Seeds of Peace
During its first five years, Seeds of Peace focused effort exclusively on the Middle East. In 1998, the divided island of Cyprus became a testing ground for broader application of the coexistence model when US State Department officials asked Seeds of Peace to create a program for Cypriot youth. The Cyprus program, like all Seeds programs, is designed to build a generation of youth prepared to live the peace that adults work to negotiate.
The youths of Cyprus are doubly tasked to bridge divisions both political and physical. The Green Line, manned by UN peacekeepers, is a nearly impenetrable border dividing Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots and evidences the fear and horrors of the Cypriot war that engaged Turkey and Greece and remains a destabilizing factor in their relations and the stability of South East Europe and NATO. When the island was divided in 1974, Cypriots from both communities left their ancestral homes and joined their ethnic communities leaving behind a long history of bicommunal ties. As generations changed and memories of a bicommunal history was lost, younger generations learned stereotypes about each other based on the horrors and perceived histories of the war. To prepare the next generation to live together, Seeds of Peace provides its youth with the conflict management skills and network of friendships required for coexistence.
The Cyprus Program, which began as an experiment in 1998, is now a fixture of Seeds of Peace, annually graduating up to 100 youth from both Cypriot communities, Greece and Turkey. Eighty percent of the youth are Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots selected in a competitive process by the Cyprus Fulbright Commission.
The Cypriot program in Maine brings together youth who could not spend weeks together in divided Cyprus. At camp, they meet and come to know their counterparts rather than stereotypes. Sleeping and eating side-by-side in bunks and at meal tables and sharing as teens in camp sports and activities, they develop friendships and discover a common heritage that includes folk songs and dances and traditional foods. In daily conflict management meetings, Greek Cypriot, Turkish Cypriot and American facilitators lead the youth through the challenge of conflict management training that includes the Cypriot “Walk through History,” in which each Seed marks important dates along a timeline of Cypriot history. This exercise brings the most contentious issues dividing their communities to the fore and heated discussions ensue as each side points a finger at the other for misrepresenting historical facts and distorting the truth. Guided by the professional facilitators, the groups gradually moves beyond recriminations toward active listening, identity and stereotype explorations that lead to mutual understanding and trust. The Cyprus program includes an innovative art project each summer, led by an Artist-in-Residence or Temple Stream, a professional theater troupe. For an example of the Cyprus art project, click here.
Summer Program
The Cyprus Program, which began as an experiment in 1998, is now a fixture of Seeds of Peace, annually graduating up to 100 youth from both Cypriot communities, Greece and Turkey. Eighty percent of the youth are Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots selected in a competitive process by the Cyprus Fulbright Commission.
The Cypriot program in Maine brings together youth who could not spend weeks together in divided Cyprus. At camp, they meet and come to know their counterparts rather than stereotypes. Sleeping and eating side-by-side in bunks and at meal tables and sharing as teens in camp sports and activities, they develop friendships and discover a common heritage that includes folk songs and dances and traditional foods. In daily conflict management meetings, Greek Cypriot, Turkish Cypriot and American facilitators lead the youth through the challenge of conflict management training that includes the Cypriot “Walk through History,” in which each Seed marks important dates along a timeline of Cypriot history. This exercise brings the most contentious issues dividing their communities to the fore and heated discussions ensue as each side points a finger at the other for misrepresenting historical facts and distorting the truth. Guided by the professional facilitators, the groups gradually moves beyond recriminations toward active listening, identity and stereotype explorations that lead to mutual understanding and trust. The Cyprus program includes an innovative art project each summer, led by an Artist-in-Residence or Temple Stream, a professional theater troupe. For an example of the Cyprus art project, click here.
