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Yaron
Meishar - the man behind "Rokdim":
I took my first steps in
folk dancing with the children of kibbutz Shamir when I was a fourth grader. We
used to learn a new dance every week. Each boy received a "private lesson"
from a girl in the class and then we all got together and danced all the dances
we had learned. The girls of the senior classes taught the dances to the girls
of the junior classes and thus were the
dances passed on from generation to generation. "Ha’Roa’a Ha’Ktana"
was the most difficult dance for us to learn. If you managed to dance it you
were considered a good dancer.
As early as those days at school I loved
the connection between songs and steps and the social integration the circle
brought about. In high school I already took courses for folk dance instructors
run by the youth movement "Ha’Shomer Ha’Tzaeir" and also conducted my
own dance sessions for students.
The regional dance group of the Upper Galilee at kibbutz Amir was then run by a young man, Gershon
Federman, whom I remember affectionately to this day and to whom I owe my great
love of international folk dances that were very popular in those days. When I
was in the eleventh grade I joined the courses of the kibbutz movement that
were conducted regularly at Giva’t Haviva where Maya Miron used to teach new
and old international and Israeli folk dances.
When I finished school I volunteered to
serve one year at the Ha’Shomer Ha’Tzair movement in Hulon and also continued
to learn and teach folk dances.
I did my military service as an officer at
regiment 50 (parachuted Nahal), and even then continued to dance. After I
completed my military service I began to dance regularly with the dance group
of Kiriat Shmona and with the regional group of the Upper Galilee at Kibbutz Gonen conducted by Sefi Aviv. I was also
his regular substitute. At the same time, I studied at the Ulpan for dance
teachers at Kiriat Shmone, which was conducted by Sa’adia Amishai and Tamar
Eligor.
In 1976 I finished the Ulpan with honors
and started teaching in the Kibbutzim of the area. In 1979 I left the kibbutz
and settled in Tel Aviv. There I began a preparatory course in physics and
mathematics at the university of Tel Aviv. For a living I taught folk dances in schools and
community centers run by the municipality of Tel Aviv.
During those years I danced with the group
of Givat Shmuel conducted by Shalom Amar, the late. After the preparatory
course at the university I pursued my studies at the Kibbutzim Seminar and in
85 graduated as a qualified teacher in "physical education". During
that time I founded the "Rokdim" company, which was then called "The
center for folk dance recording".
I was very "determined" to
establish a center that would supply the necessary records in a professional
and lawful way. Slowly but surely with great perseverance I succeeded in making
the managers of the recording companies aware of the importance of the matter.
I signed on special contracts with recording companies and with ACUM (the
Israeli society for authors and composers). I bought professional recording
equipment and specialized in editing. A booklet with instructions as to the
steps of the dances was attached to each record in the catalogue. Thus were
hundreds of dances recorded and registered in a uniform and professional way.
In 1987 we produced the first issue of "Meida-Am"
and thousands of copies were distributed among the dancers of the various
dancing groups.
The purpose was to inform our readers about
the locations of the various group dances and the names of the teachers. In
1988 the name of the magazine was changed to "Rokdim" and distributed
in newsstands. Later, I established the "Rokdim Club" and its members
enjoy discounts on purchases made in our stores. The magazines are now sent
directly to the homes of the readers.
Hundreds of dancers in Israel and abroad are members of the club. They enjoy our
discounts, the colorful and manifold magazines, and the up to date information
they receive. In 1992 I opened the store "Rokdim" in Tel Aviv, Ha’Arbaa street number 10. My aim was to reach out to a larger number
of people and to enable each dancer and teacher to buy whatever he needed in
one place.
In
1994 I started producing videocassettes. Step by step and very efficiently we
photographed over 1500 dances, in more than a hundred different videocassettes
(by now they have all been converted to DVDs), taught by the best teachers and
produced in professional studios. The
cassettes and the DVDs of "Rokdim" are now distributed all over the
world and evoke a lot of praise and appreciation.
Since 1999 I have constantly been in
conflict with the record companies in Israel regarding the legal distribution of the songs to the
dances. In 2004, after a long struggle, I finally got the approval and our
products are now officially legal.
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