
Village where Israelis and Palestinians live together to promote peace faces planned tax on funds
An Israeli village where Jews and Palestinians live together to promote peace is in danger of losing vital overseas funding following Israeli government proposals to impose an 80% tax on foreign donations, residents have warned.
Leading figures from the unique community – Wahat Salam/Neve Shalom, which translates as 'Oasis of Peace' – flew to the UK this week in a visit hosted by the Co-operative Group, which is calling for the UK government to support peace-building cooperatives worldwide with foreign and development policy.
Samah Salaime, an Israeli Palestinian, and Nir Sharon, an Israeli Jew, co-direct the village's educational institutions, which include the School for Peace for activists and a primary school where 250 Jewish and Palestinian children learn each other's histories, in Arabic and Hebrew.
The co-directors addressed a parliamentary round table, attended by Labour and Co-operative MPs and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) on Tuesday, in a visit coinciding with the 77th anniversary of the Nakba, when more than 700,000 Palestinians were dispossessed. On Saturday, the pair addressed the Co-operative Group's annual general meeting in Manchester.
Before the meeting, Salaime told the Guardian of the threat posed by a bill being debated in Israel's Knesset. If it became law, it would decimate the finances of NGOs in Israel that receive funding from foreign states.
'All support from foreign countries for the peacemakers of the left, the liberal and the democratic; humanitarian aid or legal aid for the Palestinians, will be taxed 80% from foreign countries,' she said.
'The biggest supporters for Wahat Salam come from the UK, from the Co-op, our friends in Switzerland, in Sweden, in the US. We don't have any local Israeli support for our project … financially and ideologically, they are against us.'
Sharon added: 'We faced financial problems and challenges in the past, but if this law passes, we will be in severe problems, most of our education projects will just shut down.'
Conceived by Bruno Hussar, a Jewish Catholic priest, the village started with a handful of residents in 1978, in 'no man's land' between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
It now has 300 residents, half Israeli Palestinians and half Israeli Jews, including academics and tech professionals, with a waiting list of about 200 families. There is no synagogue or mosque, instead residents pray or meditate in a dome called the Court of Silence.
Surrounded by olive trees, communal life in the village revolves around committee meetings where the co-operative's decisions are voted on, shared meals, the swimming pool and the Garden of Rescuers, which commemorates heroes of global catastrophes. There is a guesthouse in the village, and children from surrounding areas are bussed in to attend the school.
Salaime said: 'We were attacked by settlers three times. We had two arson attacks in 2021. They set fire to our peace school, and we rebuilt it and the peace library. They attacked the primary school, destroying 16 vehicles … we have all kinds of unfortunate incidents, and we survive.'
Salaime, a social worker and feminist of the 'third generation of the Nakba', moved to the village from East Jerusalem in 2000, five days before the second intifada, looking for a 'decent school'. Her three sons have grown up with Jewish friends, facing the 'complexity' of a 'soulmate' agreeing to serve in the Israel Defense Forces. When her home came within a range of rockets from Gaza, Salaime reassured her mother that she could use her Jewish neighbour's shelter.
'We break the rules, we break the stereotype, the brainwashing of the Israeli mainstream that peace isn't possible,' Salaime said. 'We have to win this and offer a different agenda.'
Sharon was 14 when his parents moved to the village 23 years ago and said it gives 'isolated lefties, Jewish peacemakers and activists' a place to 'coexist'.
'We are not some kind of utopia, where everything is perfect and there is no debate,' he said. 'When there is October 7 and the war, we have to talk about it.'
Leading the Co-op's peace-building campaign, Paul Gerrard, Co-op Group's policy director, said the village was a 'breathtaking example of where people come together around a goal, in that cooperative way, they can survive and they can thrive'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
21 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Israel arming anti-Hamas gang in Gaza
Israel is supplying weapons to a Palestinian gang in Gaza with the aim of destabilising Hamas, Benjamin Netanyahu said. Rifles and handguns have reportedly been handed over to the Abu Shabab militia, an armed group that has been accused of looting aid and, allegedly, has links to Isis. Based in the east of Rafah, the gang has been operating within an area that is under the direct control of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), indicating that it is doing so with Israeli consent. The revelation comes as Israel seeks to break Hamas's control over the population of Gaza via its troubled new aid distribution mechanism and an enhanced military campaign. Abu Shabab has members in both Gaza and Egypt and is led by Yasser Abu Shabab, who comes from a Bedouin family. His group has been accused of involvement in drug dealing and weapons smuggling from Egypt, including via the use of drones. According to local media reports, the group, comprising roughly 100 armed men, now calls itself the 'anti-terror service'. 'Netanyahu selling Israeli security for another day in office' The news was leaked by Avigdor Lieberman, a former defence minister, and political rival to Mr Netanyahu. He said the government was arming Isis-affiliated criminal gangs. The Israeli prime minister admitted the claim, saying: 'In consultation with security officials, we made use of the clans in Gaza that are opposed to Hamas. 'What's wrong with that? It's only good. It saves the lives of IDF soldiers.' Some Israeli politicians, and some in the media, have pointed out that there is no guarantee that the militia will not go on to use the weapons against the IDF, and that Israel has a mixed history of arming Palestinian factions for short-term gain. Yair Golan, leader of the opposition Democrats, wrote on X: 'Netanyahu, who transferred billions to Hamas in suitcases full of cash [before October 7], based on the incorrect belief that Hamas is an 'asset,' is now promoting a new dangerous concept: Arming a Gazan militia with ties to ISIS.' 'Netanyahu is dangerous to Israel's security,' he said. 'This is not a mistake. This is systematic. Netanyahu is selling Israel's security for another day in office.' Even among a population that, reportedly, is growing increasingly weary of Hamas, any suggestion of affiliation with Israel is very controversial.


Daily Mail
30 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Israel issues evacuation warning to Gaza residents ahead of 'impending strike on all areas from which rockets are launched'
The Israeli military issued an evacuation order for residents of parts of Gaza City on Friday ahead of an attack. 'This is a final and urgent warning ahead of an impending strike,' army spokesman Avichay Adraee said. The army 'will strike all areas from which rockets are launched.' It comes after last month Britain, France and Canada threatened Israel with sanctions unless it relents on plans to expand military operations in the beleaguered Gaza Strip. A joint statement from the leaders of the three countries cited the 'intolerable' level of human suffering and 'denial of essential humanitarian assistance' in a stark warning. An 11-week blockade on food, fuel, water and medicine has pushed the decimated civilian population of Gaza to the brink of famine, experts continue to warn.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Israeli army admits to Gaza strike after BBC Verify investigation
The Israeli military has admitted to BBC Verify that it conducted a previously unacknowledged strike on the al-Mawasi area of southern Gaza, which reportedly killed at least one Palestinian and injured 30 strike took place on Sunday - hours after 31 Palestinians were killed in an incident near a new aid distribution centre in the city of Rafah, according to the Hamas-run Civil Defence reviewing footage purporting to show the incident near the aid distribution centre, BBC Verify identified a separate strike in the nearby city of Khan blast was not previously announced by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), which regularly publishes operational updates online. It was only when approached by BBC Verify that the IDF admitted it had carried out an artillery strike and said the incident was the result of "technical and operational errors".They said troops had fired towards a "target" but the artillery had "deviated" and "wrongfully hit the Mawasi area" - a coastal strip of Khan Younis. The IDF did not provide evidence for these IDF rarely acknowledges such "errors". A BBC Verify analysis of statements on the IDF's official Telegram account could only find four previous instances of it admitting to making a "mistake", "technical" or "operational" error relating to the war in Gaza since it began in October footage we reviewed from the Khan Younis blast first began to emerge late on Sunday evening. It showed bloodied bodies surrounded by dust clouds in an area where Palestinians were living in tents. Women and children could be seen running and screaming as they watched injured people carried away. The Israeli strike hit an area where a number of displaced Palestinians had been sheltering. The UN has estimated that 90% of the strip's population of 2.1 million people have been forced to flee their arrived on the scene to collect the injured shortly after the incident. BBC Verify identified a number of the same injured Palestinians in both the footage from the scene and later images from the hospital where they were Palestinian was killed and 30 others were injured by the strike, according to the Kuwaiti Field footage was initially falsely linked to killings near a controversial new aid distribution site in BBC Verify geolocated the footage to a location in Khan Younis - 4.5km (2.8 miles) away from the distribution Hamas-run Civil Defence agency said "Israeli gunfire" had killed 31 Palestinians near the aid distribution centre. The Israeli army at first said it did not fire on Palestinians near the site, but a military source later told BBC Verify that troops had fired warning shots. We used the position of the sun to ascertain that the footage was filmed in the evening, shortly before sunset. A local journalist who filmed footage of the scene also told BBC Verify that the incident occurred around 19:00 local time on Sunday - hours after the killings near the aid IDF statement did not offer a figure for those killed in the Khan Younis blast and said that "the incident is under review".The footage showing the strike has been at the heart of a dispute between the BBC and the White Monday, BBC Verify reviewed the footage and debunked claims that it was connected to the killings near the distribution centre in debunk post was then picked up by White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, who wrongly claimed that it showed the BBC had retracted its coverage of the aid centre a statement, the BBC said her comments were "misleading", adding that she had been "conflating" the two stories."We did not remove any story and we stand by our journalism," the BBC statement launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to Hamas' cross-border attack, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken least 54,607 people have been killed in Gaza since then, including 4,335 since Israel resumed its offensive on 18 March, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry. What do you want BBC Verify to investigate?