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Middle East Entrepreneurs of Tomorrow (MEET), formerly known as Middle East Education Through Technology, is a program bringing together Palestinian and Israeli young leaders through technology and entrepreneurship. Working in partnership with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) since 2004, MEET's goal is to educate and empower the next generation of Israeli and Palestinian leaders to take action towards positive social and political change in the Middle East.
Formation | 2004 |
---|---|
Founder | Anat Binur, Yaron Binur, Assaf Harlap, Abeer Hazboun, Sandra Ashhab |
Founded at | Israel |
Purpose | Empowering Israeli and Palestinian youth through technology and entrepreneurship |
Location |
|
Affiliations | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) |
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As of 2022, over 500 alumni have graduated from the three-year program.[1]
Structure
editMEET teaches computer science, entrepreneurship, and leadership to excelling high school students (ages 15-17) over three years. The program comprises three consecutive summers with volunteer instructors from MIT and weekly program sessions in the two intervening years at the MEET hubs in Jerusalem and Nazareth, taught by MEET alumni. Run entirely in English, the program provides MEET's 200 high school students with the skills, values, and network to become "agents of change" in the region. Graduates of the program stay connected through the Alumni Program and continue developing social and business projects at the MEET Venture Lab in Jerusalem, in partnership with Google.
The students are excelling youth from the West Bank, Jerusalem (East and West), and the Nazareth area. Students are evenly distributed across gender and nationality and gain a deeper understanding of each other and the conflict through working on pragmatic projects with real-world impact.[citation needed]
The entire program is conducted in English. Neither students nor instructors pay to participate.
History
editMEET was founded in 2004 by a group of young Israeli and Palestinian students and professionals. At the start, it was three friends: Anat Binur, a graduate student in political science at MIT; her brother, Yaron Binur; and Assaf Harlap, who came up with the idea. Soon after, Palestinian friends Abeer Hazboun and Sandra Ashhab joined the team.[2]
Purpose
editThe program is designed to empower Israeli and Palestinian youth through education and technology. By connecting students through joint interests and opportunities to learn about each other, the program tries to empower young people.[2]
MEET is grounded in the vision of developing common ground between Israeli and Palestinian youth, providing a safe forum for them to meet and discover one another's cultures and explore similarities and differences.
MEET is affiliated with MIT.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Our Programs". www.meet.org. Retrieved 2022-11-27.
- ^ a b "Unique Middle East program rooted at MIT bears fruit".
- ^ "Technology project crosses Jerusalem's divide". Financial Times. 1 October 2006.