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13.08.2008
Karmiel-Misgav Teen Leadership Delegation Visited Pittsburgh


From Pittsburgh to Galilee: African-American
leader lays plans for inner-city project in israel

By RUTH EGLASH

A successful North American social welfare and vocational training initiative may soon be transplanted to Israeli soil if a joint venture  by the United Jewish Federation of Pittsburgh and African-American 
leader, social activist and author William Strickland comes to fruition.

In Israel this week to explore the possibility of expanding his non-profit Manchester Bidwell orporation to Pittsburgh's sister  region of Misgav in Northern Israel, Strickland told The Jerusalem  Post that he was impressed with the resilience, tenacity and  commitment of the local population both Arabs and Jews to support  Israel.

Israel is physically a beautiful country, declared Strickland, who  had earlier met with local philanthropists such as millionaire  industrialist Stef Wertheimer and Nochi Danker, chairman of the board  and CEO of Israel Discount Bank Holding Corp. Ltd., as well as the  mayors of the Misgav region's main urban centers  Sakhnin, Karmiel  and Misgav Am to discuss the establishment of a center aimed at  providing employment development, educational enrichment and cultural  activities to the local population.

The people of Israel mirror my own experience growing up in the  inner-city of Pittsburgh,continued Strickland, who is considered by  many in the US as an African-American role model for social 
entrepreneurship. I see here the same spirit that we had back then.

Strickland, who has become a local legend in his native Pennsylvania,  grew up in a poor, rough neighborhood of Pittsburgh and started his  work with underprivileged communities back in the late 1960s.

As an undergraduate student at the University of Pittsburgh,  Strickland set up the Manchester Craftsmen's Guild, a program aimed at  introducing local teens to creativity and the arts. Not long 
afterwards, he was asked to take over another local socialwelfare  initiative, the Bidwell Training Center, which provided vocational  training to young adults in his community.

Today, Bidwell training and culture centers exist in San Francisco,  Cincinatti and Grand Rapids, Michigan, with Strickland on the constant  look out for other possible locations both in the US and worldwide.

In previous media interviews, Strickland has said that the key to  establishing a successful model of vocational training and social  action is to combine community, corporate and philanthropic sponsors,  exactly the mix of sources that he tapped into during his visit here  this week.

Jeffrey Kohan, director of Community and Public Affairs for  UJF-Pittsburgh, said that Strickland's meetings with Wertheimer and  Danker had been extremely fruitful. He also met with Jewish Agency for  Israel director Ze'ev Bielski.

Strickland's non-Jewish, African-American background is a very  appealing aspect of this project for Jews and Arabs in this area,  said Kohan, adding that any center built by Manchester Bidwell would 
provide services to both Arab and Jewish communities living in the  Galilee. It will build bridges between the two populations in this  region.While neither Kohan nor Strickland would say where exactly  such a center would be located, Kohan did comment that it would not be  an inexpensive project.

We hope to raise significant philanthropic support both here and in  the US for this project, he said.

As for the question of why an AfricanAmerican leader would commit to  social welfare projects in the Jewish state, Kohan explained that the  Jewish community of Pittsburgh and Strickland have always held a close  working relationship, with Manchester Bidwell receiving significant  funding from local Jewish philanthropists during its early days.

I have many connections with the Jewish community in Pittsburgh,  said Strickland. This is one way I can express my gratitude to them. He continued: "I believe in giving everyone the opportunity to prosper  and don't see any reason why this should be different. I am not  interested in fighting political battles, I prefer to leave that to  the politicians, and focus on building a social welfare center for 
poor kids in Israel".


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