WIZO REVIEW SPRING-SUMMER 334 May, 2014 | Page 12

WIZO Tel Aviv WIZO’s Tel Aviv Branch Spreads Across the City From the young to the old and everyone in between, WIZO Tel Aviv takes care of Tel Avivians of every creed and colour Zohar Friedman In operation for over 80 years, the Tel Aviv branch of WIZO Israel is one of the oldest WIZO branches in the country. Today, led by Chairperson Meira Drori, the branch has five clubs: in Ramat Aviv, Arlozorov St., Montefiore St., Yad Eliyahu and Jaffa, all of which conduct numerous welfare and community outreach activities in coordination with the Tel Aviv Municipality and WIZO Israel. Some of these services include single parents’ groups, women’s empowerment groups, enrichment for the elderly, activities for children and a number of initiatives for girls-at-risk.    The branch also runs over 50 extended-day afterschool programmes for children ages 3-6 in order to help working mothers who need day-care for the entire workday. To further promote the status of women, the branch also offers legal advice through the women’s leadership course and through a legal office that provides legal aid and services to women and couples in the areas of personal status and work-related problems. There are numerous local community ‘homegroups,’ where participants meet regularly at the home of a WIZO member for meetings which include a speaker, discussions, cookery demonstrations and more. Some of these groups have been in existence for many years and members form strong personal friendships. WIZO Tel Aviv is also proud to host a 200-member French-speakers’ group who meet for various activities, including Hebrew conversation practice. To help finance its activities, the branch runs four highlysuccessful second-hand shops that sell gently-used and vintage clothing as well as household and miscellaneous items. In addition, large fundraising events are held across the city throughout the year. grinning and holding hands, other visibly distressed and in need of advice, a hug, a hot meal and a listening ear – all of which they readily receive. The girls, who are usually referred to the programme by their teachers, social workers or school guidance counsellors, all come from difficult backgrounds, which include problematic home lives, poverty, social, emotional and integration problems at school, as well as behavioural problems and academic underperformance. In order to qualify for the Warm Home programme, the girls must all have an open file at the Welfare Ministry. Warm Home, Racheli explains, is not a treatment centre, it’s a safe alternative to the girls’ likely path – “wandering the streets.” While Racheli doesn’t provide the girls with treatment, she works hard to provide them with structure and support. For enrichment, Racheli regularly organizes workshops with visiting teachers on everything from selfdefence to belly dancing, art, fashion and makeup. She also regularly holds