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Heroes Among Us
People Magazine

A Jewish Student Helps Put Arab Friend Through School

LOS ANGELES | Growing up in Ramallah, Palestine, Omar Dreidi always dreamed of going to college in America. So in 2006, when he got accepted into Earlham College in Richmond, Ind., Omar was elated. There was just one problem: Even with a partial scholarship and a work-study job, he couldn’t afford the $42,000 for tuition and expenses.

One night Omar called his best friend, Joseph Katona. They had met two years earlier at Seeds of Peace (seedsofpeace.org), a camp in Maine that brings together children from areas of conflict. The boys became fast friends after an emotional discussion about their desire for peace in the Middle East.

“From that day on I felt that Joey understood me,” says Omar, 20. After camp ended, they e-mailed and called regularly and visited each other’s families. Yet Omar was still shocked when Joseph said he would raise the tuition money himself. “It was like someone telling me, ‘Your dream is going to come true,’ ” says Omar.

By soliciting family, writing grants and digging in his own pocket, Joseph has raised more than $60,000. Omar, a business major, plans to pay back his friend, but Joseph isn’t concerned. “If I could do this to give him a chance to have a more successful future, why wouldn’t I?” he says.

If you are interested in supporting Joey’s fundraising efforts or have any questions, suggestions, or well-deserved kudos, please email him directly at josephkatona@gmail.com.

Read Wendy Grossman’s article in People Magazine »

View: Seeds of Peace
Daily Times (Pakistan)

NoorzadehLAHORE | Far away, in the lush, green woods of Otisfield, Maine, USA, there is a place where great things happen. This place, which over a hundred new young people from all over the world are proud to call “home” for three and a half weeks every year, has a magical effect. Seeds of Peace, an American NGO, is paralleled by few, because the greatness of the idea on which it is based is unique and yet fundamental to human co-existence; the idea that people everywhere are good, and that each of us can be a collaborator for peace. The camp in Maine is theory put into practice.

Established in 1993 by John Wallach, an eminent journalist of his time, Seeds of Peace brings together young people from regions of conflict around the world in an effort to promote peaceful coexistence and reconciliation, in the hope that they, being future leaders, will use the values and leadership skills learnt at camp to bring about change in this world. Wallach firmly believed in his philosophy that “the enemy has a face”, and that when people of two conflicting nations sit down together and have a conversation about their lives, families, hopes, dreams and aspirations for their children, they would ultimately see the good in each other. That is the first step to achieving peace in this world.

This summer, I was one of the lucky few chosen to attend the SoP camp, and I can safely say that it was probably the most amazing experience of my life, for it is not every teenager who gets the opportunity to interact with people from different conflict-stricken regions of the world. I shared a bunk with people from America, India and Afghanistan, ate three meals a day at a table with my Israeli, Palestinian, Egyptian and Jordanian counterparts, and participated in all sorts of activities, including music, art and sports with people from different countries.

In addition, the Pakistani delegation also had dialogue with the Indians, Americans and Afghans regarding important issues such as terrorism, the conflicts between our respective countries such as Kashmir (between India and Pakistan), and the Durand Line (between Pakistan and Afghanistan), and the effects these issues had had on us individually.

There was an interesting clash of opinions, with free expression of all points of view, and though our conversations became pretty intense at times, they never went too out of control. On a personal level, I spoke as an individual, not as a supporter of my government’s stance on every topic. During the last days of camp, we tried coming up with possible solutions to all these problems, and actually succeeded in agreeing on several things.

It was amazing to hear their side of the story, and learn about how what they’ve been told differs from what our history books say. The first step to making peace is, no doubt, clearing all misconceptions, and our dialogue sessions certainly served this purpose. It was an enlightening experience.

Though every day at camp was exceptional, there were some highlights, such as the Culture Night, where people from all delegations wore their traditional native dress, and rich, exotic food from different countries was served. There was also a camp talent show where different delegations presented a performance pertaining to their culture. Pakistanis danced to a medley of old film songs; the Jordanians performed their traditional “dapkay” dance, and so on.

Campers were given the opportunity to observe different religious services, even if they were not participating. I observed the Jewish Sabbath, Hindu and Jain services and Christian mass, while non-Muslim campers came to see Muslim Friday prayers. The purpose of this was to showcase the similarities between our religions, and to make people realise that we can live in peace and harmony. I enjoyed the other services thoroughly, especially the Jewish ones, because the atmosphere was filled with love and warmth.

In addition, there was an interfaith dialogue, where campers of different religions discussed their beliefs, and how religion could be used as a means to achieve peace in the world.

The neutral atmosphere of Seeds of Peace was truly valuable. I never once felt as if I was being judged by anyone for anything I said or did on the basis of my nationality, religion or ethnicity; I was there as an individual.

Probably the most important aspect of Seeds of Peace is that one learns to put aside all preconceived notions, doubts and misconceptions one has to get to know people from other countries for what they are, and not based on stereotypes and labels.

Seeds of Peace is no longer just an idea; it is the realisation of a beautiful dream which over four thousand people all over the world are involved in. Many have dedicated their lives to working for peace and stability, and their efforts are not in vain: Seeds of Peace’s manifest success in the Middle East led to international recognition of the organisation as an effective body for bringing about peace in areas of conflict. The US State Department too started to support it, and with its aid, a South Asia programme was launched in 2001, comprising Indian and Pakistani delegates. A year later, it was extended to Afghani youth as well. This programme continues to date, and is doing much valuable work in our region.

The writer is a student based in Lahore. For more information on Seeds of Peace, visit www.seedsofpeace.org.

Read Pakistani Seed (’09) Noorzadeh Raja’s opinion piece at The Daily Times »

July 21, 2015 | Camp Session 2 (Maine)

The second session of the Seeds of Peace Camp will bring together campers from the Middle East, South Asia, and the United States.

ADDRESS: 183 Powhatan Road, Otisfield, Maine
DATE: July 21, 2015
TIME: July 21 – August 13
LOCATION: Seeds of Peace Camp
WEBSITE: www.seedsofpeace.org/camp
CONTACT: Sarah Brajtbord | sarahb@seedsofpeace.org

August 1, 2013 | Maine Seeds Day at Camp (Maine)

Join us on August 1 for a Camp visit and meeting about our Maine Seeds program with special visits by policymakers from the state. The event will be hosted by Leslie Lewin, Seeds of Peace Executive Director; Tim Wilson, Maine Seeds Program Director; and Jim Erwin, Maine Steering Committee Chair and Partner, Pierce Atwood LLP.

ADDRESS: 183 Powhatan Road, Otisfield, Maine
DATE: August 1, 2013
TIME: 10 a.m. – 1 p.m.
LOCATION: Seeds of Peace Camp
WEBSITE: www.seedsofpeace.org/maine
CONTACT: Jessie Erwin | jessie@seedsofpeace.org

Seeds of Peace selected as youth beneficiary for 2003 Peoples Beach to Beacon 10K

World-class race set for Saturday, August 2, in Cape Elizabeth

PORTLAND, MAINE | Peoples Heritage Bank announced today that Seeds of Peace, an organization that promotes tolerance and understanding among youth around the world, has been chosen as the beneficiary for this year’s Peoples Beach to Beacon 10K Road Race.

Peoples will provide a cash donation of $30,000 from race proceeds. Additionally, Seeds of Peace will benefit from fundraising opportunities and publicity valued at more than $40,000.

Seeds of Peace brings together youth from troubled regions of the world to co-exist in an internationally-recognized conflict resolution program at a summer camp in western Maine, as a way to dispel the hatred and misconceptions that divide them. Through the summer-long programs, participants develop empathy, respect, communication/negotiation skills, confidence, and hope—the building blocks for peaceful coexistence. Participants include Israelis and Arabs, Turks and Greeks, Indians and Pakistanis, and more.

For the past three years, Seeds of Peace has included sessions for local and immigrant teens from Portland – the organization’s first effort to apply its methods of conflict resolution directly to an American contingent. The program is now open to teens all over Maine, including Lewiston, where an influx of Somali immigrants has sparked recent tensions.

There is no other such program available to and serving Maine youth.

“We’ve been aware of the work of Seeds of Peace for a long while, and can think of no better time to bring their mission to Maine’s forefront through the Peoples Beach to Beacon,” said Michael W. McNamara, president and CEO of Peoples Heritage Bank, the race’s major corporate sponsor. “Maine is becoming a much more diverse state and it’s vitally important to find a way to increase understanding, especially among our young people, who represent the state’s future.”

“Like the Peoples Beach to Beacon race, people from all over the world participate in our program,” said Timothy Wilson, Seeds of Peace Camp Director. “We appreciate the bank’s generosity and are honored to be the youth beneficiary for this great international event. It is organizations like Peoples that make Seeds of Peace possible.”

The date for the 2003 Peoples Beach to Beacon 10K Road Race, which attracts elite runners worldwide as well as top road racers locally and across New England, has been set for Saturday, Aug. 2 along the picturesque shores of Maine’s rocky coast in Cape Elizabeth.

The field size, increased last year to commemorate the fifth anniversary, will remain at 5,000 this year for the popular race, which is expected to fill up by early summer. Registration will begin in mid-March.

Now in its sixth year, the Peoples Beach to Beacon has grown to become a top international road race and much more. Each year, for example, families in Cape Elizabeth open their homes to athletes from such countries as Kenya, Ethiopia, Japan, Russia and South Africa. The cultural exchange is another special aspect of the event.

That effort to promote understanding will be further enhanced this year by the selection of Seeds of Peace as the youth beneficiary, according to Joan Benoit Samuelson, Maine’s most recognizable athlete who founded the race.

“Seeds of Peace’s formula for addressing ethnic and racial tensions is known the world over, and we look forward to assisting the organization with such a worthwhile and timely youth program,” said Samuelson, a 1984 Olympic gold medalist and two-time Boston Marathon champion.

Samuelson serves as a spokesperson for the bank during the year to promote the race and the bank’s “Peoples Promise” program, which benefits Maine youth with scholarships, sponsorship programs and charitable gifts. Last year’s race beneficiary was Opportunity Farm, a long-term, family-style, residential facility in New Gloucester for at-risk Maine youth.

Seeds of Peace, founded in 1993 by award-winning author and journalist John Wallach, is recognized as the leading international conflict resolution program for youth. Each summer, hundreds of teens identified as their nation’s best and brightest spend a month at Seeds of Peace International Camp in Otisfield, Maine, living side-by-side with people they have been led to hate.

The Maine Project is a pilot program designed to address ethnic and racial tensions between diverse communities in the U.S. Immigrant and refugee populations continue to swell in Portland, Lewiston, and in other Maine cities, and schools and neighborhoods now more closely mirror the profound diversity so valued in America. Unfortunately, as diversity has increased, so too have hate crimes and discrimination—particularly among youth. The Maine Project is a proactive measure to increase understanding, tolerance, and unity throughout the state. Past participants in the Maine program include teens from Cambodia, Rwanda, Somalia, Vietnam, Sudan and Uganda who have recently settled in Maine, as well as youth from European-American families whose Maine roots date back several generations.

For more information on the race, visit www.beach2beacon.org.

Office Depot to sell Michael Feinstein’s latest CD in over 800 stores nationwide to benefit Seeds of Peace

BEVERLY HILLS | Beginning August, Office Depot, one of the nation’s largest sellers of office products and equipment, will offer Michael Feinstein’s latest recording with Concord Records, Michael Feinstein With the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, for sale in over 800 stores throughout the United States. A portion of all sales will benefit Seeds of Peace, a non-profit, non-political organization dedicated to helping teenagers from regions in conflict, including Arab and Israeli youngsters from the Middle East, end the cycle of violence.

The sale of this CD at Office Depot stores holds particular poignancy as it follows Monday’s announcement that the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra’s 8-city tour of the U.S with Michael Feinstein was cancelled. One of the reasons cited for the cancellation is security concerns.

Seeds of Peace (www.seedsofpeace.org) has graduated more than 2,000 teenagers representing 22 nations from its internationally recognized conflict-resolution program since it was created in 1993. Living together throughout the summer, these teenagers, who were identified by their governments as among the best and brightest, work to develop the building blocks necessary for peaceful coexistence. The organization also provides a safe and supportive environment in which the youngsters can air their views and learn communication, listening, negotiation and other conflict-resolution techniques that allow them to develop empathy for one another.

Michael Feinstein With The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, recorded in Tel Aviv, was released May 7. It marks the first time that the singer-pianist, one of the top interpreters of popular American song, has recorded with a symphony orchestra. The CD contains lush and inventive treatments of a dozen veteran American standards, all written by American immigrant composers, such as “Stormy Weather,” “By Myself,” “Somewhere,” and “I Won’t Send Roses.” The 88-piece Israel Philharmonic Orchestra is led by the Alan Broadbent Trio.

“Seeds of Peace is an extraordinary organization that has developed incredibly successful social programs to help both Israeli and Arab teens work and live together in peaceful co-existence,” says Michael Feinstein. “The teenagers I met in Israel through the organization had demonstrated tremendous courage and I dedicate this recording to all of those children.” Michael continues: “Music has always been a great healer, and, along with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, I want to help it keep playing.”

Office Depot will sell Michael Feinstein With The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra through the end of September, 2002.

In 2001, Michael Feinstein received his third Grammy Award nomination for his acclaimed double CD Romance On Film, Romance On Broadway. Michael enjoys an active performance calendar, including major concert halls, symphony orchestras, and intimate jazz clubs. More than a mere performer, he is nationally recognized for his commitment to the American popular song, both celebrating its art and preserving its legacy for the next generation. Michael also co-owns the most successful nightclub in New York City, Feinstein’s at the Regency.

Seeds of Peace launches forum on conflict and diplomacy

Senator George Mitchell to inaugurate series on negotiations

NEW YORK | Seeds of Peace, the nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering leaders of the next generation and advancing reconciliation and coexistence will launch a high-level speaker series on negotiations in New York City. The first forum will take place on Monday, April 19, 2004 and feature Senator George J. Mitchell, former U.S. Senator and the newly elected Chairman of the Board of The Walt Disney Company. Announcement of the senior statesmen confirmed for the second forum will be made on April 19.

Mitchell was selected to be the first speaker in this biannual series based on his outstanding career in negotiations and politics. As a key broker of the Northern Ireland Good Friday Agreement and Chairman of the Sharm el-Sheikh Fact-Finding Committee, no one is better positioned to delve into the complexities of the negotiation process.

Said Aaron David Miller, President of Seeds of Peace, “Senator Mitchell has a unique feel for both the theory and practice of negotiations—when they can work and when they cannot. He brings a rare insight and wisdom to a very complicated subject. As a long time supporter of Seeds of Peace, he understands the importance of negotiations to the extraordinary work we do with leaders of the next generation.”

Mitchell will be joined by Israeli and Palestinian alumni from the Seeds of Peace program who will have an opportunity to interact with him during the forum and to engage him on the substance of his presentation.

The Seeds of Peace Forum on Conflict and Diplomacy is an educational series, which offers senior statesmen and negotiators the opportunity to discuss their views and experience on the theory and practice of diplomacy. Two lectures are planned for 2004; the second of which will be held on September 20.

Since 1993, Seeds of Peace has graduated over 2,500 teenagers from four conflict regions from its internationally recognized leadership program. Through its Camp in Maine, its Center for Coexistence in Jerusalem, international youth conferences, regional workshops, educational opportunities, and adult educator program, participants develop empathy, respect, and confidence as well as leadership, communication and negotiation skills—all critical components that will ensure peaceful coexistence for the next generation. For more information, visit www.seedsofpeace.org.

The Seeds of Peace Forum on Conflict and Diplomacy will be held at the University Club (One W. 54th Street at Fifth Avenue) at 6:45 p.m. If you are interested in attending as a member of the press, please contact Rebecca Hankin at 212-573-8270.

Seeds of Peace Celebrity Auction to feature Bill Clinton and Janeane Garofalo, with live music by Barenaked Ladies

NEW YORK | The Seeds of Peace Young Leadership Committee will present the 5th Annual Bid for Peace Celebrity Auction on Tuesday, January 14th at 6:30 p.m. at the Hammerstein Ballroom at the Manhattan Center in New York City. This year’s event will be hosted by Actress/Comedian Janeane Garofalo with special guest, The Honorable William J. Clinton, 42nd President of the United States. The Barenaked Ladies are scheduled to perform live at the event and receive the first-ever MTV Networks Seeds of Peace Award.

Honorary Host Committee members who are lending their support for the evening include:

  • Kim Cattrall
  • Chevy Chase
  • Billy Crudup
  • Kelsey Grammer
  • Robert Sean Leonard
  • Bebe Neuwirth
  • Chris Noth
  • Mary-Louise Parker
  • Susan Sarandon
  • Sam Waterston
  • Pinchas Zuckerman

In addition to the live musical performances and surprise celebrity guests from television, film and sports, the event will feature over 200 premium live and silent auction items (live action conducted by C. Hugh Hildesley, Vice Chairman of Sotheby’s). Auction highlights include:

  • Cruise through the Greek Isles aboard Princess Diana’s yacht
  • “Dream Week” with the New York Yankees
  • Gourmet dinner party prepared by Union Pacific’s world-renown chef, Rocco DiSpirito
  • Slumber party at Dylan’s Candy Bar
  • Getaway to a romantic South of France villa
  • Original artwork by Ya’akov Agam
  • Custom dress designed by Nicole Miller
  • Private basketball clinic with an NBA star

Israeli and Palestinian Seeds of Peace alumni will also speak and pay special tribute to John Wallach, the founder of Seeds of Peace, who passed away in July 2002.

Package tickets for Bid for Peace Celebrity Auction start at $1,500 and include a VIP reception with President Clinton. Individual tickets are available between $175-$500. Tickets can be purchased online at www.seedsofpeace.org or by calling Seeds of Peace at 212-573-8040.

To further advance its objectives, Seeds of Peace has formed the Young Leadership Committee, a New York-based group comprised of young professionals (25-45 years old). Each year, the Young Leadership Committee holds a large fundraiser, raising important funds and exposing more people to the work of Seeds of Peace.

Since 1993, Seeds of Peace has graduated more than 2,000 teenagers representing 22 nations from its internationally recognized conflict-resolution program. The Seeds of Peace program brings hundreds of youth identified by their governments as among the best and brightest to live together at three consecutive month-long summer programs. Through the summer-long programs, participants develop empathy, respect, communication/negotiation skills, confidence, and hope—the building blocks for peaceful coexistence.

ADDRESS: Manhattan Center, 311 W. 34th Street, New York, NY 10001
DATE: January 14, 2003
TIME: 6:30 p.m.
LOCATION: Hammerstein Ballroom
CONTACT: Rebecca Hankin | (212)-573-8040 ext. 31.