Animal Assisted Therapy




Entrance Fee (in Israeli Shekels) 2024
  • Adult
    71 ILS
  • Child (age 3 - 18)
    54 ILS
  • Police officer, student, soldier, senior citizen
    54 ILS
  • Guest with disabilities
    35 ILS
One-Year Membership Prices
  • Child
    245 ILS
  • Adult
    330 ILS
  • Student
    245 ILS
  • Soldier, police officer, senior citizen, person with disabilities
    245 ILS
  • Couple
    570 ILS
  • Couple + 1 child
    690 ILS
  • Couple + 2 children
    750 ILS
  • Couple + 3
    810 ILS
  • Couple + 4
    860 ILS
  • Couple + 5
    915 ILS
  • Couple + 6 or more children
    970 ILS
Membership Prices for Single-Parent Families (per year)
  • Parent + one child
    515 ILS
  • Parent + 2 children
    665 ILS
  • Parent + 3
    735 ILS
  • Parent + 4
    755 ILS
  • Parent + 5
    795 ILS
  • Parent + 6 or more children
    830 ILS
Group admission rates
Group rates are for 25 or more people from institutions and organizations and with advance reservations
  • Each adult (above age 18)
    56 ILS
  • Each child (age 3 - 18)
    45 ILS
  • Soldier, senior citizen
    45 ILS
  • Guests with disabilities
    30 ILS

The Biblical Zoo’s center for animal-assisted therapy for children was established with the support of the Lotte Salzberger Foundation. The field of animal-assisted therapy is innovative, and at the zoo’s project, over 500 children with special needs, children and adults with disabilities, and children and youth at-risk participate. Participants visit the zoo to enjoy weekly encounters with animals and a zoo professional who is specially trained for the program.

The weekly gatherings offer an up close and personal encounter with social and friendly animals, creating an ongoing relationship with them and a sense of connection and acceptance for the participants. They can touch and pet the animals, they learn how to care for the animals, to feed them, and to clean their enclosures. The need for physical touch and connection is a basic human need. The knowledge that the animal is awaiting their visit provides the motivation needed for the work to acquire individual and group skills. Building a relationship with an animal requires, among other things, perseverance, concentration, dealing with frustrations, and self-confidence, as well as sensitivity skills, which are built through the relationship-building process. The animals are non-judgmental and are ready for the connection, which continues to grow throughout the year.

The participants enjoy a special experience, which offers them a sense of pride and joy. The experiences with the animals remain with the participants well beyond their time at the zoo. Participants internalize the sense of success, concern, and empathy, and the ability to provide the warmth and support which they received from the animals and apply them within their personal lives.

For more information, please contact VeeVee Merlin Knopp, the Zoo’s Animal-assisted Therapy Coordinator, at:

Tel: 050-4043062

Email: veeveemk@gmail.com

Photo: VeeVee Merlin Knopp