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I was a volunteer at Kibbutz Be’eri, it gave me a lifelong love of Israel

Retired police officer Jonathan Nicholas remember halycon days at the kibbutz where he was a volunteer in the late 70s

December 18, 2023 13:36
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By

Jonathan Nicholas,

Jonathan Nicholas

5 min read

Since the 1960s, some 400,000 people from across the world have volunteered at kibbutzim. I suspect that, like me, the vast majority are not Jewish, and probably had little or no prior connection to the country. My first visit, in 1978, was initiated by my cousin, who at the last moment decided to go to university instead, leaving me to find Tel Aviv on my own. I’d just turned 18, and been on a few Air Cadet summer camps but never anything like this.

At the kibbutz office in Soutine Street, Tel Aviv, a rakishly thin woman in her forties with long black hair and deeply tanned, leathery skin showed me a map of Israel and pointed to the far north, and the border with Lebanon. “Dafna, that’s a nice kibbutz,” she said. Who was I to argue?

The 841 Egged bus from the chaotic Tel Aviv Central Bus Station took me to Kiryat Shmona in Northern Galilee, and then a local bus to the kibbutz gates.

When I saw my spartan room, 15 square feet and already occupied by two lads from Birmingham and one from West Yorkshire, I seriously questioned my sanity.