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Drills and Dance-offs: The 2012 Professional Development Retreat

Chad, Nissreen and Vito help sum up the weekend after an intense session of Anatomy of Peace Drills

We are in retreat season here at PeacePlayers International – Middle East. Two weekends ago, we were in Eilat with the Jerusalem All-Stars. This past weekend we were at our more regular hang-out, Kibbutz Sdot Yam, for the annual Professional Development Retreat, which brought together 43 Palestinian and Israeli basketball coaches and members of the Leadership Development Program (LDP) (stay tuned next week when we bring you the Peace Education Retreat for kids, which is taking place this coming weekend).

Nissreen leads a conflict resolution seminar for coaches and LDP participants

Coaches at the Professional Development Retreat came from the communities of East and West Jerusalem, Tamra, Kiryat Anavim, Ein Rafah and Holon. They were joined by members of the LDP, who are coaches-in-training in the Twinned Basketball Program. This might have been the most intense Professional Development Retreat we’ve had yet, with coaches running from gym to classroom and from classroom to gym once again.

PPI friend and board member Chad Ford (professor of conflict resolution at BYU Hawaii) was on hand to share some inspiring stories about how seeing people as people can improve a player’s game on the basketball court, as well as his or her life outside of the gym. Chad also offered support to Nissreen and Renana, PPI – ME’s new curriculum facilitators, who led a four-hour Arbinger session. Other special visitors included new PPI Organizational Learning Specialist Gunnar Hagstrom (who until recently was a fellow at PPI – Cyprus), who spent time getting to know how PPI – ME implements the Anatomy of Peace Curriculum. Also on board was Chad’s fellow BYU Hawaii faculty member Rand Blimes, as well as BYU Hawaii students Adhna Martin and David Whippy. Adhna and David added some extra flavor to the weekend with a team building battle of the sexes dance-off. Men learned an aboriginal dance from New Zealand, while Adhna, whose mother is from Tahiti, taught women a traditional Tahitian dance.

Adhna and David say goodbye to the LDP girls.

Oh, yes. And there was basketball, too, of course. PPI – ME Basketball Operations Manager Vito Gilic’ demonstrated (with the help of the LDP) the Anatomy of Peace basketball drills, which take the principles of the Arbinger Institute’s Anatomy of Peace conflict resolution model, and applies them to basketball drills. Each drill was followed by a discussion led in both Hebrew and Arabic by facilitators Renana and Nissreen. By the end of the weekend, coaches were bushed, but now they’re ready to enter the coming program years with the tools they need to use basketball to bridge divides, and that’s what we’re all about!

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Goodbye 2010-2011, Hello 2011-2012!

Hand-in-Hand teammates reacquaint themselves with the court after summer break.

PPI – ME is back from summer break. Not that our summer break was all that much of a break: With the action-packed Building Bridges summer camp, PPI international board trip and loads of MEPI-supported leadership development activities, we indeed did manage to keep ourselves busy over the hot Middle Eastern summer months. But now back to our regularly scheduled programming: This past week, PPI – ME officially launched the 2011-2012 programming year. So far, we’ve launched twice-weekly Basketball and Peace Education Sessions, All-Stars practice (including special athletics training sessions on the beach), and completely integrated Leadership Development Program (LDP) weekly practices.

Girls of the Hand-in-Hand team (comprised of teens studying at Hand-in-Hand School, our home base) at their first practice of the year.

The most widespread activity so far is the Basketball and Peace Education Sessions, in which every children’s team in the Twinned Basketball Clubs (TBC) takes part twice a week. At this stage, TBC teams are practicing in their own communities, with Twinnings expected to start in November. The purpose of this period is to help prepare Palestinian children for the joint encounters, which can be a bit scary for kids who have never met children from the “other” community, kids who have only ever learned about the other side through myths and the media. We help Palestinian and Israeli children become comfortable with the idea of meeting and playing basketball with kids from the other side by helping children combat stereotyping and negative thinking, all the while making sure their basketball is up to speed, so that both teams will be of roughly equal skill level.

The Jerusalem All-Stars, the first ever integrated Palestinian-Israeli team from Jerusalem ever to compete in the Israeli Basketball Association’s youth league, have also started to get a leg up on the competition with intensive pre-season training. More than a month ahead of the start of the season, the All-Stars have been working hard in three practices a week. Two of three weekly practices take place on the beach in Herzliya and are led by star athletic trainer Alon Levy And PPI – ME’s Director of Basketball Operations, Vito Gilic’. In Herzliya the All-Stars train together with Elitzur Holon, an Israeli team in the national league, which last year took the league cup (and included two Palestinian PeacePlayers from East Jerusalem).

The LDP has also reconvened, with weekly Basketball and Leadership Sessions already underway. In the coming weeks, the LDP teens will begin volunteering as assistant coaches in their local communities, and the months that follow will see a weekend retreat and Social Action Projects.

All in all, the year has started with a bang. Stay tuned.

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