Zajel
is the Arabic word for a carrier
pigeon: a symbol of communication and a symbol of peace. The
Zajel Program offers a peaceful way by which Palestinian youth
can be part of their cause. We seek to answer the
misunderstanding and unawareness of people in the West, by
representing Palestinian youths in a positive way and by acting
as ambassadors for the Palestinian cause.
The Zajel
Youth Exchange Program came as the result of a dream. The
dream was to develop an exchange program that would assemble
youth from diverse backgrounds to interact with Palestinians,
and to learn about Palestinian society and political reality.
The Zajel
program is based at
An-Najah National University in
Nablus. Most of the students of our university are from
northern cities in the West Bank: Jenin, Qalqilia, Tulkarem and
Nablus, amongst others. These cities suffer badly from the
Israeli military occupation
– movement from one city to the other is made difficult
by Military checkpoints and the cities
themselves are plagued by Israeli military
incursions.
The
intention is to provide foreign youth and An-Najah National
University students, a venue to create a type of symbiotic
relationship that will surpass what other exchange programs have
offered.
These conditions
make it very hard for young people to get involved in community
service programs or serious political and social activities.
They also rarely get a chance to meet with people from outside
Palestine. This prevents them from expressing their opinions,
how they feel or to make friends in other cities and across
borders. In many ways the students have been cut off from the
rest of the world.

Zajel focuses
on three main ideas:
-
To challenge the
stereotypes about Palestinians that exist in the West,
by making our students aware of these misconceptions and
providing them with the political, historical and cultural
education needed to counter this.
-
To foster
international communication and intercultural dialogue,
to empower our students to accept and deal with different
opinions, religions and cultures by bringing them into
contact with people from the West.
-
To involve the Palestinian youth in
organizing activities that
serve their community; this builds the self confidence and
experience of students, which will help them play a larger
role in the future building of a Palestinian state.

There are many
ways in which Zajel seeks to bring these ideas into practice,
some of which are:
-
The Palestine Information Unit
promotes Palestinian culture, tradition, history and news.
It gives a voice to those usually overlooked by a media
obsessed with conflict.
-
Voluntary work placements
allow international volunteers to help our efforts in a
variety of ways, for instance: teaching English, collecting
and editing articles for publication, and establishing
contacts internationally with youth organizations from
across the globe.
-
Summer work camps
are organized annually for a period of 3 weeks: about 25
volunteers from all over the world are brought together to
work at the Refugee Camps, organizing activities for the
children. This camp aims to foster a lasting relationship
between the international volunteers and the Palestinian
community.
-
Video
conferences and chat sessions
aim to engage lecturers and students from Palestine and the
rest of the world in an open dialogue about important and
controversial topics of the Middle East.
-
Study visits allow
participants to see another side of the conflicts in the
Middle East. Study Visits last for two days, and include
workshops, lectures and meetings with leaders of the
community, giving invaluable insight into this complex
region.
-
Galleries
are Zajel’s way of
preserving the past for future generations: a wealth of
information to be stored digitally – for instance,
photographs of the Nakba of 1948 or old newspapers.
-
Publications
of Zajel include,
Testimonies of the Nakba, The Image of the
Palestinian Uprising in Western Cartoons, the reports on the
Israeli Violations of the Right to Education and The
Annual Impressions of the International Work Camp Volunteers.
History
The roots of the
Zajel Youth Exchange Program lay in a Palestinian NGO called
Nashama, in 2001 An-Najah National University, adopted the
ideals of Nashama and established the Zajel Youth Exchange
Program.
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