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Board Member,, Ameinu; life-long supporter of the Zionist left, grew up in Hashomer Hatzair and is currently an Ameinu Board member. He is trained as a sociologist and currently serves as Director of Research and Evaluation for the Philadelphia Corporation for Aging, Adjunct Associate Professor in the School of Nursing at the University of Pennsylvania, and as a Fellow of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. He also served two terms as President of the Association for the Social Scientific Study of Jewry. His work has been supported by private foundations and the National Institutes of Health, whose Director has given him a special award for innovations in research methods. member of the Ameinu Board of Directors and has spent 15 years working in executive management of several Jewish Community Centers throughout the United States, and is currently Director of Development for the JCC of St. Louis. Amacher has bachelor's degrees in journalism and psychology from Syracuse University. She also earned a master of social work degree from Yeshiva University and a Jewish studies certificate from the WUJS Institute in 1985, when she also worked for United Press International covering the Lebanon War and the absorption of Ethiopian immigrants. She has served as vice president for the Association of Jewish Center Professionals, president of the Syracuse University Alumni Club of Central Virginia and chair of the Community Advisory Board for KXCI Community Radio in Tucson, Ariz. She currently serves as Co-President for JNF in St. Louis and co-chair of Ameinu's St. Louis chapter. Executive Director of the National Committee for Labor Israel; board member, Ameinu He was founding Executive Director of the National Conference on Soviet Jewry and was Executive Director of the International Committee for Sepharad '92. He has spoken and written widely on Israel and the Middle East, and is author of the weekly Internet bulletin "Labor Israel News." {{r|Brad Rothschild} currently serves on Ameinu's Board of Director Policy and Advocacy Committee, while also working at Citigroup's Global Consumer Bank. From 1995-97, Brad worked as a speechwriter and Director of Communications at the Permanent Mission of Israel to the United Nations. After graduating college, Brad lived in Israel for two years. During this period he worked as a research associate at the Israel Democracy Institute, a think tank advocating political and economic reform. Brad is a passionate advocate for Israel and is deeply committed to achieving peace and social justice. He lives in New York. a New York-based media and public affairs strategist, is a board member of Ameinu, Americans for Peace Now and the Givat Haviva Educational Foundation; author, Transforming America's Israel Lobby-The Limits of Its Power and the Potential for Change; bloggrt at Realistic Dove (www.realisticdove.org/) Ameinu board member, is a consultant to labor and Jewish communal organizations.

Vice President for Policy and Advocacy, Ameinu and Chair of Ameinu’s Executive Committee. She also serves on the executive committee of the Habonim Dror Foundation and on the camp committee for the Habonim Dror Camp Moshava, where her three children represent the fourth generation of her family associated with the camp. Prior to attending Oberlin College and MIT, Judith participated in the Habonim’s 23^rd Workshop at Maayan Baruch. In addition to her work with Ameinu and Habonim Dror, Judith sits on the International Council of the New Israel Fund. She is the immediate past President of Adat Shalom Reconstructionist Congregation in Bethesda, MD. She has previously worked for the Council of Economic Advisers and the Federal Trade Commission, and is currently employed at Salop Economics in Washington, DC. Board Member, Vice President and Chair of Membership and Outreach Committee Nomi grew up in Habonim Dror in Canada and both her professional and personal development have been centered on Israel and the Middle East. Nomi is currently a trustee on the board of Congregation Beth El in South Orange, New Jersey as well as a member of the Metrowest Jewish Community Relations Council. Nomi is also a former member of the Habonim-Dror Na’aleh Camp Committee. Trained as a foreign policy analyst specializing in the Arab World and the Persian Gulf, she previously worked at the Council on Foreign Relations and a private energy consulting firm. She holds degrees from Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) and McGill University. She has lived, worked and traveled throughout the region and speaks Hebrew, Arabic and French. Executive Director and Publisher of the Forward newspaper' Vice President, Ameinu Boards of the Folksbiene Yiddish Theater, the Jewish Labor Committee, the Atran Foundation, the Claims Conference, the Workmen’s Circle, the American Friends of the Ghetto Fighters House and Midstream magazine. Samuel was also Vice President of the World Jewish Congress from 1975 to 1981, and executive Director of the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research from 1980 to 1992. Ameinu's Vice President, Fundraising, is the Chief Operating Officer of the Foundation for Jewish Camping. She previously served as Executive Director of the Office of Management and Budget at UJA-Federation of New York. Maggie lived in Israel for more than three decades, most of that time as a member of Kibbutz Hulda. During that period she held a variety of positions including Executive Director of the Carmel Institute for Social Studies and Policy in Zichron Yaakov, founding Director of the Department of Resource Development and Special Projects of the United Kibbutz Movement and Executive Director of the Israel Movement for Progressive Judaism. Maggie has translated numerous works from Hebrew into English, including Amos Oz's works: "In the Land of Israel," "The Slopes of Lebanon," and "The Story Begins." She has served as Vice-Chair of Ameinu's Israel Connections Committee since its inception is helping to develop local Ameinu activities in New York. has held senior positions at the Affiliated Organizations of the Jewish Federation, the Aliyah Demonstration Project and his local Jewish Federation. He is a mechanical engineer by trade, who often serves as an expert witness in accident cases. In addition to his work with the Jewish community, Martin performs and teaches magic to patients at Daniel Freeman Hospital. represents Ameinu in many organizations of American Jewish leaders, including in the American Zionist Movement. In addition to his work with Ameinu, Steve is active within the Habonim Dror Camping Association, as Chair of the Camp Committee of Philadelphia's Camp Galil. An urban planner, Steve does affordable housing consulting in New Jersey and Pennsylvania from his home base in East Brunswick, NJ Vice President and Chair of Israel Connections Committee; Simmy was the Mazkir of Habonim Dror in South Africa from 1976-1977 and was the leader of the United Kibbutz Movement Delegation to the United States in the 1980’s. Additionally, Simmy founded an educational software company that was later acquired by the Educational Testing Service, where he now works as the Senior Director of Business Development. Board member, Ameinu an avid and active Israeli Folk Dancer and a teacher of B’nai Mitzvah preparation (Haftarah and Torah). Harriette works as a consultant in the commercial insurance and risk management industry, specializing in software. Board Member, [Ameinu]]; third generation Labor Zionist;nurse for the Michigan Department of Community Health Division of Nursing Home Monitoring. Immediate Past President' Winner of a Fulbright Fellowship to study science and gender anxiety, Jeffry writes extensively on Jewish political and cultural topics, and his articles have appeared in the Forward, Midstream, Yiddisher Kemfer. Dr. Mallow is a Professor of Physics at Loyola University Chicago, where he researches quantum mechanics.

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Associate Professor of Political Science. She holds a Ph.D. in Government from Georgetown University (2001), an M.A. in Political Science from the University of Toronto (1996), and a B.A. in Middle East Studies (Honours) from McGill University (1994). Her specialties are International Relations theory, international security, conflict resolution, psychological & constructivist approaches to IR, Israeli foreign policy and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and peace process. Her book, The International Self: Psychoanalysis and the Search for Israeli-Palestinian Peace (Albany: SUNY Press, 2005), employs a socio-psychoanalytic model to examine the conditions under which a state will shift its policy stance from conflict to compromise with a significant adversary -- in this case, Israel's decision to seek peace with the PLO leading to the Oslo agreement of 1993. She has taught at Georgetown University and for the University of South Carolina's Washington Semester Program, and in 1999-2000 was a visiting fellow at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem's Truman Institute. She has published numerous articles on IR theory, international security, Canadian foreign policy, and Israeli-Palestinian relations. At Carleton, Professor Sucharov teaches courses on International Relations and IR theory, Israeli-Palestinian relations, and foreign policy analysis, and is a 2004 recipient of the University Teaching Achievement Award. She is a frequent media commentator on Middle East Affairs, and writes a regular column in the Ottawa Citizen. Currently, she is working on a book project examining Israel advocacy and the psychology of loyalty.

Jamie Levin › View Articles Jamie Levin was Executive Director of Ameinu and is now pursuing an advanced degree in Canada. Jamie has long been an activist for progressive Israel, serving as the elected National Director of Habonim Dror North America in 2001-02. Jamie completed an MS in Political Economy from the London School of Economics in 2004, specializing in the economic aspects of the Oslo Accords between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

Rabbi Dr. Einat Ramon › View Articles Coming from a family of three generations of Labor Zionists in Israel, Rabbi Dr. Einat Ramon was the first Israeli-born woman rabbi. Following her ordination by JTS in 1989, while pursuing her doctoral degree at Stanford University, Rabbi Dr. Ramon served as the interim rabbi at Berkeley Hillel and then as the "circuit" rabbi of congregation Har-Shalom of Missoula, Montana. Since her return to Israel in 1994, she has been teaching at various Israeli academic institutions (including the Hebrew University, the Shalom Hartman Institute, Hebrew Union College and Kibbutzim College of Education), and supervising a Masorti (Conservative) congregation (Havurat Tel Aviv) in north Tel Aviv. In 1996-1997 (during the peak of the battle against the conversion bill) she was the spokesperson of the Masorti (Conservative) Movement in Israel. Today Rabbi Dr. Ramon teaches modern Jewish thought and literature and Jewish feminism at the Schechter Institute, where she also serves a special consultant for women and gender issues at Schechter's rabbinical school. She has written and published numerous articles on modern Jewish thought, Jewish feminism and Zionist intellectual history, and has completed a book on the theology of Aharon David Gordon. She lives in Jerusalem with her husband Rabbi Arik Ascherman (together they constitute Israel's only rabbinic couple) and with their two children, Adi Rinat- Yah and Ayal Elazar is the Associate Director of the Teva Learning Center and an alumnus of Habonim Dror North America. He also ran for the Green Zionist Alliance in the most recent World Zionist Congress elections and has studied at the Arava Institute for Environmental Studies. was born in 1939 in Nahalal, a co-operative village in Israel, to Ruth and the late General Moshe Dayan. A three time Member of Knesset for the Labor party, Ms. Dayan has chaired the Committee for the Advancement of the Status of Women and has been a member of several high-profile committees. An author of eight books and a signatory to the Geneva Accords, Ms. Dayan writes regularly on political affairs in both the Israeli and foreign press. She is currently the deputy mayor of Tel Aviv-Yafo. was a member of Workshop 43 and was Rosh Galil in 1999 and 2000 and was the first Director of the Habonim Dror Foundation. He was a member of Kvutsat Yovel and continues to live in Israel. Ezra is currently finishing his second year of Rabbinical School at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College. Ezra holds a Masters in conflict Transformation from the School of International Training

Guy Spigelman › View Articles Guy Spigelman is the editor of "Revival", the English language news magazine of the Labor Party. Guy was born in Sydney, Australia and served as Mazkir of Habonim Dror before making Aliya in 1994. Currently, Guy lives in Tel Aviv and serves as VP Asia Pacific at XMPie, a leading provider of software for the advertising and printing industry. In 2003 Guy and other leaders of the hitech industry founded I-tech, the hitech forum of the Israeli Labor Party. Today the forum has over 500 members who have banded together to promote: support for R&D, an overhaul of the education system, reducing social gaps and political reforms. Aside from politics, Guy is an active board member of Merchavim, the Institute for the Advancement of Shared Citizenship in Israel, an NGO that has trained hundreds of teachers from across the school system in models for promoting cultural diversity inside the classroom. Guy is married to Naomi and together they are the parents of three wonderful girls Eden, Galia and Neta.

has served as a Knesset Member with the Labor Party since 1999. In the Knesset, she chairs the Ethics Committee and the Parliamentary Inquiry Committee for the Location and Restitution of Property of Holocaust Victims. She is also an observer in the Foreign Affairs & Defense Committee and a member of the Education and Culture Committee, the Committee for the Advancement of the Status of Women, the Finance Committee, and the Constitution, Law and Justice Committee. As a career diplomat, Ambassador Avital has served as the Israeli Consul General to New York, Consul and Acting Consular General in Boston, Ambassador to Portugal, Consul in Paris, and Press Attaché in Brussels. Within the Israeli Foreign Ministry, she has served as Director of the Leadership Department, Deputy Director General of the Communications and Information Division, and Acting Director of the Publicity Department. Ambassador Avital holds a BA in Political Science and a MA in Public Administration, while her mastery of foreign languages includes English, French, Romanian, German, Portuguese, and Italian. Her articles have appeared in Le Monde, the New York Times, and the New York Post.

Howard Fremeth › View Articles Howard Fremeth has always had a close affinity with Israel. He has visited Israel on three separate occasions. In the summer of 1997, he had the opportunity to live the Canadian-Zionist dream by playing hockey in Metulla's Mercaz Canada. From 1998-2001, he worked at Habonim Dror's Machaneh Gesher in Ontario where he learnt about and was inspired by labour Zionism. Howard has just completed a MA in Communications at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, British Columbia. His thesis focused on the formation of communication satellite policy in Canada. While at Simon Fraser University, Howard was heavily involved in raising Israel issues on campus through his work with the Israel Advocacy Club and writing for the campus newspaper. Howard will soon be starting his PhD in Mass Communications at Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario. He is generally interested in Canadian broadcasting and telecommunication policy. In particular, how the federal government has regulated communications to achieve social objectives and how these policies have recently been challenged by new technologies, consumer demands and legal decisions. He believes his work has relevance to Canada's Jewish community as the policy regime that once curbed hate speech and regulated foreign satellite broadcasts is now under disrepute.

Norman Gelman › View Articles Norman I. Gelman was a public affairs consultant to major U.S. corporations including IBM, Citicorp, and Ford Motor Co., among others. Prior to that, he was on the professional staff of the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee, specializing in international trade policy. He is now retired. Mr. Gelman served as president of the American Jewish Committee's Washington, D.C., chapter and is currently a member of AJC's Board of Governors. He is also vice-chairman of the American Jewish International Relations Institute(AJIRI).

Avi Melamed › View Articles Avi Melamed was born in 1960 to an old Jerusalemite Sefardi family. Avi is a sought-after lecturer in Israel and abroad, specializing in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, democracy, education, the West and Islam. For thirteen years Avi, worked for the Government of Israel in civilian affairs and counter-terrorism. By the mid 1990's Avi was a Senior Advisor on Arab Affairs for the Mayor of Jerusalem. Based on this experience, Avi co-authored "Separate and Unequal-The Inside Story of Israeli Rule in East Jerusalem" (Harvard University Press, 1999). Avi has delivered lectures to the UJC, the World Bank, The Israeli Foreign Office, The Peres Institute for Peace, AJC, and The Jerusalem Foundation. He is also the Founder of The Teachers for a New Leadership movement (TNL) and a member of the Board of The Israeli Forum and a member of the Young Israeli Leadership Forum (YLF). Currently, Avi works as an Educator and Lecturer in the Maayan-Shachar educational campus.

Cary Sperling › View Articles Cary Sperling has a highly diverse background. Having obtained Master's degrees in both Education and Sociology, she also completed doctoral course work in Sociology at the New School for Social Research, now New School University. She has taught every grade level from nursery through university including several years at Baruch College, CUNY and Haifa University in Israel, where she not only taught many classes to Ethiopian students but also worked closely with their community. In both Israel and American she has conducted research, written articles, edited dissertations, books and articles as well as grant-writing on varied topics.

Amnon Hadary › View Articles Amnon Hadary was born in Palestine in 1929, spent the years '38 to '48 in Chicago, and returned to Eretz Yisrael in time to serve in the Palmach during the War of Independence. So he has experienced life in the diaspora in one of the world's oldest democracies and homecoming to one of the newest. A founding member of a kibbutz Gesher Haziv, where he lived for 20 years, he has spent the past 35 years in Jerusalem, writing, editing and lecturing. His first book, To Royal Estate: The American Jewish Novel, (in Hebrew) was a critique of American Jewish literature. Married, with children and grandchildren, his commitment to Zionism remains vital: its realization attainable only through the imperative of peace. The affirmations of an unrepentant Zionist are written in that spirit. Amnon was a shaliach to Habonim in Philadelphia and Vancouver in the late 50?s and served as Workshop Madrich at Gesher Haziv for 6 consecutive years.

Ron Werber Ron Werber is the newly appointed head of the Labor Party emergency restructuring program, which is overseeing radical political, organizational & financial change in the party while it prepares for the next election. Ron's assignment also includes holding the position of Acting General Director of the party. A leading political & media strategist, Ron Werber served as campaign director & chief strategist for many successful national, municipal & referendum campaigns in both Israel & in Europe, where he is widely recognized for his expertise in strategic planning, message formulation & grass-roots campaigning, as well as effective media & campaign training for grass-roots activists and national leaders. Mr. Werber is also the president of the Tel-Aviv based Werber Public Affairs agency.

is a guitarist and recording artist, as well as a long-time Rolfer (R) and psychotherapist. His four CD's of solo acoustic guitar music have been released by DGM Records. He is also the author of two books of guitar music for Warner BROS Publications and Mel Bay Publications. In 1993 he was formally designated an Artistic Ambassador by the US State Department, representing the United States all over the world. In that capacity, he has conducted master classes and performed concerts that describe and demonstrate the history and evolution of American folk music and jazz, and its relationship with the development of American democracy. In 2002, during the height of the intifada and in response to concert cancellations by some international artists, he organized a free, ten-city concert tour throughout Israel, bringing Andy Statman (and his trio - Jim Whitney, bass, and Bob Weiner, drums) and Peter Himmelman with him. Each concert also featured a prominent Israeli artist. Presently, he is at work recording his guitar transcriptions of the Six Suites For Solo Cello by Johann Sebastian Bach. Much more information is available on his website, www.stevehancoff.com.

is the Israeli Co-Director and founder of the Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information (IPCRI) - a joint Israeli-Palestinian public policy think. Dr. Baskin initiated the founding of IPCRI in 1988 following ten years of work in the field of Jewish-Arab relations within Israel, in Interns for Peace, the Ministry of Education and as Executive Director of the Institute for Education for Jewish-Arab Coexistence (established by the Israeli Ministry of Education and the Prime Minister's Office). Dr. Baskin has published books and hundreds of articles in the Hebrew, English and Arabic press about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict including: A Model Interim Agreement, Aspects of Internal Security in During the Interim Period, The Future of Jerusalem, How to Conduct Business in the Palestinian Territories , The Future of the Israeli Settlements in Final Status Negotiation, and more. Dr. Baskin meets regularly with Israeli and Palestinian policy makers at their invitation as well as similar people from the international diplomatic community and international organizations. Dr. Baskin was a member of the Jerusalem Experts Committee established by the Israeli Prime Minister's Office during the Final Status Negotiations in 2000-2001. Dr. Baskin holds a Ph.D. in International Affairs. His dissertation was on Sovereignty and Territory in the Future of Jerusalem, parts of which were published as a book Jerusalem of Peace. Dr. Baskin is a member of the Israeli Council for Peace and Security; he is the Chairman of the Board of Directors of MAKOM, the Israeli Center for Environment Mediation and he was a founding chairman of Kehilat Kol Haneshama in Jerusalem where he served as Chairman for three years. Dr. Baskin speaks Hebrew, English and Arabic.

Yona Prital › View Articles Yona Prital, a past recipient of the Excellency Award from the Jewish Agency, was the Central Shlicha for Habonim Dror North America. Yona holds a Masters degree in Education from Hebrew University in Jerusalem and is a graduate of the Mandel Institute for Leadership in Education. For twelve years, Yona was the Head of the Kibbutz Movement Education Department where she was the Kibbutz representative for the Israel Labor Party. Yona has returned to Israel and is living on Kibbutz Maale Hachamisha. is the President of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union and President of the Jewish Labor Committee. riginally from Ottawa, Canada, was recently appointed as the Assistant Rabbi at Temple Micah, a Reform synagogue in Washington, DC. Before her appointment she served for two years as the Marshall T. Meyer Fellow at Congregation B’nai Jeshurun of Manhattan. She was ordained in 2008 from Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in New York. Prior to becoming a rabbi, she worked at the Israel Policy Forum, as well as on a project on Middle East peace education for the Union of Reform Judaism and Habonim Dror North America as the Mazkira. She spent 10 summers at Machaneh Gesher and served as Rosh for three Habonim camps, Galil, Moshava and Naaleh. Rabbi Lederman received the Dreamers and Builders Award from Ameinu in 2009.

In a career spanning half a century, Theodore Bikel has starred in countless movies, plays and television shows, and has recorded numerous albums showcasing folk music from around the world. The original Captain Von Trappe of "The Sound of Music" and the Treya of the original run of "Fiddler on the Roof", Bikel went on to portray a German U-boat captain in the film "The Enemy Below" and was nominated for an Academy Award for his performance in the 1958 movie "The Defiant Ones". An accomplished musician, Bikel reguarly performed on the weekly television series Hootenanny, before co-founding (with Pete Seeger) the Newport Folk Festival. His autobiography, "Theo: The Autobiography of Theodore Bikel", was recently re-issued in paperback by University of Wisconsin Press and his latest CD, "Theodore Bikel's Treasury Of Yiddish Theatre And Folk Songs", is now available on Rhino Records and Hatikvah Music.

He was involved in Young Judaea as a high school student and attended Camp Tel Yehudah in 1968 and in 1971. Additionally, he attended the Young Judaea Year Course Program 1971-1972. David has worked in Jewish Communal Service from 1979-1981, and then as a Missouri State Probation and Parole Officer in St. Louis, Missouri from 1983-1988. Since 1988, he has been employed as a United States Probation Officer. is the President of Ameinu Australia. Ron has been actively involved in the Australian venture capital industry since 1986 with time at both the Advent and Pratt venture funds. Prior to founding Momentum (with Ergad Gold), Ron was Director of Investments at Advent Management Group for many years where he was actively involved with several investments and divestments, was a director of a number of portfolio companies, and also identified and developed the opportunity to establish a fund investing in businesses serving the Australian tourist industry. Ron has also worked as a corporate advisor and as an executive in the travel industry. He holds degrees in Law and Commerce from Melbourne University. is a rabbi ordained by the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College and a doctorate in medieval Jewish Studies from UCLA. She received her Bachelor’s Degree from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she lived for ten years. A citizen of both Israel and the United States, Rabbi Berner is also a licensed Israel Government Tourist Guide. For two decades Rabbi Berner has combined rabbinical and academic work, and has taught at Swarthmore and Bryn Mawr Colleges, the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College and Emory University. She currently teaches at the George Washington University and American University. She has served Reconstructionist congregations in Maryland, Pennsylvania and Georgia and an unaffiliated congregation in Washington DC. Rabbi Berner was the founding director of the Center for Jewish Ethics and has taught and written extensively on a values-based approach to Jewish ethics A nationally known creator of new Jewish liturgy, she is also a commentator in the Kol Haneshamah prayer book series published by the Reconstructionist Press. Rabbi Berner has also authored many articles on Jewish feminism, Jewish spirituality, new Jewish life cycle rituals, and innovative approaches to Jewish family and community. Most recently, Rabbi Berner has been trained as a Jewish Spiritual Director at the Lev Shomea (Hearing Heart) program sponsored by Aleph: The Alliance for Jewish Renewal. She now works actively as a spiritual director to individuals and groups and is working with a colleague on creating and developing Lev Tahor: A Center for Jewish Spirituality and Learning in the Washington DC area/ Rabbi Berner lives in Kensington, Maryland with her life-partner, Franna Ruddell, and their daughter, Kayla Moriya Gal.

Judd was born in Johannesburg, South Africa in 1983 and immigrated to Australia as an infant. He attended Moriah College, Sydney’s largest Orthodox Jewish day school, graduating in 2001 as College Captain and second dux. Not one for Anglo sterility and plasticity, Judd has since travelled extensively overseas. A passionate Labor Zionist, Judd finally made aliyah at the end of June, enrolling at Tel Aviv University to finish his Bachelor of Arts degree as part of an exchange program and then begin a Masters in Middle Eastern History. Judd holds dear the ideals of social democracy, the separation of religion and state and the imminent coming of the Second Altalena.

is Program Director of Van-Leer Jeruslaem Institute’s Center for Social Justice in memory of Yaakov Hazan. In this position, she runs seminars on social and economic justice topics. She also works for the Gvanim Association where she creates and oversee programs that use technology to foster dialogue between different sectors of Israeli society (Jews-Arabs, kibbutz-cities, religious-seculars, and more.) Previously, Nomika worked as a journalist with Al-Hamishmar and Hotam. After a pre-army year of service with Hashomer Hatzair in Holon, she spent her army service teaching school drop-outs. After the army, she continued working with youth through the Hashomer Hatzair youth movement. In 1987, Nomika Zion pioneered a new form of collective living in Israel when she founded Kibbutz Migvan in Sderot, an urban kibbutz that seeks to balance social-educational involvement and personal fulfillment. Nomika’s social activism and commitment to communal solutions are a natural outgrowth of her family background. Born and raised on Hashomer Hatzair Kibbutz Reshafim in the Beit Shean Valley, Nomika is the granddaughter of Yaakov Hazan, co-founder (with Meir Yaari) of Hashomer Hatzair.

Mihal grew up in Chicago, and is a 2nd generation Hashomernik. Mihal came to Israel before in 1976. Since then she has done a little of everything: dairy farmer, cook, zoo keeper, artists model, grade school teacher, translator, reception clerk, housecleaner, gardener, beach cleaner, graphic artist, document manager and more. Currently she lives in Be'er Sheva. was active in Hashomer Hatzair in New York and Canada in the 1970s. He has lived in Israel since making aliya in 1980, was a member of Kibbutz Harel, and served in the IDF between 1984-86. In 1995, he founded the ShomerNet, an internet forum for past and present members of North American Hashomer Hatzair, which has grown to nearly 500 members. Danny has worked for Tel Aviv University for the past 10 years, and is currently the University's director of development and public affairs.

in 1953 to a Zionist family. A member of Habonim for many years, he made Aliya in 1979 and moved to Kibbutz Sasa, a kibbutz on the Lebanese border in 1983. There he has worked as an electrician, in tourism and as an educator, and today runs a business information and bibliographical service. He has a grown son, Ariel, who is a student at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya. His parents, Ruth and David, live in Tel Aviv.

was raised in Brooklyn and Long Island. He first arrived in Israel in 1969, participating in a kibbutz volunteer program. In 1971 he was part of the second contingent of western immigrants that reestablished Kibbutz Adamit in Western Galilee. He remained there until 1989 when I moved to Kibbutz Eilon. He have worked as a fruit farmer in both communities. He represented Adamit at Mapam and various kibbutz federation functions. Barry developed strong ties with our Bedouin neighbors of Arab al-Aramshe. He was involved in the earlier stages of Aramshe's integration into the local regional counsel. He am married with three sons. is the Senior Advisor to the Treasurer of the Jewish Agency on Foreign Affairs. He is a member of Kibbutz Machaniyim. serves as MarComs Director of an Israeli security software developer; writing marketing collateral and managing the company website. In his spare time he freelances as a writer, commenting on life in Israel for the Cape Times; and as a photographer for the PictureNET Africa online photographic agency. Born in South Africa, he moved to Israel in 2004. a resident of Safed, built a free library in her apartment over many years which serves villages from all around the Galilee. She also has a variety of games, puzzles, jigsaw etc. that she circulates to everyone. After her small apartment got overwhelmed (more than 10,000 volumes) she built with her own funds a separate unit which now operates with coded and numbered books.

Danny is a strategic consultant for Labor Party (Israel) Minister Benjamin Ben Eliezer. Danny is a member of the Labor party and is also a succesful businessman in Israel. Danny lives in Ashdod with his wife and four children.

Israel's Deputy Defense Minister, served as a career officer in the IDF until 1987, reaching the rank of Brigadier-General. He has held a variety of important positions in the army, including Commander of the Medical Teams during the Entebbe Rescue Operation in 1976, Chief Medical Officer of the IDF Paratroops and Infantry Corps, Commander of the Security Zone in South Lebanon in the early 1980's and Head of Israel’s Civil Administration for the West Bank from 1985 to 1987. A Member of Knesset (Labor Party (Israel) Ephraim Sneh was first elected to Knesset in 1992 and has served as a member of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee and has held various cabinet posts, including Minister of Health and of Transportation.

is the New York Director of the New Israel Fund, an organization that advances civil rights, equality and social justice for all Israelis. Bruce was in Habonim Dror garin Gal Hadash to Kibbutz Ravid, was Mazkir Tnua in 1986-87, Rosh Tavor '85 and '86, and was on workshop 31. lives in the Galilee community of Eshchar with her family. She is a professional painter and part-time writer and fundraiser for Neighbors. the Chair of Young Labor, Jerusalem, lives in Jerusalem. Currently, Eran is the assistant to the regional coordinator in the Forum of Civil Peace Service. FCPS is an NGO that deals with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Prior to that Eran was a parliamentary adviser to M.K. Colette Avital (Labour). went to the University of Michigan and made aliyah to Kibbutz Gezer in central Israel in 1977. She quickly became a lay leader at the kibbutz synagogue, Kehilat Birkat Shalom. Miri completed her rabbinic studies at Hebrew Union College, was ordained in 1999, and has served as rabbi of the congregation ever since. The congregation has 180 members from Kibbutz Gezer and the surrounding communities. Since Rabbi Gold is not recognized by the state, she receives her salary directly from the congregation. Gezer regional officials have backed her bid for government funding and support the Israel Religious Action Center’s petition with the High Court of Justice to compel the government to recognize her and pay her salary, like any other community rabbi. Her case has been reported extensively in Ha’aretz, the Forward, and the Jerusalem Post. is a graduate of Habonim. He spent a year at the Hebrew High School in Sde Boker and another year at the Machon L'madrichai Chutz L'aretz. For many years he was a sit-com writer and is currently the V.P. of Sales and Marketing for California Faucets.

Professor of Urban Studies at Temple University. is an alumnus of the 17th Habonim Workshop in Kibbutz Urim. He lives in Morristown, NJ. is the co-chair of the New York City chapter of Brit Tzedek v’Shalom, a contributing editor to Jewschool.com, and the former director of the Jewish Student Press Service, publisher of New Voices magazine. His blog can be read at www.judaismwithoutborders.org.

Zach Luck › View Articles Zach Luck graduated from Columbia in May. He currently lives in Washington, DC, where he is a research assistant.

Moises F. Salinas › View Articles Dr. Moises Salinas is a professor of psychology at Central Connecticut State University. He was a winner of the 2004 WZO Herzl Centennial Award. His latest book “Planting hatred, Sowing Pain: The Psychology of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict” (Greenwood/Praeger) will appear in May 2007.

Daniel Orenstein › View Articles Daniel Orenstein, Ph.D., is a visiting fellow at Brown University's Watson Institute for International Studies and Ameinu representative on the Jewish National Fund USA Board of Trustees.

J.J. Goldberg › View Articles J.J. Goldberg is Editor of the Forward.

Yigal Tzachor › View Articles Yigal Tzahor is Chairman of the World Labor Zionist Movement and Manager of the Ideological-Educational Center at the Berl Katzenelson Foundation in Israel.

Daniel Levy › View Articles Daniel Levy is a Senior Fellow at the New America and The Century Foundations and directs their respective Middle East Peace policy initiatives. He formerly worked as an adviser in Israeli Prime Minister Barak’s office and as an official negotiator and as lead Israeli drafter of the informal Geneva Initiative peace plan.

Leonard Gordon › View Articles Leonard Gordon serves as rabbi at the Germantown Jewish Centre in Philadelphia, PA. This fall, he is teaching Talmud at the Reconstructionist Rabbinic College where a version of this article was presented at a pre-High Holiday workshop.

Diana Bletter › View Articles Diana Bletter, an Israeli writer who lives in the Western Galilee, has just completed her first novel, The Dead Can Never Thank You. She has written for The International Herald Tribune and other publications and is a member of a Jewish-Muslim-Druze-Christian women's peace group, Acco Women's Vision.

Tom Segev › View Articles Tom Segev is a columnist for Ha’aretz, Israel’s leading newspaper, and the author of three now-classic works on the history of Israel: 1949: The First Israelis; The Seventh Million: The Israelis and the Holocaust; and One Palestine, Complete: Jews and Arabs Under the British Mandate, which was a New York Times Editors’ Choice for 2000. Segev’s latest book is 1967: Israel, the War, and the Year That Transformed the Middle East. He lives Jerusalem.

Gilead Sher › View Articles Attorney Gilead Sher, former Israeli Prime Minister’s Chief of Staff and Policy Coordinator, acted as co-chief negotiator in 1999-2001 at the Camp David summit and the Taba talks as well as in extensive rounds of covert negotiations with the Palestinians. He teaches frequently as a guest lecturer at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, mainly Dispute Resolution and Negotiations in Times of Crisis. The English version of his book The Israeli- Palestinian Peace Negotiations, 1999-2001: Within Reach was published by Routledge in 2006.

Tamara (Tammy) Shapiro › View Articles TAMARA (TAMMY) SHAPIRO, a recent graduate of the University of Wisconsin (Madison), is the executive director of the Union of Progressive Zionists (UPZ).

Gadi Baltiansky › View Articles Gadi Baltiansky is the Director General of the Geneva Initiative and was Press Secretary to former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak

Sharon Brous › View Articles Rabbi Sharon Brous is the founder and rabbi of IKAR (www.ikar-la.org), a vibrant Jewish spiritual community in Los Angeles.

Shelly Goldwater › View Articles

Shelly Goldwater is the executive director of Habonim-Dror Camp Tavor, located in Three Rivers, Michigan. She is a long time Zionist, growing up in Young Judea and living on Kibbutz Gezer in Israel.

Gavri Bargil › View Articles Gavri Bargil has been the Secretary General of the Kibbutz Movement since 2000. A member of Kibbutz Ramot Menashe, during the years 1996-1999 Bargil was the head shaliach (emissary) of the Kibbutz Artzi in North America. He previously served as the Executive Director of Peace Now and as a brigade commander holding the rank of lieutenant colonel. In 1994 Bargil received his M.A. in Political Science, from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. ince June 2004.

James Horrox › View Articles James Horrox is the author of A Living Revolution: Anarchism in the Kibbutz Movement, forthcoming in 2008 from AK Press. He is a regular contributor to numerous independent publications and is currently working on his postgraduate research at Manchester Metropolitan University. He wrote this article for Zeek in October, 2007.

Rabbi David Gedzelman › View Articles

Rabbi David Gedzelman is Executive Director of The Steinhardt Foundation for Jewish Life.

Saadia Gelb › View Articles Saadia Gelb is a lifelong Labor Zionist and kibbutz movement activist who has lived on Kibbutz Kfar Blum since immigrating to Israel from the United States in 1947. He is the author of several books including the recently updated "The Chase is the Game: The Journey of an American-Israeli Pioneer."

Michael Givel › View Articles Michael Givel joined the Department of Political Science at Oklahoma University in August of 2002. His current areas of teaching and research interest include: public policy, health policy and tobacco policy, social welfare policy, urban politics, and social movements. He is the author of The War on Poverty Revisited: The Community Services Block Grant Program in the Reagan Years published by University Press of America. His recent journal articles have appeared in the American Journal of Public Health, Journal of Public Health Policy, Tobacco Control, St. Louis University Public Law Review, State Politics & Policy Quarterly, Policy Studies Journal, Public Integrity, International Journal of Health Services, and Journal of the Oklahoma State Medical Association.

Franklin M. Fisher

Liel Leibovitz › View Articles Liel Leibovitz is the executive producer of Tablet's video and interactive media. He is the author, most recently, of Lili Marlene: The Soldiers’ Song of World War II, published in 2008 by W.W. Norton. A native of Tel Aviv, he completed his doctoral studies in communications at Columbia University, researching the ontology of video games. This means he spends more time playing games than a grown man should. He is obsessed with coffee.

Julia Chaitin, Ph.D. › View Articles Julia Chaitin is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Social Work at Sapir College in Israel and a member of Kibbutz Urim.

Roger Gardner, Radarsite

Jack Nusan Porter, Ph.D. › View Articles

Jack Nusan Porter, Ph.D., of Newtonville, Mass., is the former treasurer and executive board member of the International Association of Genocide Scholars, the largest such body in the world, a sociologist, and a human rights activist. His latest book is The Genocidal Mind. He can be contacted at jacknusan@earthlink.net or (857) 636-2669. Also, look his full name up on Wikipedia.

Sidney Topol › View Articles

Sidney Topol is a friend of Ameinu, a board member of Americans for Peace Now and on the Advisory Board of J-Street.

Sid, a native of Boston, Massachusetts, is a graduate of Boston Latin School, where he was named Man of the Year in 1982. He holds a B.S. in Physics and honorary Doctor of Science Degree from the University of Massachusetts. He graduated from Harvard-MIT Radar School and has been awarded the MIT Corporate Leadership Award. His graduate study in electrical engineering was done at the University of California in Berkeley.

He is married to Lillian Friedman Topol, and they have three daughters, all of whom are married and pursuing professional careers.

Mr. Topol has been inducted into the Satellite Hall of Fame, Cable Television Hall of Fame, MTC Hall of Fame and the Georgia Technology Hall of Fame.

Currently, he is President of The Topol Group LLC and The Topol Family Fund.

Rachel Tepper Rachel is a contributor to the JTA - the global news service of the Jewish People

Miriam G. Harel › View Articles Miriam G. Harel, born in New York, is a senior psychotherapist, affiliated with Telem Clinic in Tel Aviv. She is a free lance  lecturer and   is currently presenting  her work  in Israel and abroad at major institutions of learning such as Tavistock in London and the University of Amsterdam, Schneider and Hillel Yaffefe Childrens' Hospitals, and  has been doing this for several years. She has published a book, Patchwork, distributed by Karnac in London, relating   to her experience with Israeli children and their families,  in the process of therapy. A lifetime member of Hashomer Hatzair, she lives with her family on Kibbutz Haogen Emek in Hefer, Israel.

Bracha Ben-Avraham › View Articles

Bracha Ben-Avraham is originally from Chicago where was active in the Habonim Labor Zionist youth movement, participating in the 18th workshop at Kibbutz Urim. After making aliyah she joined Kibbutz Adamit on the northern border and was a member there for 21 years. Bracha now live in Moshav Ben Ami near Nahariya, and is a professional musician, translator and technical writer. She blogs at www.ismargad.com/daily

David Twersky › View Articles

David Twersky covered Washington DC for the Forward during the first Bush administration, was editor of the New Jersey Jewish News and while living on Kibbutz Gezer edited Shdemot, an English language kibbutz movement journal. Most recently he was Senior Adviser, International Affairs at the American Jewish Congress.

Sarah Michaels Levy › View Articles

Sarah is a member of the Habonim Dror Tnuat Bogrim (Graduate Movement) and lives in Israel. She manages the Anglo-Saxon Desk for World Habonim Dror. is director of MidEastWeb for Coexistence, and editor of http.Zionism-Israel.com and http://MidEastWeb.org. He lives in Rehovot.

David J. Steiner › View Articles

David Steiner is the Director of Education at Congregation Solel in Highland Park, Illinois. He holds a doctorate in education from National Louis University and is currently studying to be a rabbi at the Hebrew Seminary for the Deaf.

Rabbi Vernon Kurtz › View Articles Rabbi Vernon Kurtz is the Rabbi of North Suburban Synagogue Beth El in Highland Park, Illinois and is a past president of the Rabbinical Assembly, the international association of 1500 Conservative Rabbis. Rabbi Kurtz currently serves as President of MERCAZ OLAMI, the World Organization of the Zionist arm of the Conservative Movement and is also on the Board of Governors of the Jewish Agency and serves as co-chairman of its FSU committee.

Alisa Belinkoff Katz › View Articles

Alisa serves as Chief of Staff of Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky. She grew up in the Habonim Labor Zionist youth movement, currently serves on the board of the Pacific Southwest Region of ARZA (Association of Reform Zionists of America) and recently joined the Executive Committee of the LA Jewish Federation Los Angeles/Tel Aviv Partnership. In December 2008 she was received a Special Ameinu Award.

Timna Axel › View Articles

Timna Axel is a member of Habonim Dror, a labor Zionist youth movement and a student at Northwestern University

Rabbi Sid Schwarz › View Articles Rabbi Sid Schwarz is the founder and president of PANIM: The Institute for Jewish Leadership and Values and the author of Judaism and Justice: The Jewish Passion to Repair the World (Jewish Lights).

Bernard-Henri Levy › View Articles

Bernard-Henri Levy is one of France's most famed philosophers, a journalist, and a bestselling writer. He is considered a founder of the New Philosophy movement and is leading thinker on religious issues, genocide, and international affairs. His most recent book, Left in Dark Times: A Stand Against the New Barbarism, discusses political and cultural affairs as an ongoing battle against the inhumane.

David Grossman › View Articles

David Grossman

born in Jerusalem on January 25, 1954 is an Israeli author of fiction, nonfiction, and youth and children's literature. His books have been translated into numerous languages. The Yellow Wind, his nonfiction study of the Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip met with acclaim abroad but sparked controversy at home.

Grossman studied philosophy and theater at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He worked as a correspondent and radio actor for Israel's national broadcasting service.

Grossman, an outspoken peace activist, supported Israel during the Second Lebanon War. On August 10, 2006, however, he and fellow authors Amos Oz and A.B. Yehoshua held a press conference at which they urged the government to agree to a ceasefire that would create the basis for a negotiated solution.

Two days later, his 20-year-old son Uri, a staff sergeant in an armoured unit, was killed by an anti-tank missile during an IDF operation in southern Lebanon shortly before the ceasefire.

David Breakstone › View Articles

David Breakstone is a member of the executives of the Jewish Agency and World Zionist Organization, where he serves as head of the Department for Zionist Activities.

Rabbi Amy Eiberg › View Articles Rabbi Amy Eilberg is the first woman ordained as a Conservative rabbi by the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. Rabbi Eilberg directs interfaith dialog programs in the Twin Cities, including at the Jay Phillips Center for Jewish-Christian Learning and the St. Paul Interfaith Network. She is deeply engaged in peace and reconciliation efforts in connection with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, as well as with issues of conflict within the Jewish community.

Yossi Beilin › View Articles

Yossi Beilin, a former Knesset member and government minister, was a central player in the Oslo peace process as well as the author of The Path to Geneva: The Quest for a Permanent Agreement, 1996-2004.

Hillel Schenker › View Articles

Hillel Schenker is co-editor of the Palestine-Israel Journal, a Jerusalem-based independent English-language quarterly, initiated and maintained by a group of prominent Israeli and Palestinian academics and journalists

Tsvi Bisk › View Articles Mr. Bisk is an American Israeli Futurist. He is the Director of the Center for Strategic Futurist Thinking and Contributing Editor for Strategic Thinking for The Futurist magazine. He is also the author of The Optimistic Jew: A Positive Vision for the Jewish People in the 21st Century (available from Amazon and Barnes & Noble). He can be reached at bisk@futurist-thinking.co.il

Leonard Fein › View Articles

Leonard Fein is a life long Labor Zionist, he grew up at Habonim Camp Moshava and is a well known writer and teacher.

Among his books are "Where are We? The Inner Life of America's Jews," which was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection and "Israel: Politics and People," which was, for ten years, a required text in all Israeli universities. His more than 800 articles and essays have appeared in dozens of newspapers, magazines, and journals, including The New York Times, The New Republic, Commentary, Commonweal, The Nation, and the Los Angeles Times. He writes a syndicated OpEd column for the Forward and a blog for Americans for Peace Now.

In the 1960s, Dr. Fein taught Political Science at MIT. In 1970 he joined the faculty of Brandeis University, where he was Professor of Politics and Social Policy and, for six years, the Klutznick Professor of Contemporary Jewish Studies.

In 1974, he founded Moment magazine, which became America's leading independent magazine of Jewish affairs, and which he served as editor and publisher until 1987. In 1985, Fein founded Mazon: A Jewish Response to Hunger, now widely recognized as the American Jewish community's principal vehicle for participation in the campaign against world hunger.

Leonard Fein received the Ameinu Dreamers and Builders Award in November 2009

Jim Gerstein › View Articles Jim Gerstein is a founding partner of Gerstein | Agne and offers clients a unique blend of experience in managing non-profit organizations, strategic planning, and communications for large scale projects ranging from U.S. presidential campaigns to international peace efforts to crisis management for corporations. During the 1999 Israeli election campaign, he served on Ehud Barak's American consulting team. He served as the U.S. team's person on the ground and oversaw the polling, paid media, and message development for the Barak campaign.

Einat Wilf › View Articles

Dr. Einat Wilf is a member of the Israeli Knesset on behalf of the Labor Party of Israel.

Dr. Wilf is the author of two books that explore key issues in Israeli society. Her first book, “My Israel, Our Generation”, about Israel’s past and future from the perspective of the younger generation, was published in Hebrew in 2003 and in English in 2006. Heaer second book, "Back to Basics: How to Save Israeli Education (at no additional cost)", which offers a detailed and fsible policy proposal for saving Israel's ailing education system, was published in Hebrew in 2008 by Yedioth Achronot.

Previously, Dr. Wilf served as a Senior Fellow with the Jewish People Policy Planning Institute, wrote a weekly column in the Israeli daily newspaper ‘Israel Hayom’, taught social entrepreneurship at Sapir College, was a member of the President's Conference Steering Committee, a Foreign Policy Advisor to Vice Prime Minister Shimon Peres, a strategic consultant with McKinsey & Company in New York City and a General Partner with Koor Corporate Venture Capital in Israel.

Born and raised in Israel, Dr. Wilf served as an Intelligence Officer in the Israel Defense Forces and holds a BA in Government and Fine Arts from Harvard University, an MBA from INSEAD in France, and a PhD in Political Science from the University of Cambridge.

Lionel Slier

Sara Benninga › View Articles

Shawn Guttman › View Articles

Shawn Guttman is the current Mazkir Klali (National Director) of Habonim Dror North America. Originally from Toronto, Canada, he has a Bachelors Degree in Cultural Anthropology, specializing in Peace Studies. Shawn has been a member of Habonim Dror for over 16 years during which he has been Educational Director, Camp Director and member of the Board of Directors at various Habonim Dror camps. At the end of his tenure in September 2010 Shawn plans to make Aliyah and shift his focus to furthering his education in the area of Peace Studies and Mediation.

Gil Browdy › View Articles Gil Browdy was the National Director of Habonim Dror North America for two years starting in August 2006. through He grew up in Kensington, MD and is a long-time member of Habonim Dror. Gil lived in Israel in 2000/2001, primarily in the lower Galilee area, on Habonim Dror’s Workshop program. Gil has also been the educational coordinator and camp director for different Habonim Dror summer camps across North America. He graduated with a B.A. in Linguistics from McGill University. Gil considers himself to be a life-long educator and activist for peace and equality. At the end of his term as National Director he moved to Israel and remains active in Zionist youth activities there.

Christopher MacDonald-Dennis, Ed.D. Chris MacDonald-Dennis, Ed.D., is Assistant Dean of the Undergraduate College and Director of Intercultural Affairs at Bryn Mawr College. He has been a scholar-activist for more than fifteen years and has been involved with many social change movements, including the feminist movement, LGBT movement and progressive Zionism. He received his BA from Framingham State College in Massachusetts, his MS from Northeastern University and his Ed.D. in Social Justice Education from the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Originally from Boston, he currently lives in Philadelphia.

Chris' activity with Ameinu has found a number of expressions. He has written regularly for the website. He serves on the joint committee Ameinu has formed with MeretzUSA to address the Left's attitudes towards Israel and Zionism and is also part of the effort to establish an Ameinu chapter in Philadelphia.

Alex Sharone