The Peres Center is paradoxical: an apolitical organization which swears allegiance to peace, and which clings to glamor in spite of its unglamorous grass-roots work.
By ANNA BEHRMANN
Fresh off the plane from grey London, and armed with the scantiest knowledge of Middle Eastern history, I was the newest intern at the Peres Center for Peace.Suffering from acute disorientation, I’d been in Tel Aviv for two weeks, but had yet to see the sea. I walked down toward the Center, and confronted the crashing waves.I was almost swept away when I arrived, battling with the wind when trying to open the door, much to the security guard’s amusement – a running theme for January. I walked down the sparse, neat Holocaust memorial garden, opposite the faded stones of the Muslim cemetery, and onto the patio stretching out to the sea.Reaching upwards and outwards in horizontal stripes of glass and stone, ever so slightly dusty, the Center was blue, green and incongruous next to the neighboring run-down, graffitied houses, strung with washing lines.I had only recently heard of the Center, but I soon learned that it was “the place” to be for peace. I was in the Community and Leadership department, which develops projects in education, leadership, technology, culture and the arts.The outgoing intern; an idealistic, tanned Christian American, was wandering around looking dazed at the thought of leaving. The young, mainly female office followed Israel’s official casual dress code, but still looked well-polished in their skinny jeans and over-sized glasses. There were a couple of girls working at the Center as part of their army service; it was certainly cooler than combat.I was interning through a Masa scheme for Jews in the Diaspora. Other interns included the son of a US Senator (he got a special handshake) and a political science student from Berlin.The frenetic activity of the Center belies the fact that it is located in out-of-the way Ajami, which is one of the poorest, predominantly Arab areas of Jaffa. We would lunch in the only nearby restaurant, with its faded photograph of Shimon Peres.I was idealistic, admittedly without a clear vision – and it was easy to be. I thought, and still do, that it is very valuable to be able to change a person’s mindset through educating them about coexistence, or introducing them to new ideas and people. The Center presents a simple message: peace between Israel and its neighbors, especially Palestinians; and between Jews and Arabs in Israel.This is to be achieved through activities for all ages – sport, art, and peace education; as well as economic, health and technological cooperation. Crucially, the Center positions itself above the political fray, although it is inevitably affected by it.