The Dizengoff Family
Support Israel’s Most Vulnerable Children
Give them the childhood they deserve.

For Ariel, Yehuda, and Itamar Dizengoff, life revolved around managing their degenerative muscle disease—doctor visits, therapies, and the search for treatments. They came to Jordan River Village looking for a break. Instead, they found freedom, joy, and belonging.
At JRV, they weren’t patients—they were campers. They painted, laughed, zipped through the air, and, for a while, forgot about their illness. The Village wasn’t just a place to rest; it was a place to thrive.
For Ariel, it was life-changing. Watching the Gap Year volunteers, he saw a future for himself beyond his diagnosis. Now, he’s back—not as a camper, but as a leader.
The brothers came for a break. They left with confidence, connection, and a renewed sense of possibility. And with Ariel now helping others experience the same, their story is still being written.