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The Mamtak Program

Since 2021, more than 500 students have participated in Mamtak’s diverse  programming. Mamtak is experiencing a continuous  growth trend of approximately 10% per year. Mamtak is co-funded by Mifal HaPais and additional entities, including The Lowy Foundation. In this program, each  student performs 140 hours of community service in  one of dozens of social projects. 

Among all of the arts-related schools in Israel, Rimon takes pride in providing the most extensive community  contribution. Over the years, the institution has collaborated with more than 50 NGOs and public bodies in Israel. To date, Mamtak scholarship students have served more than 70,000 hours bringing music enrichment to the community.  Music transcends all languages and disabilities and  can impact every individual. Among the communities  where the students are active: people with intellectual developmental disabilities, patients in various hospital  wards, people on the autism spectrum, refugee children,  individuals with mental health and post-trauma  challenges, the elderly, at-risk children and youth,  medical staff, and more.

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Music and Mental Health  

Rimon’s Songwriting Workshop for Nova Festival Survivors 

Rimon’s commitment to strengthening the community can be felt through its ongoing initiatives. In addition to the many music enrichment programs we deliver in various academic, medical/disability services, eldercare, and therapeutic environments, we also mobilize around current events.  Recently, we created a songwriting workshop for survivors of the Nova Festival massacre. Through music and song, they could pour out their feelings and begin to heal.  The months-long program concluded with a culminating concert (listen here in Hebrew)Presidential First Lady Michal Herzog attended and delivered a moving speech. She also spent private time with the Nova participants.

Among the Activities Within the Mamtak Framework

Beit Achim L’Chaim (Brothers for Life)

Beit Achim L’Chaim Association in Kfar Truman aims, as a supportive social framework, to promote and assist IDF soldiers who were injured in operational activity while protecting the homeland and its citizens, to lead in the process of their rehabilitation, and help them fulfill their personal and employment aspirations.  Together, with Rimon scholarships, we share musical enrichment to support therapeutic processes in various ways: Expanding the emotional connection  and expression, creating interpersonal and inner world  connections on the experiential level, and developing  “anchors” that ground and support participants.  

 

Participants of Achim L’Chaim convene monthly with Rimon students to write songs together. The program is directed by Ari Gorali, alongside Rimon Founders Harry Lipschitz and Yehuda Eder (who is also Rimon’s President). They also assist in the composition process.  Meetings alternate between Beit Achim Le’Chaim headquarters and Rimon’s main campus in Ramat HaSharon. Towards the end of the most recent workshop, the resulting songs were recorded as an album at Ha-Ogen Studio, engineered by Beit Achim L’Chaim member Shlomi Gvili. This year, the Israeli radio station Galei Zahal agreed to present the album as a special broadcast. 

Healing through Music

Rimon’s Songwriting Workshop for Nova Festival Survivors 

Rimon’s commitment to strengthening the community can be felt through its ongoing initiatives. In addition to the many music enrichment programs we deliver in various academic, medical/disability services, eldercare, and therapeutic environments, we also mobilize around current events.  Recently, we created a songwriting workshop for survivors of the Nova Festival massacre. Through music and song, they could pour out their feelings and begin to heal.  The months-long program concluded with a culminating concert (listen here in Hebrew)Presidential First Lady Michal Herzog attended and delivered a moving speech. She also spent private time with the Nova participants.

Music and Mental Health  

Rimon also brings the Mamtak program to several facilities focused on mental health, including Lev Hasharon Mental Health Center (Pardesiya), Yehuda Abarbanel Mental Health Medical Center (Bat Yam),  and Mazra Mental Health Center (Akko/Acre). Before the students’ arrival at the mental health centers, they undergo a special training course led by a certified music therapist specialising in trauma. The course qualifies the students to enter closed wards in mental health  centers and perform for the patients. In addition, the students lead a songwriting and composing workshop alongside the ward’s patients. The project contributes to the emotional expression of mental health patients, as many struggle to express their feelings in words. Music  often offers an additional channel for self-expression.  Writing and creating music is a new and significant emotional outlet for the patients. The project culminates at the end of each year with a live performance featuring  selected original songs that were written. The patients and students perform side by side, with the spotlight on the inner world of the patients, reflected in the songs,  allowing the audience (mostly families) to discover new  and moving sides of their loved ones.

Healing through Music

The Hospitals Project takes place in several main medical  centers across the country: The Davidoff Center for the  Treatment and Research of Cancer at Beilinson Hospital  – Rabin Medical Center (Petach Tikva); Sheba Medical  Center Tel Hashomer (Ramat Gan); Hadassah Medical  Center (Jerusalem); and Meir Medical Center (Kfar Saba).  Students visit the hospitals’ various departments once  a week to perform, easing the waiting time for patients,  singing to them during treatments, and uplifting their  spirits. Music is a powerful tool that can be creatively and  effectively used to ease and strengthen patients’ physical and mental well-being. It is evident that the stress and  anxiety of those waiting for treatment decrease when  music is in the background. They choose songs they love,  and their mood improves. This year, due to the war in Israel, students also perform in rehabilitation  departments where injured soldiers are hospitalized.  

The Hospitals Project

The Hospitals Project takes place in several main medical centers across the country: The Davidoff Center for the Treatment and Research of Cancer at Beilinson Hospital – Rabin Medical Center (Petach Tikva); Sheba Medical Center Tel Hashomer (Ramat Gan); Hadassah Medical Center (Jerusalem); and Meir Medical Center (Kfar Saba). Students visit the hospitals’ various departments once a week to perform, easing the waiting time for patients, singing to them during treatments, and uplifting their spirits. Music is a powerful tool that can be creatively and effectively used to ease and strengthen patients’ physical and mental well-being. It is evident that the stress and anxiety of those waiting for treatment decrease when music is in the background. They choose songs they love, and their mood improves. This year, due to the war in Israel, students also perform in rehabilitation departments where injured soldiers are hospitalized.

Beit Achim L’Chaim
(Brothers for Life)

Beit Achim L’Chaim Association in Kfar Truman aims, as a supportive social framework, to promote and assist IDF soldiers who were injured in operational activity while protecting the homeland and its citizens, to lead in the process of their rehabilitation, and help them fulfill their personal and employment aspirations. Together, with Rimon scholarships, we share musical enrichment to support therapeutic processes in various ways: Expanding the emotional connection and expression, creating interpersonal and inner world connections on the experiential level, and developing “anchors” that ground and support participants. Participants of Achim L’Chaim convene monthly with Rimon students to write songs together. The program is directed by Ari Gorli, alongside Rimon Founders Harry Lipschitz and Yehuda Eder (who is also Rimon’s President). They also assist in the composition process. Meetings alternate between Beit Achim Le’Chaim headquarters and Rimon’s main campus in Ramat HaSharon. Towards the end of the most recent workshop, the resulting songs were recorded as an album at Ha-Ogen Studio, engineered by Beit Achim L’Chaim member Shlomi Gvili. This year, the Israeli radio station Galei Zahal agreed to present the album as a special broadcast.

Healing through Music: Rimon’s Songwriting Workshop for Nova Festival Survivors 

Rimon’s commitment to strengthening the community can be felt through its ongoing initiatives. In addition to the many music enrichment programs we deliver in various academic, medical/disability services, eldercare, and therapeutic environments, we also mobilize around current events. Recently, we created a songwriting workshop for survivors of the Nova Festival massacre. Through music and song, they could pour out their feelings and begin to heal. The months-long program concluded with a culminating concert (listen here in Hebrew). Presidential First Lady Michal Herzog attended and delivered a moving speech. She also spent private time with the Nova participants.

RockRimon Student Competition - Founded 2000

RockRimon allows students to showcase their developed skills in songwriting, composing, and performing original songs within the framework of a rock band. Consisting of three competition rounds, under faculty guidance, this competition is open to all Rimon students form bands and perform their original material. Six bands perform in the finals at a public live music venue in front of an audience and a panel of judges from the Israeli music industry. The band who takes first place wins a prize package that includes recording hours and production consultation. Dozens of (now professional) musicians who studied at Rimon have participated. Bands that became well-known in Israel were formed through this competition, such as: Kol HaChatichim Etzli (Aya Zahavi Feiglin), Kalbei Haruach (Hila Ruach), Jane Bordeaux, Yaldei Hasadeh, and the first songs of singer-songwriters like Keren Peles, Eric Berman, Aya Korem, and many others were performed. Emesh was chosen as the 2024 RockRimon winner – a group of three students who are also songwriters, composers, musicians, and music producers. The band serves as a model for young female musicians who want to specialize in all areas of music, including those still considered predominantly male.

The EP Production Practicum

For the past three years since its inception, 90 third-year students have participated in Rimon’s EP culminating production project. Each student produces 4-6 original songs which are presented publicly at the end of the academic year. This lab provides students with an inherent support system as a springboard to their musical careers including mentoring, workshops led by top musicians in the Israeli industry (Noga Erez, Rami Kleinstein, and Ehud Banai, for example), and a platform for professional development. This program serves as a hands-on academic practicum that mimics a real world experience. The project creates a framework for the student that simulates the reality in the music industry and gives them leverage for success.Students conclude the practicum with a commercially viable recorded project in hand, which can be used to augment their professional dossier. This aims to help better position them for potential career success.

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