ST. LOUIS, Mo. – The tent movement is spreading.
In Israel, tent cities are popping up throughout the country as part of a broad social protest against high housing prices in the Jewish state.
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In America, Hillel just announced it is planning to set up tents at 20 campuses across the country this fall as places for respectful dialogue about Israel and Middle East issues.
"The purpose of the tent is to grapple with the challenges that Israel is facing and that will play out on college campuses,” said Sharon Ashley, head of the recently formed Center for Israel Engagement, which operates under Hillel’s auspices.
Ashley introduced the initiative, called Talk Israel, at Hillel’s annual
conference last week, held this year at Washington University in St.
Louis.
The tents, set to go up for a full day sometime in late September, are
part of Hillel’s response to the expected vote on Palestinian statehood
at the United Nations in September. The tents might involve a video link
with speakers as well as other common resources, but each campus on its
own will decide the crux of the tent’s activities. Hillel has not yet
chosen which campuses will get a tent.
“The tent has got flaps, but at the same time it’s open,” Wayne
Firestone, Hillel’s president, said in his plenary address at the
conference. “It’s open in the sense that we want to be open and inviting
to students that want to engage in conversations about Israel that we
are so passionate about, and we refuse to allow ourselves to be
marginalized and polarized by those on the edges and outside the tent.”
Ashley, a former journalist and longtime resident of Israel, said she
hoped tent visitors would come away with a sense that the Jewish state
is more than just the conflict. Other than the existence of Israel
itself, she said any issue is up for discussion. Opinions can be offered
freely as long as the bounds of civility are observed.
“You are welcome in this tent to ask questions, but you can’t have all
the answers,” she said. “This is not a one-off event. This is hopefully
something that can be replicated in the spring."

More than 400 students from US Hillels came to St. Louis for the
conference, and they were joined by about as many professionals from the
Jewish campus group. Washington University was hosting the week long
event for a second consecutive year.
In his speech, Firestone also spoke about using social networking to
connect Jews, calling Hillel the “Facebook of the Jewish people” and
talking about how the models for engaging young Jews increasingly are
bottom-up rather than top down. They focus on students not as passive
consumers, he said, but as active “prosumers” who bring content and
meaning to the interaction.
Aaron Weil, a St. Louis native who now heads the Pittsburgh Hillel, said he thought the conference was valuable.
“It gives colleagues the opportunity to connect with one another,” said
Weil, who was honored with Hillel’s Exemplar of Excellence Award. “One
of the challenges of Hillel is that because we are so spread out around
the world, it can be easy to get stuck in a silo mentality where all you
know is what you see and experience on a day-to-day basis.”
Arielle Weil, a 19-year-old art student at Elon University in North
Carolina, said the conference allowed her to understand the best ways to
interact with the few Jewish students on her small campus.
“We’re learning new techniques to reach out to them initially at the
beginning of the school year as well as to have more conversations that
build relationships, not just to get them to come to Hillel but to get
them to feel more comfortable at the university itself,” she said.
Desiree Soleymani, a 21-year-old psychology major from UCLA, said she
felt refreshed by the event and ready to return to her campus and
accomplish new objectives.
“I feel like the staff has taken the opportunity to get to know us and
ask us questions as students,” she said. “It’s nice to feel valued and
like my opinions matter.”