Georgetown has partnered with an organization of bereaved Israelis and Palestinian families to produce a program that fosters meaningful dialogue about the human side of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The program, Listening from the Heart, aims to equip college students, community and religious leaders, colleagues and advocates to engage in empathetic, constructive conversations about the conflict and reflect on the human stories behind it.
Since February, Georgetown leaders have worked closely with the Parents Circle Families Forum (PCFF), an organization made up of over 750 Israeli and Palestinian families who have lost an immediate family member to the conflict, and its American Friends organization, to adapt its peace education program in Israel and Palestine for North American audiences.
“Our hope is this program is going to be the leading tool for educators or community leaders to help their communities talk about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” said Shiri Ourian, executive director of the American Friends of the PCFF. “It’s about being able to engage in a triggering and sensitive subject in a way that is respectful, is empathetic and is humanizing, and also gives people living outside of Israel and Palestine the opportunity to ask themselves a question: Am I helping here?”
Georgetown first connected with PCFF in 2008, when President John J. DeGioia invited a delegation of its members to the university to work on conflict resolution and organizational capacity building. This most recent collaboration arose after Georgetown hosted a conversation earlier this year between a bereaved Israeli mother and a bereaved Palestinian brother who both lost family members in the long-standing conflict and who represented PCFF.
The organization was eager to expand the conversation model to educational, community and workplace settings, particularly in the wake of the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and the ensuing war.