Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Yom Ha’Shoah

Yesterday I had the opportunity to observe Yom Ha’Shoah in Israel. The day of remembrance started the evening before where all the members of Kibbutz Tzuba came together for a ceremony to honor the 6,000,000 Jews who perished in the Holocaust. The ceremony was lead in Hebrew therefore I did not understand what the people were saying, But seeing a community come together as a whole and support each other was very nice to see.  
In Jewish History class we learned how after the holocaust the survivors living in Israel were forced to be ashamed of what had happened to them. At the time, people would ask why they did not rebel or why did they allow themselves to go like sheep to the slater, not understanding the full story.  
Now look how far we have come. We now have ceremonies such as these that educate.  In class we talked about whether or not we should have Yom Hashoah or is it too much. I explained to the class that I believe it is important to educate because everyone needs to understand all the elements of what took place so it does not happen again. I related it to Remembrance Day. On November 11th every school in Canada remembers the World War 1 victims and soldiers.  We have a small ceremony which includes standing for a minute of silence, reciting the poem IFlanders Field. All throughout the month of November everyone wears poppies on their coat or sweaterEven though most people in my school have no direct family connection to WW1 everyone participates and comes together as a community. Each year I learn something new about the events of WW1 and the Canadian troops who risked their lives 
Today, just before 10:00 AM our class got up and went outside to the overlook of the Judean Hills where we had a great sight of the highway. At 10:00AM a siresounded over all the speakers, radios, and televisions in the country. I did not know what to expect. Unfortunately we could only see a very small portion of the highway below and could only see the few cars that stopped right away and then saw all the other disrespectful cars that continued to drive during the moment of silence. I am sure if we had a bigger view of the highway the ratio of cars stopped to those still moving would be closer.  I thought it was amazing to be in Israel over this holiday. I had always heard about the moment of silence and how the siresounds, but to be here standing in Israel, the Jewish State after just visiting Poland a month ago……wow


Thursday, April 24, 2014

אני ואתה by Arik Einstein

For this weeks blog we were assingend to look into the culture of Israel. I decided to learn about the culture through song, the song I picked is אני ואתה – You and I by Arik Einstein.


            I have always heard this song throughout my years at camp and admired it’s nice melody and rhythm. No that I am in Israel and learning the culture of Israel though my own eyes I decided to look into what this song that I have lessoned to for years is about. אני ואתה talks about how you and I will change the world. Together we will change the world and others will follow, it may be tough but it does not matter because together we will change the world. Now that I know the meaning of אני ואתה by Arilk Einstein it made it ten times more meaning full to me.




Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Passover and Yam l' Yam

Monday April 14, 2014

EIE gives the students the opportunity to experience the Passover holiday in a family setting. All of the students on EIE were divided up and sent off to either their family or a host family, arrange by EIE. I had the opportunity to spend the holiday with my mom’s cousin Shari, her husband Baruch and daughter Maa’yan.

            On Monday morning all of the EIE students loaded buses to be dropped of with their host family. I got off in Modi’in where I was greeted with open arms by Shari, Baruch, and Maa’yan. This was my first time meeting the Pilo family. We spent the day hanging out and getting to know each other, first at the mall and then back at their house where Maa’yan and I baked a cake.  After a few hours we all got dressed up and ready for the seder. We were celebrating the seder with Baruch’s family who lives in Netanya. The seder was at his cousins house but I also had the opportunity to meet his parents, his aunt and uncle, his brothers and all of the kids. In my family at home, and most families living in the diaspora, we take time in our lives to do Jewish things such as the seder, going to temple because it allows us to connect with our Judaism. But in Israel, the Israelis see it as they live in Israel, so they are Jewish and don’t need to go above and beyond.
We arrived at their house and everyone welcomed me and were very nice. At first I was very overwhelmed by the language barrier but I found it very entertaining to see how other families celebrate this holiday. The 17 of us sat down at the table and one by one each person would read a passage from the haggada. There was no order to who would read. Whoever wanted to participate could just jump in and read. The whole seder was in Hebrew but they provided me with a English haggada so I could follow along. Each person would read faster than the one before and by far this was the quickest seder I have ever been to. It was very different from my seder at home. At home I celebrate Passover at my house with 30 of us gathered around the table. Our seder is very unique. It is interactive. The haggada has many fun Dr. Seuss style poems, readings and songs. When we get to the plagues we all pull out our plague bags.
The one main difference between celebrating Passover at home and in Israel is what is on the seder plate. Before this experience I assumed the seder plate is universal, but apparently not.  At home we have a shank bone, egg, bitter herb/maror, charoset and parsley. But in Israel you have everything the same but instead of maror you have lettuce. Therefore when creating the Hillel sandwich  you create a lettuce wrap with a piece of matza and charoset wraped inside. I found it very interesting to see the differences between the seders and to see how each family includes their traditions. The coolest part about spending Passover in Israel is every year at the end of the seder you say “next year in Jerusalem” and this year I am in Jerusalem. It’s amazing to see how life plays out. A year ago I had no idea I was even considering EIE and look at me now already three months into my EIE journey.
After the seder we ate and ate. Everything was delicious. After a very fun evening we headed back to the Pilo’s house for bed.




Tuesday April 15, 2014

Today I spent the day with Shari, Baruch, and Maayan. We spent the morning relaxing. In the afternoon we went to a utopia, where we saw beautiful flowers. After the utopia we had “lupper” (lunch and supper) and relaxed the rest of the evening. Maa’yan and I walked her dog Snoopy and she showed me around Modi’in. If I were at home right now I would have been getting ready for seder number two, but in Israel they only do one seder. After a relaxing and fun day we went to bed.

Wednesday April 16, 2014

This morning we woke up early so that I could pack my bags and head to the bus pick up location. After a fun few days living in Israeli style it was time to say goodbye to Shari Baruch and Maa’yan. I had an amazing time with them and really enjoyed celebrating the holiday with Israeli traditions. I am excited to take things I learned from their seder and bring them back to my seder at home next year.
The EIE bus arrived to pick up all the kids staying in Modi’in. We all hugged and smiled being reunited after two days apart. It was fun hearing about what everyone did for Passover but we were all SO happy to be together again. After a very long bus ride up north we arrived at a river that branches off from the Kinaret. Today marked the first day of Yam L Yam (sea to sea). Today we had a beautiful water hike though the river. The water went up to my hips. After the hike we took a bus to our first campsite where we stayed the night. My tent tonight was Jordan Karpin Avi Goldstine and me! Our staff surprised us with matching custom designed NFTY EIE Yam L Yam bucket hats with our last names embroidered on. We all looked so cute. Everyone screamed with excitement! We had dinner and then got into our tents for bed because we had to wake up at 5:45 the next morning.

Thursday April 17, 2014

This morning we woke up at 5:45 and we were divided into two large groups. Guys group (which I was in) and Maya’s group. These large groups were our hiking groups. Within the large group we were divided into smaller groups, which we would cook with. We were responsible to cook breakfast and lunch in our small groups, and dinner was made by the staff. Each person was required to carry something either food, pots, or the portable gas burner. Eventually we were on our way for the longest and toughest hike of Yam L Yam. Today we were hiking UP Mount Merom. My legs were burning. The whole hike was up hill and each step would hurt more than the one before. My whole body was covered in sweat. Thank goodness they gave us back packs to use because mine was soaked. After a while of hiking we stopped for breakfast. Because it is Passover it was matza for all! We were given matza, peppers, chocolate spread, jam, rice, salami, and other random items that were to last us the two meals. For breakfast we ate matza and chocolate spread, hard boiled eggs, apples, and tea. After breakfast we continued hiking taking breaks here and there. We stopped for lunch mid way up the mountain. For lunch we made rice, using the burner, chopped up veggies and ate salami slices and of course matza and chocolate spread. After lunch we had a lesson on using a map to get to a location and then group by group we were off on our own to find our way up the mountain to the campsite. It was really fun to break into our small groups because when you hike you can have the best and most interesting conversations with people and being in small groups allowed our group to get really close! It also gave us freedom to adventure on our own for a bit. When we arrived at the campsite we organized our things, ate dinner and relaxed.  After dinner we did an evening activity in silence. We hiked up into the forest. Through the forest we were dropped off one at a time. We were given 10 minutes or so to sit in the silence of the forest and hear the sounds of the nature. Personally I did not like this activity because every sound I heard I freaked out fearing the animals would attack me. After the activity we all walked back down to the campsite and went right to bed.


Friday April 18, 2014

This morning we woke up at 5:45. Because we were at the top of the mountain it was absolutely freezing when we woke up. Eventually we all rolled out of our tents packed everything up and drank tea to keep us warm. All day we hiked down the mountain that we had hiked up the previous day. Often I wondered why we could not have just gone around the mountain… Going down was very steep but I found it easier than going up. Again it was very hot out. By this point I don’t know what is a tan and what is a layer of dirt? We stopped for breakfast eating the same foods as the day before. We continued hiking. As we hiked there were a lot of cows just wandering the land and their poo was everywhere!! We stopped for lunch at a natural spring that looked more like a mikvah. Today my group was a lot more creative than the previous day with our meal preparation. We decided to cook the salami and mix it in with the rice. We also learned a really amazing army trick. If you take a can of tuna open it and remove the lid but don’t pour out the oils. Then take a piece of toilet paper and place it over the can and light the paper on fire. The fire will cook the tuna. It is delicious. After lunch we did the same thing as the day before we went off into our small groups and hiked to the campsite where we would spend the next two nights. We arrived at the campsite and had services for Shabbat followed by dinner and evening activity of star watching. We were all exhausted after all of the hiking. We went right to bed.

Saturday April 19, 2014

This morning we had a slow morning. We were given the opportunity to sleep in but because we were sleeping outside the sun woke us all up by 7:00am. First we had Saturday morning services followed by a “easy hike”. This hike was in no way easy! First we went down a very steep mountain for about an hour. When finally we arrived at a stream where we spent the day. After a few hours we hiked back up and it was ten times harder! We arrived back at the campsite and had a beautiful havdallah service as the sun set. After camping for five days, on the last day we had our first camp fire. After a long day we went to bed, our last time sleeping in tents.

Sunday April 20, 2014

Today is our last day of Yam l’ Yam and for the final portion we biked from our campsite down to the Mediterranean Sea! After we packed up we were all given bikes and helmets and one at a time, almost all 66 of us road our bikes in a line. We biked through banana fields and farms! It was so refreshing to have the fresh wind go though me as I biked. We finally arrived at the Mediterranean and we all cheered. After a five day hike we arrived. From sea to sea. I have hiked across Israel! I felt so accomplished. Even though it was really difficult we all kept each others energy up and encouraged one and other to keep going! After a long week we reached the sea and we all ran into the water! It was very refreshing! We spent the day at the beach relaxing after a tough week. Our night was spent at another kibbutz because Tzuba was still renting out our rooms for Passover. On Monday night we arrived at Tzuba at 10:30pm and broke Passover with pizza!!


Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Meeting the Camp George Mishlachat

Saturday April 5, 2014

This morning myself, and all of the kids on EIE who go to URJ summer camps woke up at 7:00 a.m. to meet with people from the Summer Shlichim Program for the URJ Camp and Israel “Mishlachat training”. Mishlachat is a program that offers Israeli men and women, after their time in the army, the opportunity to spend a summer abroad at different URJ camps in both Canada and the United States, and participate in the summer camp programs. At Camp George in Parry Sound Ontario we always get a bunch of Mishlachat on staff who bring a lot of the Israeli culture and spirit to our summer.
When we arrived at the conference we were surrounded by a group of enthusiastic Israelis who all were going to different URJ camps and programs.  This weekend was their training session to prepare them for the experiences to come. We first had services outside! Many of the Israelis were shocked to see a woman lead services because they are used to traditional ways.
After services we all broke off into camp groups. I spent the afternoon with Julia Guest, Josh Dubell (staff from camp) and the Mishlachat coming to George this summer! They are all so cool and I am really excited to spend the summer with them! We played some fun camp style games and did question and answers! It was so fun answering their questions because to many of them the idea of camp is very new and they do not know what to expect. I hope I gave them a good understanding and got them excited to come to George!
After a fun morning together the EIE group left to go back to Tzuba!