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Women for Israel's Tomorrow, popularly known as Women in Green (Hebrew: נשים בירוק), is an Israeli nationalist nonprofit organization and grassroots movement founded in 1993 by Ruth Matar and Michael Matar in response to the Oslo Accords. It is dedicated to promoting Israeli settlement and Jewish sovereignty over Judea, Samaria (West Bank), and previously Gaza, opposing the two-state solution, territorial concessions from the 1967 Six-Day War, and the Oslo Accords. Members, including women and men from secular and religious backgrounds, wear green hats symbolizing resistance to returning to the pre-1967 Green Line. The group is not affiliated with any political party. From 1993-2005, it was led by Ruth and daughter Nadia Matar, focusing on vigils, protests, and a weekly radio program on Arutz 7. In 2005, after opposition to the Gaza disengagement and founders' health issues, Yehudit Katsover joined as co-leader with Nadia Matar. It launched the Sovereignty Campaign in 2011, evolving into the Sovereignty Movement, advocating for Israeli annexation of Judea and Samaria. Activities include organizing the Annual Walk around the Walls of Jerusalem's Old City on Tisha B'Av eve, establishing the Oz veGaon Nature Reserve (2014) in memory of murdered teens Eyal Yifrach, Gilad Shaar, and Naftali Frenkel near Gush Etzion, land reclamation efforts (e.g., Shdema, Adurayim), tree planting, road access fights (e.g., Walaja bypass), protests, vigils, educational events, and U.S. chapters for fundraising via the Hebron Fund and advocacy. Sovereignty Movement initiatives involve billboards, conferences, Sovereignty Journal distribution, youth seminars, and Knesset lobbying. Controversies include a 2003 proposal for compensated 'transfer' of Arabs from Judea/Samaria with international aid, a 2004 comparison of Gaza disengagement officials to Judenrat (condemned by Yad Vashem), and a 2005 U.S. ad warning of Arab threats. It is currently co-chaired by Nadia Matar and Yehudit Katsover.