I hope that you have a few minutes to spend reading this month’s blog. It is overflowing with articles about the myriad of exciting events that took place at the Arava Institute for Environmental Studies in the month of May. The blog covers our academic program’s look at cross border conflicts and reconciliation on the Dual Narratives Trip to Jerusalem. You will read about the successful alumni conference in Madaba Jordan with over 100 alumni participants and the many visitors hosted and special programs held at the institute. I want to commend the staff, students and alumni who all work together to push the institute towards higher and higher achievements. I want to give a special thanks to my new intern, Melanie Nakashian, for bringing to life the mosaic of activities at the institute in such an informative and colorful way in her premier blog, a real tour de force. David Lehrer
Dual Narratives Peace Building and Enviornmental Leadership Seminar (PELS) Trip to Jerusalem
Early this month, Arava Institute students and interns headed to Jerusalem for the PELS Dual Narratives Trip. The trip began at Beit Yalin, Israel’s first agricultural settlement. Here students listened to two different organizations: Parents Circle-Families Forum and Combatants for Peace. Both organizations seek to promote peace-building and 
The next day they went to Yad Vashem, the Holocaust (or Shoah) museum in Jerusalem. The students were divided into smaller groups and led through the museum on guided tours. Once the tours were completed students participated in a PELS session reflecting on their experiences and thoughts. Following this, the group visited the Max Rayne Hand in Hand Bilingual School for Jewish Arab Education where they had a tour and learned more about the history and mission of the school. Much like the Arava Institute the Hand in Hand school, brings Jewish and Arab students to study together and build an inclusive community. The Arava Institute students had the opportunity to engage with students during an English lesson and spoke with a group of 12th graders about their experiences at the school since an early age and their plans for the future. Though a short trip, the Arava Institute students were exposed to different narratives, perspectives, and histories. Reflecting upon the trip in a PELS session days later, using strategies like compassionate listening to synthesize the experiences they shared. Submitted by Mary Ann Maestas
MASHAV Course on Renewable Energy as a Catalyst for Regional Development

In addition, the group was lucky enough to be on Ketura during its annual “music week” and were treated to many evening performances and gatherings. This included Culture Night, when the spotlight was on MASHAV participants from each 
Friends of the Arava Institute Faculty Tour

Annual Alumni Conference in Madaba, Jordan
Alumni, staff, associates and current students of the Arava Institute gathered together over the weekend of Thursday, May 22nd through Saturday, May 24th at the Grand Hotel in Madaba, Jordan for the annual alumni conference, organized by the Arava Alumni Peace and Environmental Network (AAPEN). This year, there were 103 people in attendance. The theme of this year’s conference was “networking and entrepreneurship.” Accordingly, the conference was a valuable opportunity
Art Knows No Borders

Special Guests of the Conflict or Cooperation Course: Dr. Muhammad Hmaidi and Dr. Shmuel Brenner
On Thursday 29th of May, the Conflict or Cooperation class was fortunate to host the Palestinian and Israeli negotiators of the environmental section of the Oslo Accords, Dr. Mohammad Hmaidi and Dr. Shmuel Brenner. Following a visit earlier in the semester from Dr. Shmuel Brenner, currently Director of the Arava Center for Sustainable Development, this particular visit focused on a talk with Dr. Mohammad Said Al Hmaidi. With 30 years of extensive environmental experience, Dr. Hmaidi has been a key player in developing environmental institutions, law, assessment policy, strategy and action plans for Palestine, and previously directed the USAID funded Rehabilitation Program in Iraq.
Dr. Hmaidi emphasized that prior to becoming a negotiator for the Oslo Accords, he was not a politician but came from academia and technology – a point of view that brings people together. He proposed that “in order to proceed, we need to look at how to manage the problem, not for a solution to the problem,” and discussed the long list of environmental issues where cooperation offers win-win- dynamics, such as climate change, waste management, local pollution, environmental technology, to name a few.
After his lecture, there was a round table discussion for students to ask questions to both Dr. Brenner and Dr. Hmaidi, on topics ranging from the Oslo Accords, to the Red Sea Dead Sea Conveyance, to Palestinian media. Students certainly walked away from this unique meeting with ideas and inspiration to feed into their own work in environmental cooperation that crosses borders. Submitted by Melanie Nakashian
Profile: Dr. Shanti Gamper-Rabindran
Dr. Shanti Gamper-Rabindran arrived at the Arava Institute on May 19 as the inaugural recipient of the Bley Stein Visiting Professorship. She is 
While at the Arava Institute, Dr. Gamper-Rabindran held a two-day workshop on program evaluation for research interns and independent study students. Accompanied by her 7-year-old son Felix, they then traveled to Madaba, Jordan to meet more of the Arava Institute community at the Alumni Conference. During her time in Israel, she also lectured at the Porter School for Environmental Studies in Tel Aviv and at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. She was inspired by the youthfulness of the country and by the range of work being done by students and interns at the Arava Institute. The Arava Institute community enjoyed getting to know both Dr. Gamper-Rabindran and Felix. Submitted by Melanie Nakashian
