OneVoice was founded by entrepreneur
Daniel Lubetzky in the spring of 2002 in the wake of the failure at the
2000 Camp David Summit and renewed violence between Israelis and Palestinians. OneVoice emerged from Lubetzky's previous venture, Peaceworks, Inc., on the principle that economic cooperation between Israelis and Palestinians would result in stronger relations. Lubetzky claimed OneVoice would be a forum for moderate Israelis and Palestinians to express themselves and their desires for peace through a negotiated two-state solution. OneVoice began as a citizen negotiations platform before embracing grassroots training and mass mobilization. Its Youth Leadership Program, established in 2004, trained Israelis and Palestinians ages 18–35 on
conflict resolution, public speaking, political knowledge, and leadership development. OneVoice Israel co-founded the first caucus in the Israeli
Knesset that supports ending the conflict via a two-state solution, and OneVoice Palestine supported the
PLO's quest for statehood at the
United Nations General Assembly through an extensive town-hall meeting program throughout the
West Bank. OneVoice initiated the establishment of the Knesset Caucus to End the Arab-Israeli conflict, which organized an historic meeting between the Knesset members and President Abbas, a visit by Palestinian legislators to the Knesset, and the February 16, 2014 visit to the
Mukataa by 300 Israeli students. In cooperation with the Palestinian and Israeli ministries of education, OneVoice launched an essay contest in classrooms throughout Israel and the West Bank. From 2,500 submissions, winning essays were chosen on their potential to inspire citizens to build a future based on two states for two peoples. OneVoice asked leading Israeli, Palestinian, and Hollywood filmmakers to select one essay as the inspiration for a 1–5 minute short film. The "Boy and Soldier]" and "Palestine International Airport" were among the winners of the contest, while "Israel & Palestine to Co-Host World Cup in 2018?" went viral. At the end of the contest, OneVoice Israel received third prize in the Effie Awards' non-profit organizations category, and the most creative and provocative essays from "Imagine 2018" were published in Hebrew and Arabic and disseminated to dozens of top Israeli and Palestinian leaders. OneVoice partnered with experts in public opinion polling from Israel, Palestine, and the international community to gauge public opinion as well as engage the public in crafting a consensus
on the issues at the core final status issues. Using the results of the poll, OneVoice launched a series of town hall meetings across Israel and Palestine, aiming to demonstrate that there was a partner on the other side despite the recent violence. ==Disbanding==