EIN 52-1814447

Seeds of Peace

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
37
Year formed
1993
Most recent tax filings
2022-12-01
Description
Nonprofit inspiring young leaders from conflict regions with skills and relationships necessary for social change. Virtual programs available globally.
Total revenues
$5,459,053
2022
Total expenses
$7,546,253
2022
Total assets
$2,717,147
2022
Num. employees
37
2022

Program areas at Seeds of Peace

United states in the united states, youth had the opportunity to participate in a range of virtual program options throughout the 2021 program year. All Seeds of Peace us programs continued in virtual spaces and were made available to any youth across the us, whether they had participated in programs in the past, or were entirely new to the organization. All programs centered around the four core focus areas: dialogue, leadership, community-building, and action-taking. As the pandemic continued, Seeds of Peace adopted a new entry point for future Seeds of Peace program involvement called the core leadership program. The program offers a series of workshops, dialogues, and leadership and action-taking opportunities as part of a tight-knit cohort of young people from around the country representing different backgrounds, identity groups, and lived experiences. In the summer, youth where offered the opportunity to attend two core leadership programs virtually and the in-person Seeds of Peace camp for us participants only. In the fall and spring, Seeds of Peace offered virtual monthly roundtable with topics like understanding systems of oppression. Additional programs offered included a dialogue facilitation certification and monthly community gatherings as a time to discuss current events, find inspiration and support for action-taking initiatives and projects, and be in community with others.
Multinational in 2022, gather focused on building local hubs in east jerusalem, ramallah, and tel aviv to foster collective action and increase its impact in palestine and israel. In east jerusalem, we partnered with sinsila, a palestinian organization dedicated to educating, inspiring, and empowering local communities. In july, we ran a month-long program that included community dialogue circles, design thinking skill building sessions, and project-based action to better the lives of the people living there. This has resulted in a group of approximately 30 palestinians who have continued to meet, beyond the duration of the program, to work collectively for the sake of their neighbors and the community. In tel aviv, gather partnered with zlilim, a new artists union, to begin building its tel aviv hub. The group of 20 artists have focused on developing creative strategies to make the region more democratic, inclusive, just, and peaceful. We closed out our 202 fellowship class and began recruitment for our next cohort, focused on community organized, which officially launched in 2022. We also convened our first gather advisory council, a group of 14 past gather fellows that worked closely with the gather staff to guide the direction of our vision, strategy, and programming.south asia the kitnay duur kitnay paas (kdkp) film project translates as "so far, so close" in both hindi and urdu. This border-crossing initiative charged 42 filmmakers from pakistan and india with jointly producing works that told stories of friendship between the populations. A u.s. state department funded program allowed for eight teams to work across border virtually in creating story boards, filming and editing with completion of films set to occur in 2022. The samvaad project, funded by a u.s. state department grant, taught university educators in western india to be "interfaith dialogue facilitators" for their students and communities. The initiative culminated in a day-long conference of more than 70 educators, students, artists, religious and business leaders, and peacebuilding organizations. Seeds of Peace then synthesized the learnings in a handbook that was circulated among the 7,300+ members of its network, as well as peer interfaith organizations, and elsewhere.camp in mainein summer of 2021 Seeds of Peace offered two sessions of in person camp. Unfortunately, due to covid there were no international participants. One session, was dedicated to young people from Maine. While the other was offered to youth from new york, syracuse, and the north east corridor to boston. Youth engaged each other in dialogue across lines of difference to analyze structural and interpersonal conflict and inequalities in the us while tacking topics such as class, race, gender, power, and privilege.in each session, participants explored conflict on personal, interpersonal, and societal levels by sharing their own experiences and grappling with the differences in their respective historical narratives. The intent was not to come up with solutions or prove the validity of any one narrative. Rather it was to develop essential leadership qualities: strengthening one's voice, developing critical thinking, fostering respect and empathy, and learning how to actively listen. All with the goal of deepening participants' sense of responsibility to lead change in their communities at home.
Middle east in palestine, virtual programs began to shift to in person and Seeds of Peace welcomed 25 new youth into bassmeh, the local version of the core leadership program. Meanwhile, in israel, staff conducted an array of virtual programs for Seeds and introduced a cohort of new youth into the in-person core leadership programming. In jordan, Seeds began to meet in person again and came together around the core leadership program called rise. This version of the core leadership program was broken into four modules that included titles like "stronger than all of the armies," "islands of sanity, and "from gandhi to floyd". Kids4peace continued programing in jerusalem with youth in middle school. Binational meetings were held biweekly during the school year and focused on interfaith aspects of creating more just and inclusive societies. As the pandemic evolved, meetings were both in person and virtual. Programing was stopped in may of 2021 during an intense escalation of conflict in the region, and after several support sessions came back during the next school year.
Program administration provides program administration, evaluation, and monitoring of program activities.

Who funds Seeds of Peace

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
The Robert and Jane Toll FoundationGeneral Support$800,000
National Philanthropic TrustInternational$523,700
Vanguard Charitable Endowment ProgramFor Recipient's Exempt Purpose$322,400
...and 81 more grants received totalling $3,456,425

Personnel at Seeds of Peace

NameTitleCompensation
Alina YavorovskayaChief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President Administration and Finance / Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President , Administration and Finance / Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President Finance and Admin. / Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President Finance and Administration$170,659
Joshua ThomasExecutive Director$200,000
Brian Keith McCollumDirector of Development$174,676
Benjamin JeremiahDirector , People Operations$110,600
Renee AtkinsonDirector of Program Operations$100,587
...and 11 more key personnel

Financials for Seeds of Peace

RevenuesFYE 12/2022
Total grants, contributions, etc.$4,644,321
Program services$795,308
Investment income and dividends$20,581
Tax-exempt bond proceeds$0
Royalty revenue$0
Net rental income$0
Net gain from sale of non-inventory assets$-1,157
Net income from fundraising events$0
Net income from gaming activities$0
Net income from sales of inventory$0
Miscellaneous revenues$0
Total revenues$5,459,053

Form 990s for Seeds of Peace

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2022-122024-05-01990View PDF
2022-122023-10-24990View PDF
2021-122022-11-10990View PDF
2020-122021-09-21990View PDF
2019-122021-02-22990View PDF
...and 11 more Form 990s
Data update history
August 10, 2024
Received grants
Identified 16 new grant, including a grant for $150,000 from Frieder Family Foundation
May 18, 2024
Received grants
Identified 8 new grant, including a grant for $130,682 from Charities Aid Foundation of America
January 3, 2024
Received grants
Identified 28 new grant, including a grant for $800,000 from The Robert and Jane Toll Foundation
November 27, 2023
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2022
November 27, 2023
Updated personnel
Identified 2 new personnel
Nonprofit Types
International-focused organizationsYouth service charitiesCharities
Issues
ChildrenForeign affairsWorld peace
Characteristics
Fundraising eventsOperates internationallyNational levelReceives government fundingEndowed supportProvides scholarshipsGala fundraisersTax deductible donationsAccepts online donations
General information
Address
370 Lexington Ave 1201
New York, NY 10017
Metro area
New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA
County
New York County, NY
Website URL
seedsofpeace.org/ 
Phone
(212) 573-8040
Facebook page
SeedsofPeace 
Twitter profile
@seedsofpeace 
IRS details
EIN
52-1814447
Fiscal year end
December
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1993
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
Q40: International Peace and Security
NAICS code, primary
624110: Child and Youth Services
Parent/child status
Independent
California AB-488 details
AB 488 status
May Operate or Solicit for Charitable Purposes
Charity Registration status
Current - Awaiting Reporting
FTB status revoked
Not revoked
AG Registration Number
CT0135014
FTB Entity ID
2976656
AB 488 data last updated ("as-of") date
2024-10-16
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