Last Thursday, I got up very early, around 8am, to attend a rally in Sderot along with Rochelle and her mom. We first met up at the Be'ersheva Central Bus Station, from where we took the metropolin bus number 351 to Sderot. There, we grabbed some shwarma at the Sderot Shook, before we made our way to the Sderot Media Center, who was organizing the rally. At the Sderot Media Center on Herzl Street, we helped to make signs and to carry Israeli flags, until we were bused over to the Kibbutz Nir Am Gas Station, from where we met up with students from Israel, Australia, South Africa, United States, Canada, and a variety of other countries, along with other international supporters, members of the media, some IDF soldiers, Sderot Media Center staff, members of the Sderot Municipality, people from the Israel Ministry of Public Diplomacy & the Diaspora, and even Zambian Presidential Candidate Dr. Saviour Chisimba. Together, we marched from the Kibbutz Nir Am Gas Station to Givat Yanchik, near the Gaza border. Along the way, people shouted "Israel is a peaceful country," "stop the terror and hatred," "stop the rocket attacks," "save Israeli children," and similar slogans. I carried a sign stating "stop targets on civillians, save Israeli children." Others carried signs stating "students against extremism," "stop Hamas terrorism against all our children," "free Gilad Shalit," "save Israeli children," "Sderot wants peace," and the like. Once we reached our destination at Givat Yanchik, we listened to a few words from Yuli Edelstein, who is the Israel Minister of Public Diplomacy and Diaspora Affairs. Then, we listened to a speech from Zambian Presidential Candidate Dr. Saviour Chishimba and Sderot Mayor David Buskila, before we sent off balloon messages from the children of Sderot to the children of Gaza.
After that, we were bused to the Sderot Cinamatique, which has a photo exhibit on all of the rocket dammage done by the qassams on the city of Sderot. There, we heard speeches from Noam Bedein of the Sderot Media Center, Chaya Singer of the World Union of Jewish Students, Yuli Edelstein of the Israel Ministry of Public Diplomacy and Diaspora Affairs, Zambian Presidential Candidate Dr. Saviour Chisimba, Sderot Mayor David Buskila, and from Moshe Amar, a Sderot resident whose home was destroyed by a Hamas rocket attack. Moshe Amar then proceeded to sing John Lenon's "Imagine" for us.
In conclusion, we were all taken to the Sderot Police Station, where we all saw a display of all of the rockets that have been fired on Sderot for the last eight years. They were all labeled whether they came from Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, or the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade. They were also labeled whether they were fired from a civillian area in Gaza or not, where they landed in Israel, and when they fell in Israel. Noam spoke to us during this time. He explained to us that 97 percent of rocket attacks fired from Gaza to Sderot are fired from within civillian areas and that Hamas especially likes to fire rockets at Sderot in the morning just as children are leaving to go to school, and in the afternoon when parents are going to pick up children for school. He also said that many of the rockets that land in Sderot end up falling somewhere near a kindergarden. Noam also told us a story of how a rocket alarm once went off when a woman was driving her car in Sderot with two small children in the back, and how she had only fifteen seconds to chose which child to take with her to shelter, since she did not have enough time to take both children to safety. This is worse than the situation in Be'ersheva during the Gaza War, where we had one minute to take shelter from rockets. Sderot is the only city in Israel that has bomb shelters at every bus station and at every playground in the city. And this reality of living under constant rocket fire has had a terrible negative psychological effect on the children who live in Sderot. Between 70 to 90 percent of the children who live in Sderot suffer from post traumatic stress disorder. This point is illustrated when a kindergarden teacher once asked her students in Sderot, who are around age five, why a snail has a shell. While the average five year old in the US would say because it is cute or something like that, the average child in Sderot says it is to protect the snail from the rockets.
I am really proud of my participation in this wonderful rally sponsored by the Sderot Media Center, The Israel Ministry of Public Diplomacy & the Diaspora, World Union of Jewish Students (WUJS), World Jewish Congress (WJC), Im Tirtzu and the Sderot Municipality. I am also really excited that my picture was shown in the Eretz Sheva video of the rally:
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/135296
We also received coverage from CNN, the Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, the New York Times, ABC News, US National Public Radio, AP, Reuters, Jerusalem Post, YNET, Israel Channel 1, and Zambian Watchdog. Links can be found below:
1) CNN: http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/12/31/gaza.march/ Protestors Rally to End Economic Blockade of Gaza*Towards end of article
2) The Washington Post: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/12/31/AR2009123101935.html
3) Christian Science Monitor: http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2009/1231/In-Israel-embattled-Sderot-comes-back-to-life-after-rocket-barrages-of-Gaza-war
4) New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/01/world/middleeast/01gaza.html *Towards end of article
5) ABC News: http://abcnews.go.com/meta/search/imageDetail?format=plain&source=http%3A%2F%2Fabcnews.go.com%2Fimages%2FInternational%2Fa26d64e2-1c64-4d4c-9b35-1bcd5fa4275cUS National Public Radio (NPR): http://topics.npr.org/article/0bzU5tZdTpd9w
6) AP Photos of Rally: http://apimages.ap.org/Search.aspx?st=det&sort=date&id=MIDEAST%20ISRAEL%20PALESTINIANS&showact=events&prds=10135&intv=3d&sh=10&kwstyle=and&adte=1262277611&pagez=20&cfasstyle=AND&7) 7) Reuters Photos: http://www.daylife.com/photo/01Er9KQ2hz8I3
8) Jerusalem Post Video: http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1194419829128&pagename=JPost%2FPage%2FVideoPlayer&videoId=12613645679469) Jerusalem Post articles:
1) Hundreds Protest Israel's Gaza Policies as Sderot Rally Releases Peace Balloons: http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1261364566077&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
2) Sderot children send New Year's Message to Gaza: http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1261364566089&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull
10) Israel National News: http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/135296
11) YNet News: http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3828052,00.html
12) Israel Channel 1 (Hebrew): http://www.news1.co.il/PageLoad.aspx?adid=5324&pageUrl=Archive/0020-D-225215-00.html?tag=21-16-31
13) YNet News (Hebrew): http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-3828008,00.html
14) Zambian Watchdog: http://www.zambianwatchdog.com/2010/01/02/chishimba-kambwili-joins-demos-in-isreal-condemns-rb/
If you search on google, "Hundreds in Sderot, Israel Protest Hamas Gaza Terror Rockets, Seek Peace for children," you will see over 24,000 hits. That is because news agencies, blogs, sites picked up the Israel News Agency Press release from PRweb.com. I am so excited that our rally received such good coverage and am looking forward to getting involved in the future with supporting the people of Sderot against Hamas terrorism.
Saturday, January 2, 2010
Sunday, December 27, 2009
A wonderful brit in Zikhron Ya'akov
Today, I went to my first ever brit milah in Zikhron Ya'akov. Since I am the youngest in my family, I had never been to a brit milah before. Any ways, it was really special. My husband's cousin Sima had just had a baby boy who was absolutely the most adorable that one can imagine. His hands were so tiny. Any ways, while brit milahs generally are not as big ceremony-wise as weddings and bar mitzvahs, they are still nevertheless nice celebrations. Just like in the bar mitzvah party of last week, there was an appetizer part where people got to dine on various types of snack foods like ciggars and cous cous. Then, there were the various types of salads. I had corn salad, Israeli salad, hommus with bread, and these green hot spicy peppers that made even my mouth explode, despite the fact that I usually really love spicy food. Every one was laughing at my reaction to the peppers by calling desperately for water, but that was part of the fun I suppose. Then, we had our first course, where I chose to eat boreikhas. After that, there was the brit ceremony. All of these Iraqi Jewish women were calling out coo-dooo-doo, throwing candle in the air, and dancing, as the foreskin was removed from the baby boy. Then, we all ate the last course, where I ate chicken with Arabic rice with raisons and potatoes. And to end it all, there was Mizrachi dancing, where I got to dance with Shachar's aunts Shoshana and Carmella, and also with the brit baby's older brother, who shied away when I started to belly dance with him. In sum, it was a great ceremony!
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Roi's Bar Mitzvah Party
Last night, I literally went to the best bar mtizvah party that I have ever been to. The bar mitzvah boy, Roi, is a cousin of my husband Shachar. He is half Morrocan and half Yemenite, and the liveliness of his bar mitzvah party illustrate this point. In fact, it was so lively, it could have been a wedding. This party, which took place in Nahariyya near the Lebanon border, started out with lots of appetizers. I remember snacking on cous cous, raviolli, Arabic bread, cigars, eggrolls, chicken with peppers, etc. Then, after the appetizers, every one sat down as Roi's mom, Sylvia, Roi's father Raffi, and Roi's sisters Shany and Sivan walked towards the front in the most beautiful outfits. Then, Roi was brought in on a special chair carrying a torah schroll, as a series of special effects went into place, with Mizrachi music in the background. After that, they lit some candles in Roi's honor, they did a l'chaim to him and then there was dancing. After a bunch of dancing, we sat down and had the first course of the meal, where I ate some fish. Then, there was more dancing, where I even got to do Yemenite traditional dancing, before we sat down again to have a second course, where I ate chicken shnitzel with salad and Arabian rice. And after that, we concluded with a henna ceremony. Every one changed into Morrocan costumes. I got to dance in with Morrocan candies, along with Shachar, Leah (my mother-in-law), Sylvia, and a bunch of other people. Shachar's Aunt Funny got to dance in with the henna lit by a candle. Roi came in a special chair. Then, there was a special ceremony to put henna on the hands of Roi, and then every one else. I also got to put henna on my hand, it was so fun. We danced all the while and snacked on traditional Morrocan pastries. And that was the bar mitzvah party. Not this weekend, but the weekend after, I will return to Nahariyya to go to the actual bar mitzvah of Roi and the shabbat qatan-like ceremony afterwards. Roi plans on reading from the Torah with a Yemenite accent. I am so excited to hear him.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Differences between celebrating Chanukkah in Israel versus the United States
When I grew up as a child in the US, I remember that Chanukkah was a big deal. My mom would decorate the entire house for Chanukkah with dreidal lights, Happy Chanukkah banners, and Israeli flags. We would eat latkes with applesauce almost every night made by my Uncle Harold who would come down from Pittsburgh just for the holiday. We would sing songs together and I would play dreidal with him. Uncle Harold would always let me win, so that I would get to eat all of the gelt myself. I remember as a child I used to be jealous of the Christian kids and their santa clause, so my dad created a fictatious charactor called Grandpa Chanukkah that would give eight Chanukkah presents to all of the Jewish kids, one for each night of Chanukkah. He would give them eight times as many presents as the Christian kids to compensate for Jewish children being a minority. I would believe in Grandpa Chanukkah until the fourth grade, when I found out from other kids in Hebrew School that they never received presents from such a magical creature. Although Chanukkah was never as commercialized as Christmas, given the situation in the US, the American Jews made Chanukkah more commercialized than it was any where else in the world. Whole sections of stores contained Chanukkah decorations, Chanukkah cards, etc., and there were even big Chanukkiahs beside Christmas trees in some public buildings. Sometimes, my parents would take me downtown to see the National Chanukkah Menorah Lighting, which took place adjacent to the National Christmas Tree Lighting in Washington, DC. And starting in college, I made an annual tradition out of watching the movie Hebrew Hammer for Chanukkah, which I find to be the most hysterical movie ever. It was loads of fun, celebrating Chanukkah in the US.
Here in Israel, however, Chanukkah is celebrated very differently from the way that it is in the US. Firstly, it is not commercialized like it is in the US. You won't see people giving out Chanukkah cards and decorating their houses for Chanukkah. My Mizrachi family does not even eat latkes, but svinge, a Mizrachi pastry that is made especially for Chanukkah, served with sugar, nuttella, honey, or homemade jam. Sometimes the Mizrachim will eat sufganiyot since they came to Israel and adopted it from the Ashkenazi here, but the whole latkes thing is still not a part of their tradition. In fact, when I made latkes for my Mizrachi husband, he responded by eating it with schoog (red Morrocan hot chilly peppers), not the traditional applesauce. While people still sing some songs for Chanukkah, they usually don't sing as many as in the US. While people still light the Chanukkiah, Mizrachim don't give out presents for Chanukkah, but for Purim. My husband claims that there is a chanukkah menorah lighting in each Israeli city, but I seriously doubt that they make as big of deal out of it as the US Jews make a big deal out of the US National Chanukkah Menorah Lighting. However, Israeli television does broadcast Hebrew Hammer and children do get off school for Chanukkah, even though the universities and the work places don't close down. Indeed, to celebrate Chanukkah in Israel is very different from celebrating Chanukkah in the US.
Here in Israel, however, Chanukkah is celebrated very differently from the way that it is in the US. Firstly, it is not commercialized like it is in the US. You won't see people giving out Chanukkah cards and decorating their houses for Chanukkah. My Mizrachi family does not even eat latkes, but svinge, a Mizrachi pastry that is made especially for Chanukkah, served with sugar, nuttella, honey, or homemade jam. Sometimes the Mizrachim will eat sufganiyot since they came to Israel and adopted it from the Ashkenazi here, but the whole latkes thing is still not a part of their tradition. In fact, when I made latkes for my Mizrachi husband, he responded by eating it with schoog (red Morrocan hot chilly peppers), not the traditional applesauce. While people still sing some songs for Chanukkah, they usually don't sing as many as in the US. While people still light the Chanukkiah, Mizrachim don't give out presents for Chanukkah, but for Purim. My husband claims that there is a chanukkah menorah lighting in each Israeli city, but I seriously doubt that they make as big of deal out of it as the US Jews make a big deal out of the US National Chanukkah Menorah Lighting. However, Israeli television does broadcast Hebrew Hammer and children do get off school for Chanukkah, even though the universities and the work places don't close down. Indeed, to celebrate Chanukkah in Israel is very different from celebrating Chanukkah in the US.
Monday, October 19, 2009
iNegev est. October 2009
Welcome to this blog! You will be able to find interesting stories about life in Israel..
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)