What We Do

Here you will find a listing of the projects we are currently funding – starting with the most recent – as well as those projects we have funded in the past. If you would like to know more about one particular project or a specific program priority, please use the filter to narrow down your search. Note: In addition to the priorities shown here, we also fund language courses. More information on this can be found under Priorities in the menu field Funding.

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Human Rights Education in Alternative Schools – a Network for Teachers

Incorporating human rights education into school curricula is the goal of this joint project of the Anne Frank Educational Center and the Masar Institute of Education in Nazareth with its affiliated alternative school and the Independent School Frankfurt am Main. A central question is: what does a strong civil society means for the society’s majority as well as for its minorities.

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X-Change for Competence

Migration, poverty, equal opportunity, and protection of the environment – these are just a few of today’s challenges we all face. Crossing political and economic borders, such challenges cannot be solved by nation-states and governments alone. Instead, they call for new forms of cooperation between the public, private, and third sectors. New links and interactions between each of these sectors need to be forged in order to bring actors together to take on more collective responsibility.

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Renovation or Demolition

Preservation or destruction: The question of how to approach historical architecture is particularly controversial when it comes to Nazi architecture and buildings. Fifteen students each from Tel Aviv and Berlin examine on site in Berlin the answers provided to this question since Germany’s reunification. They also have the chance to test out new views.

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After School Volunteer Program

Rahat and the Negev region of Israel are predominantly Bedouin areas. International volunteers assist in an After School Program for Bedouin youth as a way to better facilitate their participation in Israeli society.

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Kom-Mit-Nadev

Komm mit, commit yourself, kum mitnadev (hebr. = get up volunteer), be a part of it – the volunteer program „Kom-Mit-Nadev“ brings to mind a number of motivating associations. Since September 2010, this pilot project invites 20 young adults from Israel, who, as volunteers, are involved in civil society projects in Germany. Through their work, these volunteers discover a country and its residents from a new perspective.

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Dok-Station - Beyond Yesterday and Tomorrow

Dok-Station - an entire world of film exists behind this short designation. Indeed, the cooperation between the German Film and Television Academy (dffb) and Tel Aviv University provides the possibility for students of both institutions to collectively develop film projects.

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Recognizing Narratives – Expressing Identity – Putting Dialogue into Practice

Diversity needs dialogue. But what does this in fact mean for educational work in museums and for group processes? Who communicates with whom? Together, the Berlin-based organization „Gesicht Zeigen! Für ein weltoffenes Deutschland“ (“Show Your Face! For a cosmopolitan Germany”), the Art and Cultural Educational Center of Museums in Nuremberg, and the Center for Humanistic Education at the Ghetto Fighters’ House Museum in the Western Galilee are developing new pedagogical strategies for a peaceful living together.

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Homesick

In the everyday life of today’s young people being homesick can mean so much more than a longing for a physical place. The German-Israeli theater project “Homesick,” initiated by “Glashaus – Verein der Nutzer der Brotfabrik e. V.” addresses precisely these facets of longing – for example, for something lost, for far-away places, for freedom. These are highly charged themes that reflect contemporary society (not only) in Germany and Israel.

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Memory in a Multicultural Society

There isn’t just one memory of the past in a multicultural society, there are many. This is also true for the Shoah. High Students from Berlin and Jerusalem develop together collective forms of remembrance that fulfill not only the requirements of public remembrance but, just as importantly, the students’ own understanding of their (family) histories.

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Mixstory – An Encounter with Israel

When youth and young adults with a migrant background tell stories about their lives, then it becomes a “mixstory,” which is also the name of the media-based initiative in the Rhein-Main region of Germany. At the center of this project “Mixstory – An Encounter with Israel,” is a joint trip to Israel to meet with other young people and exchange “mixed stories.”

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Kadima - Kehila, Dialogue, Meoravut/Manhigut, Ha'atzama

Not only is the gender identity of young people in the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Movement part of their self perception, but also their concern with the social and political dimensions of gender relations. The project "Kadima" offers young adults from Germany and Israel the possibility to develop new concepts of social and political participation and self-determination.

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Berlin Meets Haifa Plus

For years now, the cooperation between the Alice Solomon School of Applied Sciences in Berlin and the School of Social Work at the University of Haifa has proved successful. At the center of this success is the yearly student exchange program. In 2011, the program is titled “Berlin Meets Haifa Plus” and focuses on the topics of democratization and the politics of commemoration. Both issues are an important part of German and Israeli public debates and academic discourses. 

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Summer Academy 2011

Mechanisms of Inclusion and Exclusion in Diverse Societies

Students and academics from the Humanities and Social Sciences from Kiel and Tel Aviv come together for a 10-day seminar titled, "Mechanisms of Inclusion and Exclusion in Diverse Societies." They work together on pressing topics such as cultural diversity and immigration. The goal is to find manageable analyses of societal developments for an everyday praxis.

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72 Hour Urban Action: An Integrative Planning Workshop

A unique event happened in Bat-Yam in Israel in 2010 – an innovative architecture and urban art festival “72 Hour Urban Action” took place there for the first time. Ten international teams with participants from architecture, design, the visual arts, and industrial arts joined together for a design mission in a 72-hour real time competition. Now, the integrative planning workshop wants to bring the festival to Stuttgart.

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Identity, Integration and Belonging

Israeli school students from Ethiopian immigrant families as well as German youth in Berlin school classes, with and without a migrant background, have a lot in common. For instance, they can both benefit from the opportunity of inter- and transcultural learning. The project, “Identity, Integration and Belonging” has developed possibilities for both target groups to learn more about themselves and the “other” in new ways.

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The 4th Berlin – Jerusalem Musical Encounter

When twenty students between the ages of 9 and 19 come together to play chamber music for ten days it isn’t just a recital. It’s much more about a chance for young talent as well as a successful cooperation between two of Israel and Germany’s most distinguished conservatories.

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Diversity – Education – Belonging: German and Israeli Stakeholders in Dialogue

Educational learning processes don’t take place in a vacuum, but rather the interlocking work done in schools, universities, museums, and (youth) organizations as well as relations between countries all play a vital role in transnational learning. The conference “Diversity – Education – Belonging” continues the work of a dialogue already underway and, in doing so, sets new standards.

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First Stepping Stone in a New Path

Building a house can have multiple meanings. In the literal sense, a building is created – metaphorically speaking, however, networks are built. A group of Berlin structural engineers in training and Israeli youth will do both in summer 2011. They will work together on constructing a staircase for a kibbutz school and in doing so can create solid connections.

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German-Israeli Cooperation in Crisis Recovery after the Winnenden School Shooting

The cooperation between Israeli trauma experts and school psychologists in Baden-Württemberg focuses on transferring knowledge, sharing experiences, and working jointly on developing concepts with regards to crisis recovery in Winnenden.

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An Encounter and Concert of Composition Students

at Conservatories in Tel Aviv and Stuttgart (2011)

This project aims to provide a platform for artistic exchange between young composers studying at conservatories in Tel Aviv and Stuttgart. The project’s main events are a concert and a joint composition seminar in January 2011 at the conservatory in Stuttgart.

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Summer Academy 2010

Diversity in Society: Challenges for Germany and Israel

The bilateral project brings together scholars and young academics from both countries to examine current challenges to German and Israeli societies. The main aim is the consolidation of a bilateral network between young leaders.

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Berlin Meets Haifa

What are some differences between social work in Israel and in Germany – and what are the similarities? “Berlin Meets Haifa” brings together BA students from the School of Social Work at the University of Haifa and students from the Alice Salomon University of Applied Sciences in Berlin to pursue these questions relating to both the curriculum and the praxis on the ground.

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Migration – History – Belonging:

Actors from Germany and Israel in Dialogue

At first glance, forty-three experts from the field of educational work coming together at a German-Israeli conference may not seem like anything special. But when the collective goal of the meeting is to develop new ways to deal with issues of identity and history in an ethnically and culturally diverse society – then we have an experiment in bilateral cooperation between two states with similar and different societal realities.

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The German-Israeli Fan Exchange – Soccer Fans Against Racism and Discrimination

Soccer is popular just about everywhere in the world – this goes for Germany as well as for Israel. In October 2010, young fans of German and Israeli soccer clubs are coming together to watch live soccer matches and to discuss racist and anti-Semitic prejudices of the sport’s fan base.

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ThoughtSounds for Walter Benjamin – An Israeli-German Composers Exchange

as part of the concert series of Klangnetz e. V.

As part of a concert trip in June 2010, composers from Israel and Berlin as well as musicians of the Ensemble Adapter will give joint workshops at conservatories in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Frankfurt am Main, and Berlin.

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Abissalle Glick – ARENA Coproduction 2010 with Tadam Company

Over a period of one year, and with the involvement of students from Erlangen, a performance production is being developed. The artistic realization is mainly in the hands of the Israeli artists from Tadam Company, while ARENA is responsible for implementing all the tasks related to the production.

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Teachers of the Alfred-Müller-Armack-Berufskolleg On Their Way

Teachers at the Alfred-Müller-Armack-Berufskolleg in Cologne are on their way to Jewish as well as Arab places and schools in Israel to help prepare for an exchange program between German and Israeli students.

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The Comic-Guide Berlin – Tel Aviv

The comic-guide Berlin – Tel Aviv is an intercultural bilingual project that deals with cities like Berlin and Tel Aviv in an innovative manner. The aim of the project is to create a bilingual (German-Hebrew) city guide for Berlin and Tel Aviv vis-à-vis the medium of comics.

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Girls’ Soccer Project: Hadass plays with Stella

The project brings together 32 girls from diverse backgrounds aged 8 to 14 years from Israel and Halberstadt, Germany.

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A Future in Friendship

How do aspiring filmmakers in Germany and Israel respectively view the other country? Film students from the Film and Television Academy “Konrad Wolf” in Potsdam and the Film & TV Department at Sapir Academic College in Sderot asked themselves this very question and worked together to convey their impressions of the future of German-Israeli relations.

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ILanD 2009

If the emerging music scenes in Israel and Germany are one thing, it is that they are going places. These various artists, musicians, and bands cannot be assigned to one particular genre; instead they create their own distinct mixture from elements of pop, world music, surf or hip hop. The Project IlanD 2009 was exactly that – its own mixture: It brought together popular acts and newcomers from both countries to Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

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Musical Encounters

An exchange between the Julius Stern Institute at the Berlin University of the Arts and the Jerusalem Music Center brings together young and talented musicians for joint music making.

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