Hoshen (organization)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Hoshen
Founded2001 (the NGO registered in 2004)
FounderYoav Arad
TypeLGBTQ organization
FocusEducation for acceptance of LGBT people
Location
  • 18 Hatsfira st. Tel Aviv
Area served
All over Israel
ProductEducation activities in high schools police army etc.
MethodVarious structured activities focused around communicating the experience of being LGBT
Key people
Mor Nahari
Employees
15
Volunteers
250
Websitehttp://www.hoshen.org
Executive Director Mor Nahari

Hoshen (Hebrew: חושן Hoshen, lit.'priestly breastplate') is an Israeli non-profit LGBT organization which is listed by the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association as the largest such organization in Israel. Hoshen is the Hebrew acronym for Education and Change.[1][2][3]

History

In 1976, Dr. Moshe Dov established

The Aguda's Lecturing Service. In 2001, the organization was reformed into Hoshen, a non-profit volunteer organization whose purpose is to fight stereotypes regarding sexual orientation and gender identity. In July 2004 it became an independent public-benefit corporation. Hoshen is officially recognized by the Educational Psychological Authority of the Ministry of Education. Hoshen offers; educational activities, theoretical lectures, workshops and seminars. The "personal story" is one of its primary educational activities, in which two LGBT individuals share their own personal story that helps the audience relate with them.[1][4]

Activities

Personal story

The organization's main educational activity is the personal story in which two LGBT individuals share their own personal story. The volunteer's stories help the audience relate to them. Their personal stories also outline the difficulties they had to face and sometimes the price they had to pay.[4]

LGBT civic studies program

After the Ministry of Education decided to reform the civic studies curriculum, the development team at Hoshen put together a program focused on high school students. The aim is to educate the students in regards to LGBT history and familiarize them with activists and the fight for civil rights equality. There are 33 meetings that make up the Civic Studies program and they are organized by Hoshen. The program also encourages mutual cooperation with other LGBT organizations; IGY (Israeli Gay Youth organization), Tehila (the Israeli “PFLAG”) and the LGBT Municipal Center in Tel Aviv.[4]

The kindergarten teachers’ program

Due to more LGBT parents, a team composed of: psychologists, education councilors, kindergarten teachers and representatives of the education system developed a program that helps kindergarten teachers deal with children that are raised in LGBT families. The program was introduced in 2012 at the Oranim Academic College and the Kibbutzim College of Education, Technology & Arts as part of their curriculum. Hoshen also cooperates with Israel's popular TV children's channels.[4]

Israeli Defense Forces

Hoshen works with diagnostics NCOs, squad leaders, mental health officers, and other activities that were asked for by the Ombudsman for soldiers in providing training courses for the IDF. Their activities in the arm services and those in the civilian sector are designed to create a more accepting environment through knowledge of LGBT history and personal acquaintance with people from the LGBT community.[4]

Academic research

There is also an Academic Research Team that conducts studies and deals with LGBT related topics. In 2010, the team examined chronological milestones in the life of LGBT people:[4]

  • The age at which LGBT individuals discover their different sexual orientation.
  • The processes they go through before coming out of the closet.
  • The period in which they decide to hide their orientation.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Hoshen". International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association.
  2. ^ "Jewish Federation of Northwest Indiana: Hoshen and the LGBT Movement in Israel". Archived from the original on 2013-04-14. Retrieved 2013-04-13.
  3. ^ "Hoshen: Education and Change". Hoshen. Archived from the original on 2015-12-06. Retrieved 2014-10-04.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Hoshen" (PDF). Israel Diplomatic Network.

External links