Connecting Through Arts
Challenge
CTA is a bilingual educational program engaging Israeli and Palestinian children in creative arts and English learning, using ecological themes such as water stewardship and recycling as the basis for art projects. It aims to build cross-cultural familiarity through shared activities.
Haqel is an Israeli human rights NGO that engages in strategic litigation and legal defense on behalf of Palestinian landowners. They intend to use SIPP’s funding to support their emergency legal interventions, including operating a 24/7 hotline that connects victims of attacks with local authorities, systematically documenting violations, and petitioning the High Court of Justice. Their goal is to protect agricultural land, demand accountability, and challenge the normalization of settler and army violence.
PHRI is a joint Israeli-Palestinian organization that delivers primary and specialist medical care to West Bank communities isolated by movement restrictions and settler violence. They will use SIPP’s grant to cover medication and transportation costs for Mobile Clinic visits, ensuring immediate healthcare relief and continuity of care for populations cut off from fixed medical facilities. This is part of a larger project to bring healthcare to high-need communities and includes operating a dedicated Women’s Mobile Clinic.
Working with families in Tuwai and Masafer Yatta, this project focuses on on-the-ground solidarity and land protection. Achvat Amim will utilize SIPP’s grant to purchase agricultural tools and cover volunteer transportation to reclaim two to three agricultural plots near Tuwani village in Masafer Yatta. By establishing a consistent working presence, they aim to restore safe land access to private Palestinian fields and deter settler harassment.
Combatants for Peace: This project brings together Palestinian residents and Israeli activists through practical acts of solidarity and joint nonviolent action to counter targeted violence against the community water infrastrucure. With SIPP’s funds, they plan to repair and rehabilitate damaged water cisterns and rainwater collection systems in the North Jordan Valley. This work aims to help vulnerable farming and herding families maintain vital water access, sustain their livelihoods, and resist displacement pressures. It also provides meaningful opportunities for cooperation and shared responsibility.