Galim Dance Group


The "Galim Dance Group" * is an international cultural and youth ambassador for Israel, and a frequent performer in communities throughout its homeland for enthusiastic audiences of all ages.


Established in 1970 under the auspices of the Jordan Valley Regional Council and directed since its inception by its founder, Dorit Porat, the Galim Dance Group is comprised of young dancers between the ages of 13 and 18, who reside in communities and villages in the Jordan Valley, the scenic area surrounding the southern shore of the Sea of Galilee.


The Group’s international accomplishments include participation in the World Gymnaestrada Festivals in Switzerland, Germany, Denmark, the Netherlands and Portugal. This event, held every four years in a different country, brings together more than 20,000 people from over 50 countries and cultures, to showcase outstanding talents in dance, aerobics, and rhythmic and artistic gymnastics. The Israeli Foreign Ministry has enthusiastically endorsed the Galim Dance Group, sponsoring its performances in Hungary (for Israeli Independence Day), Brazil (Hanukkah Festival) and Cyprus (Sukkot holiday celebrations) as well as two performances at the Osaka Festival for an audience that included the Emperor of Japan.


The original dances choreographed for the Galim Dance Group draw their inspiration from Israel’s multicultural traditions and ethnic influences, as well as nature and personal experience. The Group’s Founder and Artistic Director, Dorit Porat, is a graduate of the Wingate Institute and Oranim College in Israel, where she studied dance and gymnastics, and was a member of the Israeli National Gymnastic Team, representing the State in world competitions. Since 1970 she has devoted her professional life to youth, working with hundreds of talented teens in the arts of movement and dance. In the year 2000, she was appointed Director of the Jordan Valley Dance School, where she continues her activities today.

* Pronounced ‘gal-EEM’, the name of the Group is the Hebrew word for “waves”.

Friday, May 22, 2009

From the Jewish Week

Dancing Around The Issues

Dancers from the Galim Dance Group, on their debut trip to the United States in Westchester, where they were serving as unofficial cultural ambassadors from Israel.

Dancers from the Galim Dance Group, on their debut trip to the United States in Westchester, where they were serving as unofficial cultural ambassadors from Israel.

by Merri Rosenberg
Special To The Jewish Week

In bare feet, with precise footwork and graceful gesture, the 14 girls on stage confidently interpreted several Israeli songs, ranging from upbeat and up-tempo klezmer-inflected tunes to quieter, more somber pieces.
Never mind that the young dancers, age 13-17, had just flown in that morning from Florida, where they had spent a few days performing at Miami synagogues and day schools. Their performance here was spirited and lively, and had the audience of third and fourth graders at the culturally diverse William B. Ward elementary school in New Rochelle swaying in their seats to the infectious rhythms. The young students gazed raptly at the dancers in their colorful costumes, gasping in admiration as some dancers performed flips and other acrobatic moves.

The visit of the Galim Dance Group to the school here was part of a two-week tour for the group, designed to coincide with local observances of Yom HaShoah, Yom HaZikaron and Yom Ha’Atzmaut. Besides Ward, the group also performed at Beth El Synagogue in New Rochelle, the Solomon Schechter School in White Plains, the Kinneret Day School in Riverdale, the Abraham Joshua Heschel School in Manhattan and various schools and synagogues in New Jersey.

“This is their debut trip to the United States,” said Miri Polachek, who founded the group Westchester Israelis a few years ago to bring together Israeli and Hebrew-speaking families for social, cultural and educational programs. “They’re coming for a cultural exchange, as ambassadors of Israel.”
And the Ward school was receptive to that message, since part of its educational mission is celebrating the cultural diversity of its school community.

“This is a jump-start to May, when we celebrate the culture of Israel and Jewish-American culture,” said Kenneth Regan, principal of Ward school. “We’re celebrating the art of Israel, and today it’s dance.”
Polachek, whose older son attends Ward, introduced each piece to the audience and kept the focus on the Israeli connection.

“We’re very excited to share a little bit of Israel culture with you,” she said. “It’s a very, very tiny country and a very beautiful one, with deserts and mountains and the sea.”

Local families hosted the dancers, who are high school students from Israel’s Jordan Valley. Founded in 1970, the Galim Dance Group focuses on choreographing and performing original dances that reflect Israel’s multicultural traditions and ethnic groups.

The Israeli population in Westchester, and neighboring Riverdale, has increased in recent years, said Polachek. “There is a large Israeli presence in Westchester, but families are spread out throughout the county, unlike communities like Tenafly [in New Jersey] or Great Neck [on Long Island] where they are much more concentrated in one town,” she said in an e-mail. A few years ago, Polachek launched a mailing list targeting Israelis in Westchester, and there is now a Yahoo listserv group for this community.
Besides Polachek’s efforts with the Westchester Israelis group, later this fall there will be an “Israeli Connections Club” hosted by the JCC in Scarsdale.

Such connections are also emphasized at Riverdale’s Kinneret Day School, said Principal Asher Abramovitz. “My Judaic and Hebrew studies staff are Israeli,” he said. “They bring in Israeli spirit and language into the school. We have an emphasis on Hebrew, and there’s a wonderful ability on the part of the children to speak Hebrew like native Israelis. We are very much involved in bringing Israel to the school.”

At Kinneret, the Galim Dance Group was one of many Israeli groups that visit the school throughout the year, and it received a warm welcome. “The moment they walked in, the entire school sang along,” said Abramovitz. “The entire school got up and danced with them. You could imagine you were in a kibbutz in Israel.”

And that was definitely part of Galim’s mission during this trip.

“This is about a message of peace,” said Galim’s founder and artistic director, Dorit Porat. “This is the most important subject for Israel, which struggles to make peace with its neighbors. We’re bringing Israeli culture, with beautiful music and dancing, to show the positive side of Israel.”

Friday, May 1, 2009

From Manhattan

Hello All!
We had some great shows in Manhattan
one more performance and we heading back
home to Israel
here some pic's from the performance at BETH-EL school

Dorit

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Manhatten here we come!

Four more days to go!
still in the Big Apple
wow - we love the USA!
next performance on this locations and schedule:

Thursday, April 30

Heschel – New York City (Manhattan) – Day Performance

http://www.heschel.org

11:30 - 12:00 - short performance for Nursery - 1st Grade

12:45- 1:30 - performance for grades 2-5

Friday – May 1st

Trip in Manhatten

Kabbalat Shabbat in Metro West

Saturday, may 2nd

Day off with the Families

Sunday, May 3rd

14:00 – going by bus to Bayonne

Performance AFTERNOON 17:00 NJ

JCC of Bayonne - 1050 Kennedy Boulevard
Bayonne, NJ

http://jccbayonne.com/


Sunday, April 26, 2009

First picture from the US
After shopping in one of the biggest malls in Florida… that the reason for the big smile…