
The woman helping fellow Bedouins enter Israeli high-tech
Fahima Atawna, with degrees in chemical engineering and public health, saw plenty of educated Bedouins but few in the high-tech sector.

Fahima Atawna, with degrees in chemical engineering and public health, saw plenty of educated Bedouins but few in the high-tech sector.

SmartAID provides renewable energy generators, heaters, rechargeable thermal blankets and battery packs to help Ukrainians avoid freezing this winter.

Dr. Yoni Yehuda, recovering from his own wounds, devised a unique animal-assisted therapy model where he, clients and creatures are equal partners.

Psychotrauma and crisis-response specialists from United Hatzalah flew to Florida in the wake of Hurricane Ian to give immediate trauma care.

Entrepreneur Rony Zarom founded Unistream to help young people from underprivileged backgrounds prepare for success in business.

After a distressing stillbirth, Elysa Rapoport founded an organization to offer support to Arabs, Jews and Christians in Israel, who suffer similar losses to her own.

Tareq Nassar saw empty rooftops and high unemployment among Arab women of Jerusalem and hatched a honey of an idea to address both issues.

Senior officials are shown how Israel promotes accessibility and inclusion to ensure equal opportunities for people with disabilities.

The Israel Life-Saving Federation is teaching Arab and Jewish children how to save lives on the country’s 350 kilometers of coastline.

As the war in Ukraine continues to expand six months after it began, Israeli aid organizations ramp up operations to help deal with the unprecedented humanitarian disaster.

Children from a Chabad-run home in Ukraine are being cared for at the KKL-JNF Nes Harim Field and Forest Education Center in Israel as the war drags on at home.

Ex-officers from the Israel Defense Force renovate schools and build water infrastructure to make a better life for African villagers.

IGY strives to be a safe and empowering place for Israeli LGBTQ+ youth while effecting change across society.

In the past nine years, Dr. Morris Hartstein has examined more than 7,000 Ethiopian Jews and helped 17 Ethiopian doctors receive training in Israel.

Some of the volunteers have started to take the elderly for medical checkups; others have invited them for Sabbath dinners. One volunteer brought his children to play with a 90-year-old man.