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Kibbutz volunteers are people who come from all over the world to live and work in a kibbutz in Israel. These volunteers, mostly young people, usually stay at the kibbutz for a short period of time (such as a month or all summer), working in various branches of the kibbutz economy (agriculture, kitchen, gardening and factory). Most volunteers typically come to Israel for a short period of two to three months under a volunteer visa and participate. Volunteers receive food and board, and sometimes pocket money. Some volunteers combine work with studying Hebrew at a kibbutz ulpan. Some kibbutzim organize trips and cultural events for the volunteers.[1]

Austrian kibbutz volunteers at Kibbutz Ein HaShofet working in the apple orchard, summer of 1973

History

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The volunteering phenomenon in the kibbutzim began in the mid-1960s when the young generation of Baby Boomers from western nations became curious about kibbutz life and eager to experience it first-hand, and as a result decided to come to Israel, volunteer in a kibbutz and gain experience of living and working in a collective community. Although up until the Six-Day War the kibbutzim had very few volunteers, after the conclusion of the Six-Day War the world's interest in Israel grew, and in the aftermath large numbers of volunteers arrived. As a result, many kibbutzim began arranging the necessary housing and infrastructure to accommodate this growing phenomenon. During this period there was also an increased interest in Israel among the Diaspora Jewish communities, from which the majority of kibbutz volunteers initially originated.

In the subsequent years kibbutz volunteering gradually increased significantly and was institutionalized. With time the proportion of Jewish kibbutz volunteers gradually decreased while the majority of the volunteers at that point were non-Jews who originated mostly from Western Europe and arrived either in organized groups or as individuals. Initially the kibbutzim were very satisfied with the phenomenon as it brought cheap labor, which minimized the need to hire workers and brought openness to the various cultures of the world. Nevertheless, over time some kibbutzim also became aware of the negative aspects of the phenomenon as it became evident that some individuals among the volunteers used drugs, consumed alcohol, and a growing rate of intermarriages with kibbutz members often involved the migration of some of those members to the country of origin of the volunteers.[2]

During the peak of the kibbutz volunteers phenomenon in the 1970s, around 12,000 volunteers arrived each year,[3] and worked in hundreds of different kibbutzim throughout Israel.

Following an acute economic crisis that many of the kibbutzim in Israel experienced during the 1980s, many kibbutzim began adopting an action-oriented market economy and concluded that basing the economy on the volunteer workforce was not a profitable model. Meanwhile, some kibbutzim gradually began to employ foreign workers from Thailand in the agricultural sector of the kibbutz and Israeli workers in the industrial and services sectors.

Following the intensification of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict during the last decades of the 20th century, and in particular after the Second Intifada started in 2000, many countries ceased to cooperate with the project and as a result there was a significant decrease in the number of the kibbutz volunteers. The decrease hit its lowest point in 2001, when only 100 volunteers arrived in Israel.[4] In recent years, there has been a slight increase in the number of volunteers, and in 2007 approximately 1,500 kibbutz volunteers came to Israel.[4]

In total, 350,000 volunteers from 35 different countries have volunteered in various kibbutzim in Israel since 1967,[5] with most of the volunteers through the years coming from the United Kingdom (circa 50,000), South Africa (circa 40,000), Sweden (circa 25,000), Denmark (circa 20,000), and Germany (circa 15,000).[6]

Notable volunteers

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ In the footsteps of Dylan and Seinfeld: Kibbutz volunteering
  2. ^ היה הייתה התנדבות
  3. ^ בקיבוצים חוגגים 40 שנות מתנדבות שבדיות – וואלה! חדשות
  4. ^ a b "המתנדבים בקיבוץ עין השלושה נחושים להישאר". Ynet. 15 January 2008.
  5. ^ Zionism 2.0: Kibbutz volunteer work lives on in the 21st century Haaretz
  6. ^ ידיעות הקיבוץ, קטעי "עובדה!" בגיליון מיוחד לרגל 100 שנות קיבוץ (גיליון מספר 1237, מתאריך 29 September 2010)
  7. ^ Michele Bachmann on Israel, and considering herself Jewish | TC Jewfolk
  8. ^ Focus U.S.A.-Israel News – Haaretz Israeli News source
  9. ^ Sandra Bernhard Has a Real Attitude Problem, and Fans Like It That Way : People.com
  10. ^ "הייתי בשוק כשביבי נבחר" – וואלה! תרבות
  11. ^ Samuels, David (12 November 2010). "Q & A: Noam Chomsky". Tablet. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
  12. ^ What do two Britons living in a small Israeli kibbutz have to do with a death in Dubai? – Middle East – World – The Independent
  13. ^ תרבות – קולנוע nrg – סשה ברון כהן מתרומם עם ברונו
  14. ^ a b c Israel re-brands kibbutzim to lure eco-aware generation | The Observer
  15. ^ Cashman, Greer Fay (15 December 2008). "Austrian president vows to bring up Schalit case with Assad". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  16. ^ He just keeps bobbing upIsrael News – Haaretz Israeli News source
  17. ^ Kibbutz Movement planning reunion for thousands of foreign volunteers – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News
  18. ^ Annie Leibovitz Biography. bookrags. Retrieved 19 July 2007.
  19. ^ Helen Mirren recounts kibbutz life YNet. 9 July 2011
  20. ^ Brent, Frances (1 September 2015). "Book Review // On the Move". Moment. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  21. ^ Mark Leibovich (21 January 2007). "The Socialist Senator". The New York Times Magazine. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  22. ^ "Inside the Kibbutz Where Bernie Sanders Lived and Learned Socialism". 5 February 2016.
  23. ^ American Jewish comedian Jerry Seinfeld in Israel to promote new movie – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News
  24. ^ Sigourney Weaver Biography – Yahoo! Movies
  25. ^
    • Allen, Henry (13 December 1983). "Debra Winger, Coming to Terms". The Washington Post. Retrieved 24 June 2016. She tried studying criminology and sociology at Cal State-Northridge, and went to Israel to spend time on a kibbutz, but by 17, she'd moved away from home and she was making it in commercials.
    • Thomas, Bob (25 December 1983). "Don't Try to 'Type' Debra Winger". The Gainesville Sun. Associated Press. Retrieved 24 June 2016. After high school, she worked on an Israeli kibbutz, trained with the Israeli army and then returned to the United States to study sociology at California State University at Northridge.
    • "Debra Winger". People. 26 December 1983. Retrieved 24 June 2016. At 16, she ran off to a kibbutz and did her basic training in the Israeli Army.
    • Klein, Uri (14 July 2006). "On Her Own Terms". Haaretz. Retrieved 24 June 2016. Exaggerated reports about her also concern her biography. For example, at one of the Internet sites devoted to her it is stated that she spent part of her youth on a kibbutz in Israel and even served for several months in the Israel Defense Forces. Winger laughs. Indeed, when she was 17 she spent four months at Kibbutz Beit Zera, but she never enlisted in the IDF. She took part in Gadna (youth cadet) activities, and apparently once told this to someone who told it to someone and it developed into an urban legend, according to which Debra Winger was once a soldier in the IDF.
    • Arfa, Orit (24 April 2008). "Debra Winger Explores Jewish/Arab Day Schools". The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. Retrieved 24 June 2016. Raised in a secular Jewish household in Cleveland, Winger volunteered on a kibbutz in 1972 and has maintained her connection ever since.
  26. ^ Lopate, Leonard (10 June 2008). "Debra Winger on Life Beyond Hollywood". The Leonard Lopate Show. WNYC. Retrieved 24 June 2016.
  27. ^ Elmas, Dean Shmuel (24 July 2019). "When Boris Johnson visited Israel as a 20-year-old". Israel Hayom.
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