The Jerusalem Post | IFCJ, SOCIAL AFFAIRS MINISTRY TO RENOVATE DILAPIDATED BOARDING SCHOOLS

$5.7 million public-private partnership will provide a new home-away-from-home for more than 4,000 at-risk students who attend boarding schools across the country. The project is a joint initiative of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (IFCJ), Israel’s Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs, and the Israeli Public Forum for Youth Villages and Boarding Schools for Children at Risk.

Under the partnership, 40 of the most dilapidated boarding schools across the country will be renovated. These are schools that provide a home-away-from-home for many of the 10,000 young people who are victims of physical abuse, sexual assault or neglect, and are considered at-risk youth.

The ministry, led by Minister Haim Katz, will finance about $2.8 million, while the IFCJ, led by Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, will contribute $2.27 million. The forum, led by Israel Prize laureate Avi Naor, will contribute $570,000.
“These young children are not responsible for the difficult circumstances they endure, and they deserve the best possible homes that we can provide,” said Eckstein, after touring the Neve Tzelim boarding school in Ramot Hashavim, one of the buildings scheduled to receive the repairs.
“A home that is pleasant and inviting reinforces a feeling of belonging, fostering a homey atmosphere of warmth and love that these children and adolescents so desperately lack,” Katz said.