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Note to Education Editors: There is more content available on all these programs for your upcoming Back to School education supplements.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Jodi Bodner
JNF Director of Communications
212-879-9305 ext. 221
jbodner@jnf.org

JNF Increases Breadth and Scope of Israel Education
Responds to Growing Needs in the High School and College Arenas

July 26, 2006 -- New York, NY -- Understanding the need to connect students to Israel in their formative teenage years and to give them the tools necessary to advocate for Israel on college campuses, Jewish National Fund is readying for the upcoming school year with exciting new initiatives and partnerships in these targeted areas:

For High School Students:

1. pic3To bring American teenagers closer to life in Israel, Jewish National Fund and The Jerusalem Post are creating an exciting, new publication for high school students. Written in English, and called iM:Israel Messenger, its content will stress modern Israel, its diverse population and unique Israeli and Jewish culture.

Following two sample editions, beginning in October 2006 iM will provide subscribers with 24 pages of exciting stories on topics ranging from pop culture to politics written with teens in mind. Nine monthly editions will be published yearly. Many teens want to support Israel but don’t necessarily have the background to understand all of the issues. A newspaper like this will help connect them to Israel's vibrant culture and people.

iM will engage American teens and give them the information they need to relay the message as they go out into the world. iM will also be used by youth leaders, rabbis, and teachers as a way to generate high quality discussions and activities about Israel and by parents and grandparents to connect their families to their Jewish identities that is not offered elsewhere.

2. The Alexander Muss Institute for Israel Education (AMIIE) offers students an extraordinary academic experience combined with tiyulim, trips, to historic sites in Israel. Since its founding in 1972 by Rabbi Morris Kipper and the Greater Miami Jewish Federation, more than 18,000 teens from across the country have strengthened their ties to Israel through classroom courses for which school credit is given (including up to six college credits). Students visit all parts of the country for first hand experiences and learning, helping to create a lifelong love and attachment to the Jewish homeland. Public high school students attend one of five eight-week sessions during the year, called the Alexander Muss High School in Israel (AMHSI). Uniquely designed programs are also offered to day schools for eighth graders and for juniors and seniors in high school. And special adult programs are available to interested groups.

Philanthropist and community leader, Stephen Muss, named the school for his father Alexander Muss in 1982 and has been a guiding force in the school’s expansion, not simply in number of students but also in his vision to increase the number of AMIIE/AMHSI campuses in Israel so as many as 5,000 students can participate each year. Part of this vision is to open the next campus in the Negev as part of JNF’s Blueprint Negev campaign and for the school to be part of JNF’s educational mission which seeks to engage, educate and energize Diaspora youth.

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3. Launched two years ago, Caravan for Democracy High School Edition provides speakers, panels and workshops including advocacy training, to high school juniors and seniors as a means of creating future campus leaders and of empowering students to respond to anti-Israel acts and rhetoric in an intelligent and informed manner when they arrive at college. To date, 18 cities and regions have been involved and 58 events have been held.

For College Students:

1. Four years ago, Jewish National Fund, together with Media Watch International, launched Caravan for Democracy (CFD). CFD brings speakers representing a wide spectrum of political and philosophical thought from Israel to college campuses throughout the United States. Its goal is to drive campus dialogue on the Middle East and articulate the shared values of freedom and democracy that connect Israel and the United States, as well as the challenges Israel faces as the only democracy in the Middle East.

Since its inception, CFD has sponsored 176 events, visited over 70 campuses and communities, engaged more than 20,000 participants at its events and lectures, and reaches 10,000 students through its newsletter. Entering its fifth year, CFD has plans to add six new campuses to its programming in 2006-2007.

2. Taking the quest to strengthen its pro-Israel activities on college campuses one step further, JNF has entered a new cooperative venture agreement with Scholars for Peace in the Middle East (SPME).

pic2SPME is an independent, faculty-driven, not-for-profit, "big-tent” grassroots community of scholars with over 6500 academics and members receiving its SPME Faculty newsletter on over 300 campuses worldwide. Over 20 of these campuses now have their own chapters and more are forming in a number of countries.

As a complement to its already successful Caravan for Democracy program on college campuses nationwide, JNF’s association with SPME will strengthen its impact on college campuses in two ways:

“In the complicated world in which we live,” said Bob Levine, JNF Vice President-Education, “it is not enough to teach children in Jewish elementary schools about the history of Zionism, the pre-state and post-state periods. Today with the ongoing attacks against Israel in the press, on college campuses, through boycotts of Israeli professionals and products, the Jewish community must be informed and develop the skills of activist response.

“These are all activities of JNF’s Israel Advocacy and Education Department, which has created the mechanism to fulfill its mandated task as set forth by the World Zionist Organization ‘to provide Zionist education in the Diaspora.’ Our work that begins on the elementary school level and continues all the way up to the university level brings greater understanding and pride to every Jew for the miraculous achievements of the people and State of Israel and its supporters around the world.”

For additional information on any of the programs listed above, please contact JNF’s Israel Advocacy and Education Department: Rabbi Eric M. Lankin, D.Min., Chief, Institutional Advancement and Education, 212-879-9305 ext. 264 or ELankin@jnf.org; Mara Suskauer, Executive Director, Israel Advocacy and Education, 212-879-9305 ext. 330 or Msuskauer@jnf.org ; Rebecca Kahn, JNF Campus Programs Manager, 212- 879-9305 ext. 248 or rkahn@jnf.org

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Jewish National Fund is a non-profit organization founded in 1901 to serve as caretaker of the land of Israel, on behalf of its owners—Jewish people everywhere. Over the past century, JNF has planted over 240 million trees, built over 180 reservoirs and dams, developed over 250,000 acres of land, created more than 1,000 parks, provided the infrastructure for 1,000 communities and educated students around the world about Israel and the environment. Today, JNF is putting its century of experience to work with the Blueprint Negev initiative, supporting Israel’s newest generation of pioneers in developing the Negev Desert, Israel’s last frontier. For more information on JNF or to plant trees in Israel, call 1-800-542-TREE (8733) or visit www.jnf.org. To contact your local office, please call 888-JNF-0099 or visit www.jnf.org.

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