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Netzer Olami is the worldwide youth movement of the World Union for Progressive Judaism (WUPJ) and is affiliated to Arzenu (the Zionist arm of the WUPJ). "Netzer" is an acronym in Hebrew for Reform Zionist Youth (Noar Tsioni Reformi, נוער ציוני רפורמי), and Netzer Olami means 'Global Netzer'. (The word 'Progressive' is used as an umbrella term to include Reform, Liberal, Reconstructionist and other 'non-orthodox' Jewish movements - hence the 'World Union for Progressive Judaism', so a better rendition is really Progressive Zionist Youth, but of course the acronym wouldn't work). Today there are 16,000 members active in our different sniffim (chapters) that are located in the following places: Australia, Belarus, Brazil, Germany, Israel (Noar Telem), North America (NFTY), Panama, Russia, South Africa, Spain, France, United Kingdom (LJY-Netzer, RSY-Netzer) and Ukraine. The Netzer Olami head office is in Beit Shmuel, Jerusalem.[1]
The Netzer symbol was designed in Melbourne, Australia, by Daniel (Danny) L. Schiff.
Every year, the Netzer Veida (the decision-making and ideology forum) attracts participants from most of, if not all, the sniffim. Each snif (branch) has an equal voice and vote. The official ideology of Netzer Olami is set out in the Netzer Platform, which was last changed in 2003.
The following is a simplified version of the Netzer Platform 2003:
Arabic language, Israel, Jerusalem, Hebrew alphabet, Ethnologue
Torah, Kabbalah, Israel, Hebrew language, Mishnah
Islam, Isaac, Judaism, Christianity, David
Jerusalem, Israel, Zionism, Judaism, Land of Israel
Judaism, Jerusalem, Kabbalah, Conservative Judaism, Orthodox Judaism
Washington, DC, Israel, Music, Union for Reform Judaism, The New York Times
Aliyah, Israel Defense Forces, World War II, Revisionist Zionism, Scouting
Liberal Judaism, Netzer Olami, Lily Montagu, Claude Montefiore, Albert Friedlander
Israel, Antisemitism, Zionism, Aliyah, Religious Zionism
Netzer Olami, Amnon Netzer, Călin Peter Netzer, Ehud Netzer, Günter Netzer