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‘Mutual responsibility is very Jewish’: How the Kibbutz Movement is stepping up to help communities hit by Iran’s attacks

The group established a national emergency volunteer headquarters to help families displaced by the Islamic Republic’s missile campaign

June 26, 2025 11:40
photo credit Kibbutz Movement Rehabilitation Fund (8).jpeg
Volunteers from across Israel's kibbutzim are dedicating their time to help re-house those displaced by Iran's missile attacks. (Photo courtesy of the Kibbutz Movement Rehabilitation Fund)
5 min read

Neri Shotan’s grandparents helped to established Kibbutz Shefayim in 1927. While both of their families died during the Holocaust, the pair were part of a group of Polish immigrants who first set up the community in HaSharon, along the mediterranean coast.

Nine months ago, Shotan welcomed the fourth generation of his family at the kibbutz. He named his son Telem, meaning “plough line”, inspired by the famous phrase by the early Zionist Russian activist Joseph Trumpeldor: “Where the Jewish plough concludes its last furrow, that is where the border will be set.”

For Shotan, the heart of the kibbutz mentality is taking care of your fellow citizen. One of the first things the 42-year-old mentions in our interview is that, if one was to switch off all the lights in Israel and left only the kibbutzim illuminated, you would see the country’s borders mapped out – and that is no coincidence.

“A hundred out of 259 kibbutzim are located on the borders. The movement was – and still is – designed as a way of keeping borders. Not through the army, but through agriculture,” he said. Showing up for Israel at its time of crisis is the lifeblood of the secular movement, he added.

Topics:

Iran

Israel