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Israeli gardeners with disabilities make strawberries acessible to all

ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran’s gardening team has cultivated an impressive crop of organic and insect-free fruit, making beloved berries accessible to the ultra-Orthodox community.

ADI-Negev
ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran’s inclusive gardening team harvests a crop of organic and insect-free strawberries on the annual International Day of Persons with Disabilities, Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2024. Credit: ADI.

In a feat of ingenuity and resilience, ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran’s inclusive gardening team has cultivated an impressive crop of organic and insect-free strawberries, highlighting their agricultural acumen and making the beloved berries accessible to the ultra-Orthodox community.

Working with Chasalat—the largest insect-free produce company in Israel—the rehabilitation village’s team of nearly 40 gardeners with disabilities and their supervisors created the ideal pest-free growing environment and made the Negev bloom with botanical fruits. Fittingly, the first strawberry harvest took place on Dec. 3, recognized annually as International Day of Persons with Disabilities.

“It was such an exciting challenge, and we are the perfect team to tackle it. If any agricultural team would be sensitive to the needs or limitations of others, it’s our ADI Negev gardeners,” said Yosef Morano, an ADI rehabilitation patient turned gardener, who oversees the organic farm’s special projects.

“Strawberries are so difficult to rid of pests because the mites that infest them are tiny and look exactly like the seeds on the berries themselves, so the ultra-Orthodox community tends to avoid them entirely,” he said. “Our challenge was to grow pristinely clean berries that would satisfy this important population, and we succeeded in just two months!”

To prepare for the project, the gardeners built two brand-new greenhouses, secured them with special netting and built elevated growing surfaces. While no pesticides were used, the gardeners employed a swarm of bumblebees for enhanced pollination, higher yield, and the improvement of overall fruit quality and flavor.

ADI-Negev
ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran’s inclusive gardening team harvests a crop of organic and insect-free strawberries on the annual International Day of Persons with Disabilities, Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2024. Credit: ADI.

“We’ve been partnering with Chasalat for more than two years, growing an array of spices, including sage, rosemary, thyme and oregano, among others,” added Morano. “The company was so impressed with our work that they enlisted us to grow their line of pest-free strawberries. With this newest success, we can only hope that this wonderful partnership will continue to blossom.”

ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran’s ‘Gardeners Without Borders’ program, which is heavily supported by Jewish National Fund-USA, provides dozens of individuals with disabilities who were deemed unemployable by others with a framework for inclusion, rehabilitation, socialization, skill-building, meaningful work and gainful employment. For many, it represents their very first paychecks. For all, it constitutes an opportunity to prove and empower themselves.

“While some were born with disabilities, others were touched by disability later in life, and these incredible individuals work together to grow dozens of different varieties of fruits and vegetables at our organic farm, keep our entire 40-acre rehabilitation village lush and green, and prove that disability doesn’t mean inability,” said Elie Klein, ADI’s North America director of advancement.

“This sensational strawberry harvest is a testament to their hard work and exceptional skill, but it also sends a different kind of message: Fourteen months on, we’re not just surviving but thriving,” noted Klein, referring to Israel’s battles with Hamas in the south and Hezbollah up north. “By promoting acceptance and providing the tools for personal advancement, we are renewing hope and rebuilding the Negev one game-changing project at a time.”

By reimagining rehabilitation, ADI is advancing ability for all—empowering children, adolescents and adults with severe disabilities, in addition to pioneering cutting-edge therapeutic and recovery services for anyone touched by disability.

Since Oct. 7, 2023, ADI has provided the individualized care needed to ensure the consistent growth and long-term mental health of Israel’s most vulnerable citizens, while also healing dozens of war-wounded soldiers in the Israel Defense Forces and civilians from the country’s hardest-hit communities at ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran’s Kaylie Rehabilitation Medical Center—the first and ONLY rehabilitation hospital in Israel’s south.

To learn more about ADI and to donate, visit: adi-israel.org.

ADI-Negev
ADI Negev-Nahalat Eran’s inclusive gardening team harvests a crop of organic and insect-free strawberries on the annual International Day of Persons with Disabilities, Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2024. Credit: ADI.

About & contact the publisher
ADI (pronounced <em>ah-dee</em>) is the Hebrew word for a “radiant and multifaceted jewel,” a name that reflects our expansive vision and broad scope of activities, including disability care, rehabilitation, research, employment, education, community services and <em>tikkun olam</em>. It also speaks to the importance of our mission to care for the most precious members of our society: those who cannot care for themselves. Understanding that all individuals deserve the best available care and every opportunity to reach their greatest potential, ADI provides comprehensive rehabilitative solutions for children, adolescents and adults with severe disabilities and complex medical conditions, as well as pioneers cutting-edge therapeutic and recovery services for anyone touched by disability, all in a dignified, warm and loving atmosphere.
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