Saturday, December 31, 2011

DIIIEEEEEEEE!!!

I can't believe I have been working at my gan (hebrew for kindergarten) for three months now. How time flies. I really got to love my kids like they are my own. You get to know their different personalities and even have favorites. I know, this is bad. Really bad. But I can't resist their cute little faces and English accents. They are so chamud!!!! Proof below.


I remember walking into the gan one of my first days and seeing a kid pulling his mothers shirt as she tried to drop him off in his class. She screamed DIE, DIE!! I thought to myself, "Wow, I knew Israeli's are aggressive but not as much as to tell their kids to die." As the days passed, still in shock I kept hearing mothers utter those words to their kids. In hebrew class the next week, the teacher explained the word DIE. I looked up from my notebook, immediately with the Gan image in my head. It all made sense now. Die is the hebrew word for stop! Because of the kids I will never forget the meaning of the word. Thanks yeladim  :)


Wishing everyone a healthy and happy New Year to come!!! 2011סוף

Friday, December 16, 2011

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There's nothing like a Friday morning in Tel Aviv -- not because I don't work or I can sleep in. I'm referring to the vibe. Families and friends are out in coffee shops, catching up, laughing. Dogs sit patiently under the tables while the owners eat breakfast and smoke a cigarette. Long lines outside trendy restaurants on trendy streets. Bikers ring their bells at pedestrians while the women move the carriage out of the bike lane. Friends play guitar on park benches. Every two blocks on Rothschild there is a different event... opera singers, dance show, music show and if you wish you can join in. The city doesn't allow you to get bored. Israelis really know how to live and appreciate life.


The weekends (start Thursday and end Saturday) are strictly dedicated to friends and family. No work.  This is why Shabbat is such an important thing to Jews; as busy as you may be with work and kids and life, you know that Friday night dinner is reserved to catch up with family.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

what some Israelis consider English.. should have used spell check on this one!

Saturday, November 19, 2011

"You're American. Oh so you're here with Birthright."


I have been a bit busy lately and have neglected my blog but I'm back... 

As time goes by I keep hearing stories about girls who made Aliyah for their Israeli boyfriends, including my neighbor on my Aliyah flight. The guys happen to be their soldiers on Taglit. It all of a sudden hit me: Taglit, and all of the organizations {Masa, Career Israel, study abroad programs} are Israeli recruitments in disguise. Rumor has it that the program chooses handsome/attractive soldiers on purpose, making it appealing for the American girls. For the soldiers that get chosen to guard a Birthright trip, they feel as though they have won the lottery! It’s like an American/Israeli dating service, and once they have you, you’re hooked. You Skype for a few months while your both home and then you make Aliyah for him a few months later because you think he’s the one and you want to build your life in Israel. It’s all a dream… until you get there and you have to deal with the beauracracy – but that’s a whole different story. Although I'm one of few exceptions, I feel proud to have moved to a place for my love of the country, not for a person. 
Although I have mostly spoken negatively about Israel (because it's things that would not happen in America) Israel/is also has many great qualities. Israelis are very warm people and truly want to get to know you, even if you'll never see them again. They appreciate family. Most Israeli families have close-knit relationships with one other. One of the main reasons I think this is so is because of Shabbat. If the family is busy all week, there is one day in the week where they can all get together and catch up. When I speak to an Israeli, I feel like I have known them my whole life. I can't explain why, I just feel like I have known them for years. Israeli's are the only people that will host you for Shabbat dinner or invite you over to break the fast, even if you just met that night. This is unheard of in America. The American parent would question it saying "You don't know who they are. It can put you in danger." That's the things about Israel, everyone is family. There is such a sense of community here that I have never felt in any other place. Israel is also, ironically, the safest place I have ever lived. They check every person that enters a mall, synogogue,  government building, clubs, etc. Yes, they are pushy and loud people, but every people have faults. I think the good definitely override the bad. 

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

You're in the Army now!

On a sunny Sunday in August, I was on a bus with other volunteers from all over the world; Argentina, America, Brazil, Holland, England… We were on our way to the base, close to Beer Sheva. Once on the base, we rested for a few hours before they put us to work.  At 1pm we were split off into groups of four. As we approached the workstation I saw two lines of huge white and red trucks. We were handed a stencil, a sponge and a small bucket of paint. The assignment was to paint three numbers on each front side of every truck. As I started completing more trucks, they started to look more like numbers. I don’t consider myself an artist but I thought it turned out pretty well.   

The next day I was sent with another volunteer to a nearby office who would send us to the workstation. We arrive there and the the overweight Russian commander says “Ain avodah” (There is no work).  I say “What? Didn’t you talk to my counselor, Tal? She sent us here and told us that you have work for us.” He replies with “Lo mevin. Ain avodah po” (I don’t understand you. There is no work here). So through sign language and broken Hebrew I understood to get paper to play games. After two hours of hearing soldiers and commanders speak over each other while trying to concentrate on my Hangman game, I thought to myself how useless I felt. The purpose of volunteering was to help out and learn something.

Monday night at around 10 pm I’m hanging out with a few soldiers and volunteers outside. All of a sudden I hear the loudspeaker come on and say something in Hebrew with the word Adom (red).  A volunteer explains to me that it means Red Alert. As I envision a rocket right behind me, I sprint 30 feet to the bomb shelter.  After reaching cover ten seconds later, I look back and the soldiers are strolling toward me.  As I scream “C’mon”, they were laughing at my reaction to this whole thing --- they have been dealing with this their whole lives and don't think it's a big deal. As I enter the hallway full of soldiers, my counselor runs upstairs to wake up the sleeping volunteers since the second floor is not built as a bomb shelter. I proceed to sit next to the other volunteers and talk about what just happened. To my right are soldiers; men calm and collected, girls a bit shaky and one on the phone crying. About fifteen minutes later we get the okay that it’s safe to go.

When an area is hit they have a certain amount of time to reach shelter. Beer Sheva has 1 minute, Mishmar has 40 seconds, and Sderot has 15 seconds. The times are based on how far the area is  in comparison to where the rockets usually come from.


            On Wednesday, I was assigned to kitchen duty after dinner. After all of the soldiers, commanders, and volunteers left the dining hall, I was left with another volunteer and the kitchen staff who instructed me what to do in broken English. “Dis” – pointing to the mop “like dis, chacol. Beseder?” When we were done, I went to Shlomo and tried to communicate in my broken Hebrew that we had finished. “Zeo. Tov?” I said. “Ken. Toda haverim,” he replied. On my way out, I thought to myself how much I hated that job and that was only one hour. Imagine doing that for three years! Soon after, I called my father. “So what did you do in the army today?” he asked. “I’m an immigrant mopping the floor and cleaning the tables after dinner. Now I know how Chepita feels.”  

When we boarded the bus Thursday at noon (the weekends here start on Thursdays), we got news about rockets hitting open field in Beer Sheva, only a meter or two away from where we were. After hearing my counselors at the front of the bus yell the frightening news, I couldn’t help but cry. What have I gotten myself into? What am I doing here? Is this what I want my life to be like? This is the way of life here and I knew that going into this. This news report just made it so real.

               I decided to change bases for the next week since I didn’t feel like I was doing much at the first base. I went to the medical base. This is a completely different scene. It’s just a bunch of warehouses filled with supplies that need to be sorted.  First I sorted syringes, Latex gloves, bandages, and so on, into the appropriate labeled boxes. We continued by grabbing a medium-sized plastic bag, where we placed the indicated number of items in each bag and added other bags with more supplies, to make a medical bag. The last thing would be a checklist of supplies for the medic. We filled a bin up with about forty bags. We would place four plastic bags in a cardboard box, where it would proceed to storage. The warehouse full of cardboard boxes was where the medical supplies from Israel came from that were sent to Japan during the earthquake this passed March. The duties would change from sealing the bags, to putting in the contents. These tasks seem mindless but on the other hand, if you forget one item, it could be crucial.
                                   

This time around the Army was much more fulfilling and feel as though I contributed. J


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PZHnmCz6YvE

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Parents these days

Yesterday I was walking up Bugroshav street to meet my friend at Dizengoff Center. Reading her text, I hear a BOOM in the background. I look up and a two-year-old girl landed facedown on the cement. I am not surprised. Her mother, who was sitting on a bench on her cell phone, didn’t budge. Her father, also on the cell phone, at least helped the little girl up but neither of them hung up the phones. I don’t know which is worse: the mother who didn’t move a muscle or the fact that they both remained on their cell phones… 

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Gilad Schalit returns home!

After attempting to bring him back for 5 years, Gilad Schalit returned home today. There has been an overwhelmingly {in a good way} support from all over the world on Facebook, with comments, likes, etc. Others, on the other hand, are saying how horrible it is that 1,000+ prisoners are set free for only one soldier. Most Israeli's would agree that one soldiers' life (although he isn't psychologically well after living more than 5 years in the dark, rarely seeing light) is worth 1,000+ prisoners. Knowing that, this is putting the soldiers in future danger. Israel knows that this was our only chance to unite Gilad with his family. These are the decisions that Benjamin Netanyahu continuously deals with.

Two Faces of Freedom in pictures:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2050377/Gilad-Shalit-release-Palestinians-wild-celebrations-1-000-militants-freed.html

On another note, I met my friend on Shenkin for a quick bite. We were catching up when the waitress came over to take our order. In the middle of asking her what is in the salad, a man completely interupts her and asks her something in Hebrew that I can't understand. What makes you think you can just do that? This is completely normal in the Israeli culture and is one of the nicer things. In America, we would patiently wait until the server has walked away from the customers table. I must be too curtious to live in this country!

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Welcome

Before I start sharing about my life here I want to catch you up on what happened on October 12, 2011. Three major events occurred :

The news that Israel has been waiting for for what seems like forever is finally reality! Gilad Schalit, now 25, was captured by Hamas on June 25, 2006 at a cross-border raid. He has been held hostage at an unknown location at the Gaza Strip. Aside from one letter and one videotaped message, his parents have received no signs of life from their soldier son. Ever since that day, Israelis have wished for his release. Every day that passes the Schalit family loses hope that they will never see their son again. On this day, Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) sealed the deal with Hamas that Gilad Schalit will be freed only in exchange for the release of 1000 Hamas prisoners- Palestinians serving prison sentences in Israel, as well as all female and underage Palestinians convicted and serving sentences. Although this will likely increase Hamas’ motivation to attack Israel and abduct more soldiers, at least Gilad is free! The Schalit family will be whole again in just a few days.  http://www.jpost.com/Defense/Article.aspx?id=241512 When an Israeli is abducted the whole country suffers and feels as though they have lost their brother. Its’ situations like these that make Israeli’s such strong people and create such a close-knit community.

            This day marked the first day of Sukkot (plural for booth in Hebrew). It is the holiday, which the Jews were commanded to make a pilgrimage to The Temple in Jerusalem. During this holiday you will see many makeshift booths covered with plant materials like tree branches or bamboo. This structure is intended as a reminiscence of the type of fragile dwellings in which the Israelites dealt with during their 40 years of travel in the desert after the Exodus from slavery in Egypt. The holiday lasts seven days.

This day also marked my three -month anniversary of moving to Israel. I can not believe I have already lived in this unorganized, rude, balagan (crazyness) of a country for already three months. Where does time go?