About 20% of Israel's adult population are
volunteers, active in 278 public voluntary bodies which complement
health and social services. These organizations range from hospital and
emergency care auxiliaries to the Civil Guard and volunteer rescue
units; groups which address prevailing social problems such as
substance, spouse, and child abuse, road safety, and environmental
conservation; and others which concentrate their efforts on the status
of women, immigrants' and consumers' rights, and soldiers' welfare.
Various programs offer volunteers from abroad a chance to serve in
Israel, usually on a short-term basis. Many come each summer to take
part in archeological excavations, some work in kibbutzim, while others
help in social services. Some young German volunteers view taking care
of the elderly and sick in Israel as atonement for the war crimes of the
Nazi regime against the Jewish people.
The composition of the contemporary volunteer force differs from that
of previous generations. Since a majority of Israeli women work, they
do not have much free time to devote to volunteering, but longevity
provides many retirees, both men and women, with time to help out in
such areas as emergency medical assistance (Magen David Adom) or
environmental organizations. University students commonly volunteer to
tutor disadvantaged children and teenagers (for which they may receive a
partial stipend). The voluntary effort in Israel is coordinated by the
National Council for Voluntarism in Israel, a public, non-profit
organization, funded by the Prime Minister's Office and affiliated with
international volunteer agencies.
Campaigns by voluntary groups, including occasional national
telethons to collect funds for causes, are a regular and accepted
feature of Israeli life.