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2010
Sasha Chanoff and Jared Genser Articles

Take Kim to Court
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Inspired by relatives, he's doing a world of good for refugees
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What It Takes: A persistent voice for human rights
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Mapendo and Freedom Now founders win Bronfman Prize
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The Charles Bronfman Prize Fetes Two Young Humanitarians
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Two win Bronfman Prize
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Charles Bronfman Prize Names Two Recipients
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Mapendo and Freedom Now founders win Bronfman Prize
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The Charles Bronfman Prize Names Two Recipients
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Bronfman Prize Names Two 2010 Recipients
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MAPENDO: A Lifeline for Forgotten Refugees
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Bronfman Prize Winners Announced
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DLA Piper's Genser wins 2010 Charles Bronfman Prize for accomplishments in the field of human rights
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The freedom fighter D.C. lawyer wins $100k Bronfman prize
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Freedom Fighter
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Charles Bronfman Prize Awarded to Two Human Rights Leaders
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Mapendo founder receives Bronfman Prize
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2009
KIPP - Mike Feinberg and Dave Levin Articles

National KIPP founders earn humanitarian prize
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Two teachers receive Charles Bronfman Award
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Jewish educators win Bronfman Prize
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2009 Charles Bronfman Prize Honors KIPP's Excellence in Education
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The Right Recruits From The Wrong Side Of The Track
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Education Vision Prize
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2008
Rachel Andres Articles

Prize goes to Darfur Project
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Y-Net Article (In Hebrew) on Rachel Andres
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Jewish visionary awarded Bronfman Prize for helping Darfur women (Y-Net English Version)
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If You Save One Life, You Have Saved The World - Page One
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If You Save One Life, You Have Saved The World - Page Two
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If You Save One Life, You Have Saved The World - Page Three
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Un projet révolutionnaire pour sauver les réfugiées du viol (Pana Press Article French Version)
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Pana Press Article on Rachel Andres (English Version)
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Rachel Andres - The Power of One
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2008 Press Release
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The Simple Tool That Saves Women's Lives
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2007
Amitai Ziv Articles

Prize for Simulation
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Galey Zahal interview with Dr. Amitai Ziv
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Galey Zahal interview with Dr. Amitai Ziv
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WMLB Voice of the Arts' Max Arbes Interview with Dr. Amitai Ziv
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Sheba Medical Simulation National Center

They Play Doctor in Order to Reduce Mistakes and Malpractice
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Translation to 'They Play Doctor in Order to Reduce Mistakes and Malpractice'
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An Unsimulated Success
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2005
Alon Tal Articles

Environmental activist to use award money to fund green groups
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Ma\'ariv Article (in Hebrew)
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Haaretz Article (in Hebrew)
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Y-Net Article (In Hebrew)
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Environmentalist-activist Dr. Alon Tal kicked Israel's green movement into action 15 year ago with the founding of Adam Teva V'Din - Israel Union for Environmental Defense, and he's not done kicking yet
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U.S.-born environmental warrior rewarded for his efforts
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Award-winning immigrant a force in environmental activism
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Defining the Jewish future on our own terms
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Israel proposes itself as a location of world desertification research centre
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Dr. Alon Tal to Chair JNF Land Development Authority
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The Legend of a Lost Lake:
A Tale of Death and Resurrection
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Study: 'Green' Education At Schools Is In Poor Shape
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Israeli Muslims set to green the Arab world
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2004
Jay Feinberg Articles

Jay Feinberg '90 Receives Bronfman Prize
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Founder of Bone Marrow Registry Honored
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Founder of marrow registry to use prize money to give life
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Gift Of Life
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Survival Victory Leads to $100,000
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News



Award-winning immigrant a force in environmental activism
By: Dina Kraft
JTA January 16, 2006

LOD, Israel, Jan. 16 (JTA) - High in an overcast sky, beneath a bank of clouds, Alon Tal is waving his hands and delivering a rapid-fire account of Israel's environmental history. Tal is delivering this lecture in a conference room at the top of a former airport control tower - a fitting setting for a leading proponent of recycling in Israel. Captivated, his students, most of them government employees dealing with the environment, have their eyes fixed on him and a series of charts and lists documenting the battles to save Israel's forests, beaches, air and water.

Tal, 45, a powerhouse in environmental activism, is an American immigrant to Israel who was born Albert Rosenthal in North Carolina. He came to Israel determined to make a difference. On Jan.10, he was awarded the Charles Bronfman Prize, a prize given to outstanding young Jewish humanitarians. Selected from dozens of nominees, the $100,000 award went to Tal as an example, the prize founders said, of "an outstanding environmental visionary who set out to change the world and has actually done so." Fighting for the environment in a country focused on development and security has not been easy. In receiving the award, Tal recounted a turning point one rainy winter night 12 years ago when he traveled to Beit Shemesh to deliver a talk on air pollution. He was convinced no one would attend on such a miserable, cold night. To his surprise, he was greeted by a hall packed with 300 people.

"And then I got it. The people of Israel really do care deeply about the health of their communities. They love this land of theirs. And when we learn to tap into that love, we really can move mountains."
Tal has moved his share of mountains.

In 1990 he founded Adam Teva v'Din, the Israel Union for Environmental Defense. The group was the first environmental watchdog organization of its kind in Israel. It uses American-style legal advocacy to help protect Israel's environment, filing court petitions challenging the government's development policies that it says risk endangering the environment and public health. The group focuses on issues of air pollution, safe drinking water, solid waste management and accessible open space.

Their first victory was stopping sewage being dumped from Eilat into the Red Sea. One of their landmark court victories saw a $10 million purification system installed in the Kishon River in northern Israel, after the group uncovered that nearby factories were pouring more sewage into the river than they had been reporting, making the river toxic.

The organization has also worked with Jordan and the Palestinians on common water issues, including shared rivers.

"We'll never restore our rivers without doing it together and we are doing it together," Tal said.

Among Tal's admirers is Naim Daoud, director of the environmental department of the Arab National Society For Health Research and Services.

"Alon Tal is an environmentalist who understands that ecology can be a force that brings people together and bridges our differences in the region. Few have done more in our field to make this happen," he said.

In 1996 Tal founded the Arava Institute at his then-home, Kibbutz Ketura near Eilat. He also served as the chairman of Israel's umbrella group for environmental organizations between 1999 and 2004 and is currently a board member of the Jewish National Fund.

After immigrating to Israel at the age of 20, Tal spent two years in the army as a paratrooper. Crisscrossing the Israeli landscape he saw great beauty, but also, to his surprise, a lot of trash. "We are willing to die for it, but not keep it clean," Tal said. He had been looking for a way to contribute to Israel as an American immigrant, and soon realized that environmental work might be his calling.

While studying law, he did an internship with the environmental protection service, a department within the Interior Ministry that would eventually become the Ministry of Environment. There he met a woman who would become his mentor, Ruth Rotenberg. It was Rotenberg, he said, who suggested to him that Israel needed an environmental policy organization that would push the government to create better environmental policies.
"I thought he was a person who could move things," said Rotenberg, now legal adviser and head of the legal department at the Ministry of Environment.

Tal then returned to the United States to do a doctorate in Harvard in environmental health policy - a degree that did not exist in Israel.
He returned here and founded the Arava Institute in 1996. It offers master's degrees in desert studies and environmental studies. He recruited students not only from Israel but from abroad, including Jordan. Today, some 80 percent of the institute's graduates hold key environmental positions in the region.

Among those at the award ceremony in Jerusalem were several of Tal's students, including Zein Nsheiwat, 24, from Amman, Jordan.
"Alon's classes are my favorites," she said. Nsheiwat said it was not easy for her friends back in Jordan to see her come to Israel and study. But she is convinced it is the best thing she has ever done.

"I think we are doing something here - for the environment, for peace, for our countries," she said.

The institute is affiliated with Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, where Tal is a member of both the Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology and the Department of Man in the Desert at the Jacob Blaustein Institute.Avishay Braverman, the university's former president, said Tal is a major asset.

"He is a force in bringing most of the practical aspects of how to keep the Holy Land ecologically sound," said Braverman. "New immigrants like Alon Tal are so needed in the country. He is a role model."

In his acceptance speech at the awards ceremony, Tal spoke about how he once wished he belonged to the generation of Israel's founders but now realizes he has an equally if not more important task.

"We are blessed because we have the privilege and the responsibility to define what will be preserved of the land of Israel," he said. "Will future generations enjoy the same natural treasures that so inspired pilgrims and prophets for a millennia?"


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