WIZO REVIEW SPRING-SUMMER 334 May, 2014 | Page 18

WIZO and Youth years. A grainy video from the 90s shows a teenage girl describing herself pre-Kagan as someone without much interest in school, little self-confidence and a corresponding lack of ambition. Enter the Kagan Centre and Yochai - and the girl suddenly found herself with a video camera in her hands. She had a tool that would give her unparalleled vehicles for self-expression, but which presented her with the daunting challenge of learning how to use the equipment. Laughing, she claims that she doesn’t have the best aptitude for the work, but at least she knows “how to push the red button.” Grinning, Yochai switches off the recording and mentions that this particular girl later went on to have a career in media, a common story among centre graduates. Fast forward to today, and the video quality has improved and the girl dresses a bit differently, but she tells roughly the same story. Today that girl is Lama Awadi, an outspoken and opinionated 14-year-old Arab girl who was recruited by Yochai to join the radio programme. Only on her 5th meeting, Lama has already entered into the Kagan mind-set, exuding confidence and excitement about the opportunity at hand. Along with her peers, she participates in a weekly educational youth radio programme, edited, prepared and produced by the students, under the guidance of professional journalists Nadav Menuchin and Yossef Ben Bassat. Together, the students pool ideas they’ve gathered throughout the week from their surroundings, usually a mixture of pressing issues facing youth and news items, and bring them to the studio where they edit the ideas down into a structured radio programme. They discuss everything from youth cigarette smoking to compulsory army service. Nothing is off limits, short of politics. “Speaking on the radio gives you confidence,” Lama explains. “But it’s not easy: to write articles and tell stories, you have to learn how to express yourself in the most effective and fitting way.” A community stronghold As we walk through the maze that is the Kagan Centre, Yochai explains to me that in addition to fostering media and communications among the city’s youth, the centre also provides badly needed community services for the neighbourhood. 18 I SPRING/SUMMER 2014 I WIZO RE VIE W neighbourhood demographics changed, helping each of these groups absorb into Israel and shifting its services to meet the needs of the population. And still, as generations come and go and the neighbourhood shifts according to outside trends, Kagan has stayed Kagan. Partially, this is due to Yochai’s steady leadership, but also to a large number of graduates who have come back to work at the centre and start Kagan legacies of their own. Lama (r) and her two radio coaches The centre is able to function as such a vital community stronghold partially due to its base of volunteers - a mix of soldiers who dedicate one year of their army service to community service, pre-army, post-high-school 18 and 19-year-olds who elect to do a gap-year of volunteer service before enlisting, a host of local non-profits who pair up with the centre to launch community programming, and ordinary Israelis and visitors from abroad, grandmothers and grandfathers, mothers and fathers, exchange students and more, who volunteer their time for the ben Y