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2010
Sasha Chanoff and Jared Genser Articles

Take Kim to Court
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Inspired by relatives, he's doing a world of good for refugees
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What It Takes: A persistent voice for human rights
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Mapendo and Freedom Now founders win Bronfman Prize
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The Charles Bronfman Prize Fetes Two Young Humanitarians
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Two win Bronfman Prize
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Charles Bronfman Prize Names Two Recipients
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Mapendo and Freedom Now founders win Bronfman Prize
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The Charles Bronfman Prize Names Two Recipients
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Bronfman Prize Names Two 2010 Recipients
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MAPENDO: A Lifeline for Forgotten Refugees
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Bronfman Prize Winners Announced
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DLA Piper's Genser wins 2010 Charles Bronfman Prize for accomplishments in the field of human rights
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The freedom fighter D.C. lawyer wins $100k Bronfman prize
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Freedom Fighter
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Charles Bronfman Prize Awarded to Two Human Rights Leaders
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Mapendo founder receives Bronfman Prize
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2009
KIPP - Mike Feinberg and Dave Levin Articles

National KIPP founders earn humanitarian prize
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Two teachers receive Charles Bronfman Award
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Jewish educators win Bronfman Prize
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2009 Charles Bronfman Prize Honors KIPP's Excellence in Education
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The Right Recruits From The Wrong Side Of The Track
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Education Vision Prize
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2008
Rachel Andres Articles

Prize goes to Darfur Project
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Y-Net Article (In Hebrew) on Rachel Andres
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Jewish visionary awarded Bronfman Prize for helping Darfur women (Y-Net English Version)
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If You Save One Life, You Have Saved The World - Page One
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If You Save One Life, You Have Saved The World - Page Two
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If You Save One Life, You Have Saved The World - Page Three
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Un projet révolutionnaire pour sauver les réfugiées du viol (Pana Press Article French Version)
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Pana Press Article on Rachel Andres (English Version)
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Rachel Andres - The Power of One
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2008 Press Release
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The Simple Tool That Saves Women's Lives
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2007
Amitai Ziv Articles

Prize for Simulation
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Galey Zahal interview with Dr. Amitai Ziv
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Galey Zahal interview with Dr. Amitai Ziv
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WMLB Voice of the Arts' Max Arbes Interview with Dr. Amitai Ziv
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Sheba Medical Simulation National Center

They Play Doctor in Order to Reduce Mistakes and Malpractice
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Translation to 'They Play Doctor in Order to Reduce Mistakes and Malpractice'
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An Unsimulated Success
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2005
Alon Tal Articles

Environmental activist to use award money to fund green groups
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Ma\'ariv Article (in Hebrew)
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Haaretz Article (in Hebrew)
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Y-Net Article (In Hebrew)
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Environmentalist-activist Dr. Alon Tal kicked Israel's green movement into action 15 year ago with the founding of Adam Teva V'Din - Israel Union for Environmental Defense, and he's not done kicking yet
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U.S.-born environmental warrior rewarded for his efforts
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Award-winning immigrant a force in environmental activism
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Defining the Jewish future on our own terms
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Israel proposes itself as a location of world desertification research centre
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Dr. Alon Tal to Chair JNF Land Development Authority
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The Legend of a Lost Lake:
A Tale of Death and Resurrection
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Study: 'Green' Education At Schools Is In Poor Shape
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Israeli Muslims set to green the Arab world
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2004
Jay Feinberg Articles

Jay Feinberg '90 Receives Bronfman Prize
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Founder of Bone Marrow Registry Honored
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Founder of marrow registry to use prize money to give life
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Gift Of Life
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Survival Victory Leads to $100,000
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News



Israeli Muslims set to green the Arab world
By: Karin Kloosterman
Israel 21C September 10, 2008

Americans have been tuned into environmental issues for decades. Influential activists like Rachel Carson who penned The Silent Spring, exposed the dangers of pesticides and pollution to the land in the early '60s. Since then, Americans have been leaders in the global environmental movement.

Israel has benefited from America's early start and taken some issues a step further. Monumental figures in Israel's green movement, such as Alon Tal - an American import to Israel - have brought with them education and expertise from the US to start new organizations, and push the green movement to the mainstream in Israel.

While "green" is now seeping into Israeli society, from groundbreaking R&D developments in clean technology to local educational programs on recycling, the Israeli Arab community lags behind. But that, thanks to a new initiative, is about to change.

In a groundbreaking event last month, 50 Israeli Arab imams (Muslim clerics) gathered in Umm el-Fahm, Israel, to listen, learn, and debate on the environment. Israel's Ministry of Environmental Protection, an organizer of the conference, is hopeful that the material and message - including a CD, posters and stickers citing references to the environment in the Koran - will spread beyond Israeli mosques to neighbouring Middle East nations, where environmental issues are seriously neglected.

Robert Reuven, the Environmental Protection Ministry head of Haifa District said that he plans on distributing the educational CD, in Arabic, to Muslim communities everywhere. "We would be happy if they [the imams] could spread the message to other Arab countries," Sharon Achdut, the Ministry's spokesman told ISRAEL21c.

Different Shades of Green

One issue the Ministry wanted to address was the growing complaints of noise pollution emanating from religious Muslim communities, says Achdut. The mosques' daily calls to prayer are using loudspeakers, which disturb some residents.

The Ministry sent the message, says Achdut, that of course the mosques can continue their transmissions, but that they should take the noise level down a notch. The imams also got an opportunity to vent their concern over the proximity of chicken coops in neighboring Jewish communities, and the proximity of cellular phone antennas to their homes. Other issues covered included talks on construction waste, water pollution and sewage treatment.

"I think it was a success," says Achdut. "Just the fact that we could collect these imams together [to listen to the green message] made it a success."

Sponsored by Israel's Environmental Protection Ministry, the Interior Ministry's Islamic Administration and Religions Department, as well as the Environmental Quality Unit Northern Triangle, organizers saw the "Imams of the Mosques Conference - Islam and Environmental Protection" as an important stepping-stone to improving the quality of the environment in Israeli-Arab towns.

Northern Triangle unit director Mohammad Rabah Aghbarieh, a green activist and Israeli Arab, helped prepare material for every imam to take home.

Rabah Aghbarieh told ISRAEL21c that the event "as a concept" should be replicated and adopted by the rest of the Muslim world. He was proud to report, that only one day after the conference the message was getting sent to Israeli Muslims on their holy day, Friday: "A day after the conference ended imams were already talking to people in their communities," he says happily.



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