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'Artists 4 Israel' Turn Bomb Shelters into Works of Art

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SDEROT, Israel - When the anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement started creeping into the world of street art, one group of renowned artists decided to speak out in their own way. 

CBN News caught up with ‘Artists 4 Israel’  in the southern Israeli town of Sderot.  
 
“Artists 4 Israel started because we saw all of the anti-Israel art that was going on.  We noticed that in popular culture people were doing everything they could to demonize Israel and that they were beginning to move into the young, progressive, urban, contemporary arts category,” said Craig Dershowitz, co-founder of Artists 4 Israel.

Dershowitz said this group realized they needed to do something.

“We brought together a bunch of artists 10 years ago and started making pro-Israel art events around New York and since then it’s expanded to Israel and across the world,” Dershowitz told CBN News.
 
Since then this community of world-class artists has grown to 8,000, and they’ve brought more than 100 graffiti artists from 28 countries to encourage Israelis.  

“We’re here to help the communities in need and to turn artists into advocates for Israel,” Dershowitz said. “And no matter what I can tell them, no matter what history I can share, nothing turns them more into advocates than the people who come up and embrace them on the streets.”
  
This time, seven artists came to paint in Sderot – a city that’s been in the path of thousands of rockets over years.  Sderot is an Israeli town of some 28,000 residents.  Every home has a bomb shelter and there are another 160 portable shelters on the streets.

The artwork may look like street art found anywhere in the world but it’s painted on bomb shelters, in schools and other public places. 

Artist username on Instagram: @kasartofficial

Hungarian artist Taker One painted one bomb shelter like a giant strawberry and another with a cat-tiger combo.

“It’s a bit difficult to imagine a place where sometimes rockets fall,” Taker told CBN News.

“The bomb shelters are weird but it’s a good thing we get to make them a little colorful,” Taker said. “I think that’s the main point of it to make these buildings that have a negative connotation to have something positive to them. So it’s a positive thing.”

Juuri is a Christian who prays over her art. This is her second time painting in Israel.  Last time, she painted in a community called Shtula at the spot where Israel uncovered a Hezbollah tunnel just a month later.  Now she’s in Sderot. 

“This school is a school for special needs children.  They’ve had a rocket fall like few feet away from here and spray this building with shrapnel,” Juuri said standing in front of the outside school wall.  

“You can see some of the shrapnel damage on the wall.  So I decided to paint them a big flower just to cover over that, just something beautiful. I’m Japanese American so this is a Japanese style flower that we do in Japan and this is a peony.  It represents bravery in battle in Japan,” Juuri told CBN News. 

Artist username on Instagram: @jurriart83

“Whenever I put murals on the walls I pray that everybody inside would be protected,” she added. 
 
Hollywood graffiti artist, Eric Skotnes painted a bomb shelter outside another school. 
 
“It’s such a beautiful place and the people are so beautiful but then there’s this underlying fear that they live in all the time,” Skotnes said. 

Artist username on Instagram: @zoueh_skotnes

Speaking about his bomb shelter painting he said, “I wanted to depict King David – just being in Israel and the heavy religious aspects here and I just thought it kind of fit on this wall, him looking up to the sky in the heavens and then the design in the background is influenced by Hebrew letters.”
 
Skotnes said he sees this trip as a chance to donate his time for those in need.
 
“It fills my heart when I see the kids and how they light up when they see this kind of stuff,” he told CBN News.
 
Sderot Mayor Alon Davidi came to thank the artists and lend a hand.

“For people to come to a shelter it means they need to go to someplace to save their (lives).  They need to hide in something,” Davidi explained.  

“So many times the children and the parents look about the shelter like it’s the dark part of the story and when you come you see a cat, you see a beautiful picture on the wall it make(s) the story a little better,” Davidi told CBN News.

 Artist username on Instagram: @takeronegraffiti


“You know the story of Sderot is not a small story.  It’s a big story and you’re part of our family,” Davidi told Dershowitz and Taker.  “So thank you very much that you stay with us a few days.”
 
Dershowitz said he’d like to bring more artists to Israel. He’s aiming stop to anti-Israel sentiments in places that don’t have an opinion before they take hold.

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About The Author

Julie Stahl
Julie
Stahl

Julie Stahl is a correspondent for CBN News in the Middle East. A Hebrew speaker, she has been covering news in Israel full-time for more than 20 years. Julie’s life as a journalist has been intertwined with CBN – first as a graduate student in Journalism, then as a journalist with Middle East Television (METV) when it was owned by CBN from 1989-91, and now with the Middle East Bureau of CBN News in Jerusalem since 2009. As a correspondent for CBN News, Julie has covered Israel’s wars with Gaza, rocket attacks on Israeli communities, stories on the Jewish communities in Judea, Samaria, and the