Brandeis Application due by February 5, 2010

Students Crossing Boundaries is excited to extend the application deadline for the 2009-10 SCB Fellowship Program to its final deadline on February 5, 2010 by midnight.

Please look through our website to find out about the fellowship program, eligibility requirements and application details.

Quick Access to:

  • Program details and Eligibility requirements click here.
  • Application details click here.
  • The Application click here.

Please direct any questions to Adriel Orozco at adriel@studentscrossingboundaries.com.

Israel / Palestinian Territories 2010

02/14/2010 - 12/15/2010

This program is in one of the most controversial regions of the world today. The program will allow students to immerse themselves in personal and cultural stories and experiencing the daily influences on both sides of this conflict.

Last year, students travelled to Jerusalem and Haifa.  Internships included working with Arab-Israelis, demolitions of housing, and working with women identity issues.

Mexico / United States Border 2010

02/14/2010 - 12/15/2010

This program will allow students the opportunity to explore the border issues that exist in two sister cities. Students will observe firsthand the cultures, clashing and coalescing as they will live in Mexico or a US border state. The applicant should have some familiarity with Spanish.

Last year, students travelled to El Paso, TX and Ciudad Juárez, Mexico. Internships included helping in community organizing for Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center, working with various immigrant issues at the Annunciation House or creating a women empowerment camp.

Summer Camp

Rebuilding in the Bedouin village of Omel Kher in South Hebron Mountain

Juarez: Descending Dante’s Inferno.

Originally written July 12, 2009

I held my breath as I

crossed the border. Which in retrospect, is not at all what I predicted my reactions to be.  Quite sadistically humorous in fact, since the only other time the split second autonomic reaction had occurred was when childishly scuttling through a graveyard.

The Wild, Wild West Bank: Where Settlers Roam and Know No Law

The traffic from East to West Jerusalem, as it is every day, was bad. I sat at a standstill with my cabbie, Ahmed, as the clock struck noon. The phone rang, and of course, who else would be calling but Jonah Michael Seligman. “We’ll come meet you. Get off near the YMCA.” Ahmed made a Village People joke in response to my directions, and we parted ways. My next step was hopping into the wobbly, white pick-up truck of Noa, our guide for the day.

West Banksy

El Doctor Khalidi por el podio.

In order to compensate for my sub-par blogging habits in recent weeks, this report is a prompt one. I have just arrived back at the Augusta Victoria after a long day of running around the West Bank with Jonah. With it being Shabbat in Jerusalem with little to do during the day, Jonah and I made other plans.

Qurei of the Concrete Barrier

In light of my imminent attendance at the Jerusalem Conference at Birzeit University (Ramallah) this coming Saturday, I would like to honor one of the keynote speakers:

Ahmed Qurei, a well known Palestinian figure and a former Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority, served under Yassir Arafat at the height of the 2nd Intifada in 2003. Qurei filled Abu Mazen’s (Mahmoud Abbas’) shoes after he decided to resign at that point in time.

Last Week in Brief: Nablus and Nir David

IMG_4765.JPG

I have just completed my fifth week as an intern at ANERA, which means I only have three more weeks to learn as much as I can while I’m here in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT). After my splurge of blogging about my trip to Gaza, I fell off the wagon for a bit, and found it more useful to seek experiences that were worthy of my recounting at a later date.

Well that date has now arrived, and I sit before my computer, an insomniac. It is 3am, and I have work tomorrow, but I can’t sleep tonight for some reason. I figure that I might as well take advantage of my extended waking hours to write about this last week, about which I have kept all of you in the dark.

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