While Dina Tanners was in Kiryat Malachi in January, 2013, she interviewed a few people whose lives have been impacted by a TIPS partnership project. Her is an example of a young woman currently involved on the town youth council. She was too busy to meet this week, so her advisor gave me some information about her.
Elinor Yaso is the chair of the Kiryat Malachi Youth Council. She is a
senior in AMAL high school the secular public secondary school in Kiryat
Malachi with approximately 750 students. This is her second year as
chair.
She first joined the Youth Council at the beginning of
10th grade. She joined as part of the new program in high school where
teens have to do serious volunteering in 11th and 12th grades to get a
"bagrut" in community service, and they have to do a limited amount of
volunteering in 10th grade. The Youth Coucil was considered a volunteer community service program, so she decided to join it. She was rather shy and reserved. Elinor is Ethiopian-Israeli from a more modern family, and her parents have encouraged to
do well in school.
That year, there was a lot of leadership
training in the Youth Council and Elinor went to all of the training She began to see how she could become
more assertive and speak out for the needs of the youth in
town.
She went to many meetings in Kiryat Malachi, representing youth locally in town as well at the regional and national level.
About
a year ago when there were headlines nationally about people in Kiryat
Malachi refusing to rent or sell apartments to Ethiopian-Israelis,
Elinor spoke out on behalf of her peers. She spoke at regional
conferences, to the press, and on TV too saying that she has not felt discrimination
in Kiryat Malachi. She speaks quite elegantly and people pay attention
to her.
In the community she has also volunteered regularly in the Tzeva program for disadvantaged elementary school children.
One
summer because of her efforts in the Youth Council, she was chosen to
participate in the Nesiya program, and traveled with Americans while
they were on tour in Israel. She then went to the US to meet up with
the same teens in an organized program during Hanukkah.
Elinor is on the left in the picture below which was taken at a TIPS steering committee meeting at the end of Elinor's sophomore year of school when Youth Council members attended the meeting and spoke.
She has participated on
committees on the regional level in Ashdod and also for all of the South of Israel.
She
was named a remarkable volunteer by a committee of adults from the
local Education Department as was Bentzion Zandani, a local teen who is
handicapped and uses a wheelchair to get around. The local committee
also nominated her to be recognized as a remarkable teen volunteer
nationally (for teens who volunteer in unique settings). The town should
hear soon whether she has been accepted and will get an award on the national
level.
If Elinor had not joined the Youth Council and had gone through leadership training, she probably would not have developed in
the assertive and elegant person/speaker she has become.
Another story of how the Youth Council changed the life of a local teen is that of Lital.
In May of 2010, Dina met with Lital to hear about the details of the functioning of the Youth Council.
She also asked Lital what the Youth Council meant to her personally. Lital said that although she only had one year to be involved since its
rebirth, it really helped her a lot. Through the leadership training and participation in programs with her peers, she really
learned what responsibility meant in depth and the importance of follow
through. She also learned how to deal with many different kinds of
people.
Through the YC events and programs, she said that she was pushed out of her
comfort zone and succeeded, growing and maturing. She learned to organize speeches and speak in public, something that was not taught in her high school. She is religious, so
will not go to the army but will do "national service." She originally
had planned to work in an easy job in a nearby hospital. But since her experience on the
Youth Council, she decided to work with teens at risk in Petach Tikva, especially young Ethiopian-Israeli girls.
She feels that since she is capable, and should take responsibility to do
something more challenging and will a greater impact.