The organization, associated with the Kahane Chai and Kach movements, held six four-day sessions for teenaged boys and one for girls, based in Hevron and the Shomron.

The campers, who hailed from all over Israel, including the north, Haifa, Tel Aviv, Be'er Sheva, Yesha, and elsewhere, were treated to activities and sessions dealing with the importance of the Land of Israel, building up outposts, how to tend sheep, and even how to behave during a Shabak (General Security Service) interrogation. Among the lecturers were Rabbi Yehuda Kreuzer, Noam Federman, and Itamar Ben-Gvir. Some of the groups took part in public protests, such as after the recent Jerusalem bus bombing. They were also taken to visit Hilltop 26 outside Kiryat Arba, where Nati Ozeri was murdered by terrorists and from where his family was brutally uprooted by the police some months later.

Federman told Arutz-7 that the camps were more ideological and had a deeper message than those run by other organizations in Israel. Ben-Gvir told Haaretz that it was hoped the 170 campers would set up their own hilltop outposts. "We have internalized the fact that the central struggle against the Muslim Palestinians now is the fight over the land and the hills, and we are acting accordingly," he said.