Trailblazers (hiking) clubs. I have attended Camp Becket for all of my life, where I am going to be working as a Leader in Training this summer. This LIT program includes a two week service trip to the Sioux Nation in South Dakota. In addition to this volunteer trip, I participated in DCEP West, a four week service trip—also through Camp Becket— to Yellowstone National Park and its surrounding regions, as well as locally assisting in food preparation and delivery through Lasagna Love and Yad Chased.
I know Sherman through a connection with my Uncle, who has been next door neighbors with Sherman in Cape Cod for decades. My interests align perfectly with The Trebuchet’s initiatives, and I know that the experience I’ll have and the people I’ll meet working on this project will be fascinating and resourceful. I am honored and ecstatic to become an active member of The Trebuchet community.
Mikaëla Lavandero
I am a rising junior at Princeton University pursuing a degree in sociology with minors in cognitive science and creative writing. I was born and raised in New York City before briefly living in Cambridge, Massachusetts towards the end of high school.
Speaking both French and Spanish at home, I had always been interested in pursuing linguistics and integrating languages in my work. During the summer of 2023, I interned for Americans for Immigrant Justice, a non-profit in Miami, Florida. I was a legal assistant and helped with various forms and motions for court as well as interviewed clients over the phone and in person at Broward Transitional Center. All of our clients were detained immigrants seeking legal advice. I conducted one-hour interviews with each of them, often translating between French, Spanish, and English, before passing along their information to our staff attorneys who provided legal advice. Although fascinated by immigration law, I have had most of my experience working for organizations in the criminal justice system. I interned for the Emancipating Initiative, a non-profit in Boston with the goal of ending life sentences without parole. I was able to speak with our founder, Derrick Washington, who is currently incarcerated, about our goals and initiatives as an organization. I worked alongside staff attorneys who provided legal advice and aid to our clients behind bars. I also volunteered for a UCLA Law data project that helped track COVID-19 cases and vaccination rates behind bars in various ICE detention facilities during the summer of 2021.
On campus, I am the vice president of Princeton Students for Immigrant Empowerment (PSIE) and the French Language Head for the Princeton University Language Project (PULP). Through both of these organizations, I have been able to foster my passion for languages and immigration law. I am also part of the staff of our daily newspaper The Daily Princetonian and I copy edit for one of our campus literary journals The Nassau Weekly. I am also a student volunteer for a program called El Centro where I teach English to Princeton University staff and I volunteer with Solidaridad, an immigration organization that does similar work to my internship with Americans for Immigrant Justice.
Through these various experiences, I have learned the importance of communication and dialogue and I am thrilled to join the team. I was introduced to Sherman Teichman through my mother, who was in Sherman’s EPIIC class of 1994. I look forward to learning from my peers and colleagues through the impressive work of the Trebuchet team.
Exodus within Borders: The Uprooted who Never Left Home
In 1998, our EPIIC colloquium/symposium year was Exodus and Exile in which we had dedicated that year to the least protected refugees, IDP’s and worked closely with Roberta Cohen and Francis Deng. Our professional workshop that year was Emerging Issues in Complex Humanitarian Emergencies: What Works and What Does The Future Hold in Bosnia, Kosovo, the Great Lakes, and North Korea? . The 1998 Institute’s Dr. Jean Mayer Award for Global Citizenship was given to Francis Deng.
By Roberta Cohen and Francis M. Deng
According to the United Nations, since October 7, 1.9 million Gazans—representing 85 percent of the strip’s population—have been forced to flee their homes, but remain trapped in the Gaza Strip. Their plight contributes to the growing number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) across the globe. Amid war and conflict, climate-related disasters, and other humanitarian crises, tens of millions of people each year flee their homes to escape danger—but the majority of them never cross international borders. According to the Geneva-based Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, 2022 saw a record 71.1 million internally displaced people, more than double the number in 2012.
“These displaced persons are at the greatest risk of starvation, have the highest rates of preventable disease, and are the most vulnerable to human rights abuses,” Roberta Cohen and Francis Deng wrote in a 1998 essay. Deng, a Sudanese diplomat, served as the first Representative of the UN Secretary-General on IDPs, and, from 1994 to 2004, Cohen served as his senior adviser. Together, they helped put the plight of IDPs on the international agenda.
At the time of writing, there were roughly 20 million internally displaced people worldwide, but Cohen and Deng could see that this phenomenon was quickly becoming “the newest global crisis.” And this catastrophe was unfolding under the world’s nose. Unlike refugees, who had a system—however dysfunctional—of international protection and assistance, “those forced from their homes who remain under their government’s jurisdiction are not covered by any international arrangements.” Cohen and Deng argued that when a state failed to provide protection and assistance to its citizens, the international community was obligated to act—even if it meant setting aside principles of sovereignty and noninterference.
Today, the number of IDPs continues to skyrocket, but there is more attention to them at the international level. “The steps taken over 25 years to address their plight must not only be recognized but built upon with urgency,” Cohen wrote in a recent email to Foreign Affairs. In 1998, Cohen and Deng called for “strategies to prevent genocide and other crimes against humanity that lead to displacement.” And Cohen says that this is still what is missing today. There “is too little attention to the political settlements needed to resolve the disputes and inequities at the heart of conflicts causing displacement,” she wrote. “What conflict and displacement cry out for, and for which there is no substitute, are political solutions and reconstruction plans to help reintegrate displaced populations in accord with human rights and humanitarian norms.”
This Month At Abraham Initiatives
The Abraham Initiatives at the Knesset
The Abraham Initiatives hit the ground running in 2024 with meetings at the Knesset. Last week, we took part in the discussion initiated by MK Yoav Segalovich (Yesh Atid) on the issue of private citizen militias, an issue we have been involved with from the beginning. Our co-Director of Public Affairs, Moran Maimoni (pictured above) spoke about the heavy burden being placed on police and communities by the militias.
The Abraham Initiatives is deeply worried about the activities of these unregulated and often armed groups operating on the fault-line between Jewish and Arab communities, especially during a time of war. It is important that the state takes responsibility for the protection of all citizens of Israel.
Despite our strong differences with the current government, we continue to seek opportunities to advance shared society within relevant ministries. Co-CEO Dr. Thabet Abu Rass recently participated in a meeting with Minister of the Interior Moshe Arbel, along with several other officials. At the meeting, the minister stated his desire to cooperate with The Abraham initiatives and promote positive Jewish-Arab relations in Israel during this tense period.
WATCH MORAN'S STATEMENT (HEBREW)
New Policy Reports Issued
Since the current government took office last year, The Abraham Initiatives has invested additional staff time and resources into policy work—to both combat extremist proposals and promote recommendations that will advance shared society.
In the weeks since October 7th, Arab medical professionals have faced unwarranted suspicion and incitement. In response, we issued a detailed policy report to the Ministry of Health and Hospital authorities to ensure that Arab staff can work in an environment free of racism and harassment.
We also issued our final report on crime and violence in Arab communities in 2023. Last year saw the murder rate for Palestinian citizens of Israel more than doubling.
Anti-Racism Education in Pre-Army Academies
The Abraham Initiatives' anti-racism education work in pre-army academies (mechinot) is more important than ever—and we are pleased that we have been able to continue exposing students to the complex and shared reality of Israeli society. Angham Hussiem, our Director of High School Initiatives, recently led a series of meetings with the Lachish mechina in Jerusalem.
Angham, a Palestinian citizen of Israel, is an experienced educator who has forged remarkable connections with pre-army academy students, most of whom are drawn from very different backgrounds. One former student even reached out to Angham after October 7th to check in. She wrote, "For this whole difficult period, what has kept me going is the feeling of the lessons, the thoughts and knowledge that you instilled in me. And mainly the understanding that I have always known—that war is the last option and peace is the ideal."
Training Organizational Consultants
Many critical facets of the Israeli economy and society rely on cooperation within diverse working environments, which have come under strain in recent weeks. Hospitals, universities, municipal governments, and a host of private companies are being confronted with problems that existed before October 7th but have since been exacerbated.
At the end of last year, we developed a training program for management consultants whose clients include organizations with diverse staffs. Our training aims to inculcate expertise in dealing with conflicts or issues in shared work spaces. The model was developed by The Abraham Initiatives' Shahira Shalabi and Dr. Shany Payes, emphasizing flexibility in dealing with a wide range of potential problems.