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Sderot SSRC Overview

Sderot SSRC Overview

SSRC SDEROT SOCIAL RIGHTS CENTER Creating engaged citizenry in Sderot: Empowering communities through rights advocacy

Type to enter text Type to enter text The Birth of a Rights Center in Sderot

The Sderot Social Rights Center -SSRC- is a community based action center that has been three years in the making. The Center is guided by a Rights-Based Community Practice (RBCP) model developed at McGill University that combines community organizing, social work and legal advocacy to empower individuals and communities to learn about and access their rights, to promote transparency in government and its institutions, and to ensure that the voices of the most disadvantaged are heard in civic life. The Sderot Center is a member of the International Community Action Network (ICAN), which oversees global expansion of the RBCP model. Following an exhaustive community mapping process, identifying the strengths, needs and concerns of Sderot residents - undertaken by Sderot residents together with Sapir College students- the Center began operating in the community in February 2012, with the ofcial opening in January 2013. SSRC is part of a movement of engaged citizens, aware of their rights and their ability to afect positive change in their communities and their societies. The Center is operated under the auspices of the Department of Public Policy and Administration of Sapir College, and is driven by its community and student volunteers, overseen by an active and engaged local steering committee.

Sderot : Challenge and Opportunity

Sderot is a hard working town in ’s south, less than five kilometers from the border with the . Of a population of some 23,000, more than 1000 families live in public housing and unemployment is high. Launched as a to house new immigrants, Sderot is home to families of veteran immigrants from Arab countries, as well as more recent arrivals from the Former and . It has been hard hit both by rockets from Gaza over the past several years and at times weak support from the central government, but its residents are resilient and have dreams. Sapir College, which has spearheaded this center, has provided the opportunity for many first generation college students to get ahead in life, and a strong network of community organizations, which partner with our center, strive to improve the living conditions of Sderot residents and take part in nation-wide conversations to advance Israeli society. The SSRC has become a central player in such eforts. The ICAN connection

As a member of ICAN, SSRC has access to capacity building and training assistance, a cadre of professionals— Israelis trained at McGill but living in the Region—on which to draw, and assistance with fund development and management. SSRC is a part of a global efort to expand the use of rights-based community practice in international development projects. SSRC’s Three-year founding process

The SSRC ofcially opened in January 2013 but it has been active in the community for some three years. The road to the Center’s launch has included three distinct phases to create a truly participatory rights center in Sderot, with the active engagement of the community in the process.

PHASE ONE: From Study to Action Building on more than 10 years’ experience as part of ICAN’s implementation of Rights-Based Community Practice (RBCP), the Center’s founders began conversations about bringing the RBCP model to Sderot, a perfect place for a participatory organization that could advance the rights of diverse marginalized populations. Beginning with an in-depth community mapping, involving Sapir College students and community residents, a core group of twenty volunteers was recruited, a steering committee was formalized, community outreach was begun and an intensive volunteer course was planned, all with the generous support of Sapir College.

PHASE TWO: From Residents to Activists Important support from the JF Ross Family Foundation was secured and the volunteer course was launched. Academics and social activists shared their knowledge and expertise with a diverse group of 20 volunteers. Volunteers learned how to run a ‘rights store’ to assist their peers in navigating government bureaucracy and demanding their rights and entitlements, and an initial community project was launched. As years of rocket attacks from Gaza had led to not only trauma but damage to homes and businesses, the group determined to take on the issue of the mandated bomb shelters to which all were entitled but not all were built to specification in neighborhoods such as Kasdor. Residents organized together to make sure that these shelters were built to spec and residents could live with heightened security. The campaign continues as many families still lack completed shelters.

PHASE THREE: Full Speed Ahead for Social Change Today, the Center is up and running, ofering legal advice clinics, operating the rights storefront and engaging in community organizing activities. New volunteer training courses began in January 2013 both for veteran volunteers and newcomers to expand the work of the Center. A storefront legal expert and a community organizer are in place, providing storefront services and guiding organizing initiatives. Public Policy, Law and Social Work Students are assisting in the storefront and conducting research; the SSRC is recognized as a “Flagship Program” by the Israeli Council of Higher Education, and is currently training fifteen students active in community work through the Community Involvement Department at Sapir College in rights-based community organizing. Also, community volunteers involved with the center, who once came in for assistance themselves, are now bringing their experience to Sapir College classrooms, helping to engage ever more students in action for social change. In short, the Center is vibrant, active, growing and an integral part of the bright future of Sderot, engaging and empowering residents to lead the way in improving the and society at large. Faces of Change SSRC SDEROT Sderot Social Rights Center SOCIAL Steering Committee RIGHTS CENTER Dr. Merav Moshe Grodofsky, Senior Lecturer, Sapir College; Academic Director, SSRC, Sderot

There are many ways you can Dr. Nachmi Paz, CEO, Sapir College support the Sderot Social Rights Dr. Daniel De Malach, Lecturer, Former Center: Chair, Department of Public Policy and Administration, Sapir College

ANNUAL GIFTS PLANNED GIFTS Mr. Zohar Avitan, Executive Director, Pre- Academic Program, Sapir College, Veteran General Support Planned gifts can be made by SSRC encourages unrestricted designating SSRC as the Resident Sderot general support gifts. Such beneficiary of your will, life Mrs. Achlama Peretz, Director, Pre- gifts provide SSRC the insurance policy or retirement Academic Program, Sapir College, Veteran flexibility to direct funds plan, or by making a gift that Sderot Resident where they are most urgently provides you with income needed. during your life. Mrs. Niva Reem, Director, Collot BaNegev Program Designated Gifts ENDOWMENT GIFTS You can designate your gift to Mr. Shimon Bloom, Adv., Lecturer, Sapir College; Director Legal Clinic (NII issues), SSRC’s work on the issue you An endowed fund can be Sderot care most deeply about: established with a gift of housing, employment, women’s $100,000 or more and will Mr. Meir Karp, Director, Mizrahi Bank, empowerment, youth, victims continue in perpetuity. The Qiryat Malachi of violence, health and more. principal remains untouched while the revenue generated Mrs. Yafa Melese, Director, Youth Services, is used for the purposes Sderot Social Services; Sderot Resident recommended by the donor. * COVER PHOTO: A Endowment gifts aford you the Sderot home- rocket Mr. Raanan Shaked, Community Activist; opportunity to have your name, shrapnel pocks the Sderot Resident or the name of a loved one you facade but new grass wish to honor or memorialize, continues to grow. Dr. Eitan Shahar, Lecturer, Sapir College permanently associated with SSRC. The Center receives support from: Gifts from North America can be made to SSRC through ICAN at the McGill Middle East Program (MMEP) of McGill University. Such The J.F. Ross gifts are tax deductible in Canada and the United States. McGill is Family Foundation recognized as a 501(c)(3) organization in the USA.

For more information about making a gift to SSRC, call David Leduc at (514) 398-8006 or email [email protected]

SSRC c/o ICAN: 3506 University Street, Room 113, Montreal, Quebec H3A 2A7 Canada [email protected] www.mcgill.ca/mmep/israel/sderot t: +1(514)398-6717 f: +1(514)398-7241