The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace has a beautiful and powerful video supporting their efforts.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Etmw9ld ... re=channel
They also have a Facebook page
http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Fund- ... 1375911812
The Facebook page has already garnered attention from some notable folks.
The Funds' website has been operating for some time: http://www.thefundfor.org
In the About section on Facebook, The Fund is described:
Mission
The fundamental goal of the Fund is to break down the deep-seated psychological barriers that exist within Palestinian and Israeli societies and whose existence serves to perpetuate the conflict. As such, we work to tackle the most critical psychological barriers, such as– fear, mistrust, dehumanization of the other and divergent conflict narratives – by developing and implementing innovative programming that utilizes the incredible power of mass media, education, grassroots movements, and targeted campaigns.
Description
PEACE BETWEEN ISRAELIS AND PALESTINIANS TODAY – NOT TOMORROW.
In September 2009, Leonard Cohen performed a concert in Israel honoring 400 bereaved Palestinians and Israelis, all of whom lost an immediate family member in the conflict. Yet all of them strive for peace in their lifetime. And all of them work on a daily basis to achieve it.
BEING MOVED TO TEARS WASN’T ENOUGH. COHEN WAS MOVED TO ACTION.
He was so inspired by these extraordinary individuals that he decided to donate all proceeds from the concert to establish this unique organization. And this small act has turned into something bigger. It’s sown a seed. And the seed is growing.
THE FUND IS COMMITTED TO BREAKING THROUGH THE PSYCHOLOGICAL BARRIERS OF PALESTINIANS AND ISRAELIS TO END THE CONFLICT.
In situations of prolonged conflict individuals and societies develop deep-rooted psychological barriers that perpetuate the conflict. These psychological barriers are so ingrained that they undermine any chance for progress and keep people on both sides from taking any sort of positive action to achieve peace. Breaking down the ingrained psychological barriers is a critical and absolutely necessary step towards resolving, rather than simply managing, the conflict. Without overcoming these barriers, the majority of Israelis and Palestinians will not act, will not push their leaders forward, will not accept the contours of any possible peace plan that is presented to them and will never be able to accept the compromises that both sides need to make in order to solve the conflict.
Through programming and partnering with organizations on the ground, the Fund for Reconciliation Tolerance and Peace identifies the greatest barriers to peace and addresses them in a systematic, holistic and strategic way.
PLEASE JOIN US IN THIS HISTORIC EFFORT.
The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace
The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace
Marie
Speaking Cohen
Speaking Cohen
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- Posts: 539
- Joined: Sat Apr 18, 2009 10:24 am
- Location: Barcelona, Spain
Re: The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace
"...there is a crack, a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in..."
That's how the light gets in..."
2008 Paris. 2009 Barcelona. 2010 Marseille. 2012 Ghent. Verona. Barcelona. Lisbon. 2013 Antwerpen, Berlin, Pula.
Re: The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace
Thanks for the links, Marie.
The film, "2 Boys" is very moving.
---Arlene
The film, "2 Boys" is very moving.
---Arlene
2009-San Diego|Los Ang|Nashville|St Louis|Kansas City|LVegas|San Jose
2010-Gothenburg|Berlin|Ghentx2|Oaklandx2|Portland|LVegasx2
2012-Austinx2|Denver|Los Ang|Seattle|Portland
Arlene's Leonard Cohen Scrapbook http://onboogiestreet.blogspot.com
2010-Gothenburg|Berlin|Ghentx2|Oaklandx2|Portland|LVegasx2
2012-Austinx2|Denver|Los Ang|Seattle|Portland
Arlene's Leonard Cohen Scrapbook http://onboogiestreet.blogspot.com
Re: The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace
I post this to follow up on how Leonard's donation has impacted the area.
UPDATE: Oded Lifshitz's body was returned to his family by Hamas this week.
https://www.timesofisrael.com/hamas-kil ... hospitals/
UPDATE: Oded Lifshitz's body was returned to his family by Hamas this week.
https://www.timesofisrael.com/hamas-kil ... hospitals/
Hamas killed 6 of them on Oct. 7. Why these Israelis still drive Palestinians to hospitals
Road for Recovery program, launched in 2010 with donation by Leonard Cohen, now concentrates on bringing West Bank Palestinians to Israeli medical centers for lifesaving treatment
By Bernard Dichek
16 January 2025, 7:53 am
It is still dark at 5 a.m. on a December morning, when Israeli volunteer Joanna Chen drives into the parking lot at the Tarkumiya military checkpoint south of Jerusalem that separates Israel from the Palestinian Authority.
“It’s eerily empty these days,” says Chen, noting that, other than another volunteer pulling up in a car and a few soldiers, there is no one in sight. “Before October 7, this place was always thick with people, a crowded scene of Palestinians from the West Bank on their way to work inside Israel.”
Chen is a volunteer driver in a joint Israeli-Palestinian program that enables Palestinian patients to receive medical care at Israeli hospitals. The Road for Recovery program, formed in 2010, with origins in a donation from Leonard Cohen, has continued uninterruptedly for patients from the West Bank since October 7, 2023, despite the Gaza war.
The ranks of the volunteers were thinned, due to the Hamas onslaught. Six volunteers — Vivian Silver, Eli Orgad, Adi Dagan, Tami Suchman, Hayim Katsman, and Chaim Peri — were murdered in the Hamas invasion, which saw some 1,200 people in southern Israel slaughtered and 251 kidnapped to the Gaza Strip. Two others, Oded and Yochved Lifshitz were among the kidnapped. Several months later Yocheved was released; 84-year-old Oded remains in captivity.
On that December morning, a woman clutching a child car seat and a small suitcase with one hand, while holding onto a young girl with the other, soon passes through the Tarkumiyah gate.
Chen helps Dua Abu Shekha fasten the child seat to her car before beginning the hour-long trip to the Sheba Medical Center near Tel Aviv. The sun rises slowly as Abu Shekha explains that she has been taking 5-year-old Rokia from her hometown of Dura in the West Bank for treatments on a regular basis for four years.
“When my daughter had scans that showed she had a tumor on her brain stem, the doctors at the Hebron Governmental Hospital told us she needs to get therapy in Israel,” says Abu Shekha.
“She was only one year old. It was very difficult at first, when she received chemotherapy. We spent a lot of time in the hospital, one time we stayed for two months. But now it is easier and her case is stable.”
Abu Shekha is an English teacher, but looking after 5-year-old Rokia as well as a young son has made it impossible for her to work. Their financial situation has worsened as her husband, who worked in Israel’s construction industry, has been unemployed since the stoppage of entry permits for Palestinian workers after the October 7 onslaught and the start of the Gaza war.
The Palestinian Authority pays for the hospital expenses, but it does not cover the transportation costs.
“It costs me 100 shekels [$27] for a taxi from my home to Tarkumiya and then 400 shekels [$109] to Sheba. That’s 1,000 shekels [$273] for the whole trip, which sometimes we need to make several times a month,” she explains.
According to the US Department of State, the average daily salary in the West Bank is NIS 137 ($37.50), while unemployment reached 29 percent in the last quarter of 2023, following the October 7 massacre in southern Israel.
When Abu Shekha is asked what it is like for her and her daughter to stay overnight at the hospital, she points out that she has met many Israeli mothers over the years, who like herself come back to the Sheba hospital repeatedly for treatments.
“We stay in the same room together and we have relationships,” she says.
When Chen expresses concern about all of her difficulties, Abu Shekha pauses and then responds thoughtfully.
“Sometimes, we see other patients and we realize that our case is better,” she says, pointing out that Rokia attends a regular kindergarten and that she and her husband are raising her as normally as they can, almost as if Rokia did not have her medical condition.
“It’s a journey, a journey of life that we have to live with and look at from all sides,” she adds.
Abu Shekha’s last comment makes Chen, a translator of Hebrew and Arabic poems, smile with admiration.
“That’s a really nice way of putting it,” she says.
Canceled by culture
By the time the two women reach the hospital, Chen has shared some of the medical challenges her own family has faced and there is a warm, familiar atmosphere in the car.
British-born Chen was a teenager when she immigrated from Yorkshire to Israel with her family. A former journalist with Newsweek magazine, she now works as a literary translator, having translated the works of such writers as poet Agi Mishol and novelist Tahila Hakimi.
She also contributes poetry and essays to literary magazines. Several months after the Gaza war began, she wrote a personal piece for Guernica magazine that unexpectedly caused an international furor. In “From the Edges of a Broken World,” she sensitively describes how the outbreak of the war left her in a state of shock. For several weeks, she felt unable to do any translating or volunteer work.
Writing about her relationships with both Israelis and Palestinians, she stated: “My own heart was in turmoil. It is not easy to tread the line of empathy, to feel passion for both sides.”
Even though Guernica’s editor approved her article, when the rest of the staff saw it they resigned in protest. She was accused of being “a white colonialist woman raising murderous children.” The publisher retracted the article and apologized for printing it.
But the irony of a small magazine that takes its name from Picasso’s famous anti-war painting rejecting an article lamenting war was not lost on larger publications.
The Los Angeles Times commented: “After a writer expressed sympathy for Israelis in an essay, all hell broke loose at a literary journal.” The Nation railed against “cringe-worthy hypocrisy” and observed that “a piece by an Israeli peace activist reveals a part of the left that cannot countenance historical nuance.”
After the Washington Monthly published the rejected essay, Chen was overwhelmed with responses from all over the world.
“I started getting an average of a few hundred emails a day,” says Chen. “But I realized quite quickly that it wasn’t about me or about the quality of my writing, it was about something much bigger.”
The much bigger thing that Chen cites is the hostility towards Israel shown by many in the literary world since the outbreak of the Gaza war.
This includes Irish author Sally Rooney, leading more than 1,000 writers and publishing professionals to pledge to boycott Israeli cultural institutions, as well as dozens of Canadian authors who withdrew their books for consideration for the national Giller literary award because of the sponsor’s ties to Israeli businesses.
Chen remains undaunted. Several weeks after the war began, she returned to her weekly volunteer driving and continued to write personal essays. In a recent article for Lilith magazine called “I’m Not Going to Shut Up,” she denounces the rising spread of antisemitism.
On the road to peace?
Chen is one of about 1,300 Israeli volunteers who have worked with Road for Recovery in recent years.
“Prior to the Gaza war, we were transporting as many as 1,000 patients a week,” says Yael Noy, the program director. “But 35% of those patients were from Gaza, and since October 7, we have been unable to continue with the Gaza program.”
Noy points out that even on October 8, 2023, the day after the Hamas invasion, volunteers continued to transport Palestinians from the West Bank to Israeli hospitals.
“But because the Israeli hospitals were so overloaded with treating so many people wounded in the attack, we had to reduce the number of patients taken to the hospitals,” recalls Noy.
Road to Recovery was founded by Yuval Roth, whose brother Udi was murdered by Hamas terrorists in 1993.
“Yuval was a member of an organization of bereaved Israelis and Palestinians and when one of the friends he made there asked him for assistance in driving a Palestinian patient to Rambam Hospital [in Haifa], Yuval realized that there was an unmet need,” says Noy, explaining the high cost of transportation that the Palestinians must bear.
Noy points out that Roth organized volunteer drivers informally on his own for several years.
“Then when Leonard Cohen read an article about what Yuval was doing, he decided to make a donation,” says Noy. The funds provided by the late legendary Canadian poet and singer enabled Roth to found an NGO and expand activities.
Noy remains optimistic about the future of the volunteering program.
“In the past year, despite all our difficulties, more than 100 new volunteers have joined up with us and remain committed.”
Many veteran volunteers also remain committed.
“There is so much in the world today that I’m not sure of, but this is one thing that I am sure is the right thing to do,” says Chen. “ I think that anybody who has had a sick child will get this.”
Marie
Speaking Cohen
Speaking Cohen
Re: The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace
Thank you for posting this update on The Fund for Reconciliation Marie.
I had forgotten about this.
Much appreciated.
Leslie
I had forgotten about this.
Much appreciated.
Leslie
Last edited by mutti on Sun Feb 23, 2025 6:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.
1988 Vancouver
2009 Victoria/Seattle/Almost Red Rocks/Las Vegas/San Jose.
2010 Sligo x 2/Victoria/Vancouver/Portland/Las Vegas x 2.
2012 Austin x 2/Seattle/Vancouver/Montreal x 2.
2013 Oakland x 2/New York City x 2/Winnipeg...
2009 Victoria/Seattle/Almost Red Rocks/Las Vegas/San Jose.
2010 Sligo x 2/Victoria/Vancouver/Portland/Las Vegas x 2.
2012 Austin x 2/Seattle/Vancouver/Montreal x 2.
2013 Oakland x 2/New York City x 2/Winnipeg...
Re: The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace
So comforting that this compassionate venture began with Leonard's thoughtfulness and generosity of mind and money. I remember when it happened.
It's a long hard road they travel over there and I hold onto the belief that one day everyone will be able to travel that road safely and as equals.
I know I've said this a few times before on the forum that my one and only rule in life is to try and treat others the same way that I wish to be treated. Such a simple rule but in reality it sure does encompass complex things. But the secret to success is also simple and that is to never, ever give up in trying to accomplish it.
It doesn't have to be perfect, it just has to B4real ~ me
Attitude is a self-fulfilling prophecy ~ me ...... The magic of art is the truth of its lies ~ me ...... Only left-handers are in their right mind!
Attitude is a self-fulfilling prophecy ~ me ...... The magic of art is the truth of its lies ~ me ...... Only left-handers are in their right mind!
Re: The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace
What Bev said. That's you, B4Real, yes? What you said, wholeheartedly.
Re: The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace
Yes, abby that's me

Below is along the same lines as Leonard's Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace and referencing Leonard as inspiration.
Empathy and dialogue is the pathway to peace
Ittay Flescher's book, The Holy and the Broken, is a personal story and exploration of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and the maddening quest for peace.
https://www.australianjewishnews.com/em ... -to-peace/
LEONARD Cohen once said of his iconic song, Hallelujah: “This world is full of conflicts and full of things that cannot be reconciled. But there are moments when we can … reconcile and embrace the whole mess, and that’s what I mean by Hallelujah.”
In his debut book, Ittay Flescher evokes both the words and spirit of Cohen. The title of Flescher’s book comes from this classic song: The Holy and the Broken – it’s a personal story and exploration of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and the maddening quest for peace between the warring peoples.
Flescher has lived in Jerusalem together with his family since 2018, moving there from Melbourne. He has not only had the perspective of an engaged observer, but also a view informed by deep engagement within that edgy city. As a passionate peace activist, writer and the educational director of Kids4Peace Jerusalem – an interfaith youth movement for Israeli and Palestinian children – he has moved almost seamlessly between his home in Emek Refaim in Jewish Jerusalem, and Sheikh Jarrah in East Jerusalem.
Building on his experience at Melbourne Jewish schools as a teacher and peace-building activist bringing together different faith schools and Indigenous Australians, Flescher facilitates courageous conversations and joint trust-building activities between Israeli and Palestinian teens.
A good section of the book outlines the daunting challenges and moral perplexities of peace-building during the Israel-Gaza War.
As someone who has been involved in interfaith work for some 30 years both in the multicultural environment and education – it was at Mt Scopus College after 9/11 that we launched the very first dialogue between Jewish and Muslim schools, a basis for the Building Bridges program – I found Flescher’s personal narrative engaging, inspirational, aspirational and deeply moving.
Flescher’s work with Kids4Peace includes a bi-yearly dialogue program for the parents which is valuable in its capacity to challenge and invite change beyond the kids.
As one parent said of the meeting: “I have lived in Jerusalem for many years and this is the first time I have ever had a personal conversation … with a woman wearing a hijab.”
The very fact that they were able to restart the program after October 7 is astonishing – a timely reminder that interfaith interaction especially between Jews and Muslims is far from extinct.
It is happening here in Australia and across the world.
Notwithstanding Flescher’s observation that these are usually attended by the elderly, I am aware of a growing number of young people who are seeking and working to restore peace between the religions.
Australian readers will surely find the chapters on Jewish education in Melbourne as well as the Jewish/Australian/Israeli/Palestinian nexus insightful and confronting.
They, and other readers across the world, are likely to either be informed and challenged, or irritated and dismissive, toward Flescher’s idealism and unwavering conviction that respectful dialogue imbued with empathy and compassion for the suffering of the other is both imperative and the only real pathway to peace.
You can dismiss Ittay Flescher as a hopeless dreamer or embrace him as a prophet of hope, but in either case, if you engage with his efforts as recorded in The Holy and the Broken, you are likely to come away better informed about the collective trauma of Israelis and Palestinians, and the search for small and important possibilities for healing and humanity in a world broken by war and polarisation.
This book provides the sliver of light that Leonard Cohen sought, a hint and a hope of the opportunity to reconcile and embrace amidst the mess and the brokenness.
It doesn't have to be perfect, it just has to B4real ~ me
Attitude is a self-fulfilling prophecy ~ me ...... The magic of art is the truth of its lies ~ me ...... Only left-handers are in their right mind!
Attitude is a self-fulfilling prophecy ~ me ...... The magic of art is the truth of its lies ~ me ...... Only left-handers are in their right mind!
Re: The Fund for Reconciliation, Tolerance and Peace
All of this brings a feeling of hopefulness in the midst of what otherwise feels totally despairing.
"Be yourself. Everyone else is already taken."
~ Oscar Wilde
~ Oscar Wilde