I went to a networking event last week at Nefesh B'Nefesh's offices in Givat Shaul to hear Ariel Hachstadt from Google (Hachstadt is Google’s Regional Product Marketing Manager for Israel, Greece and South Africa) discuss various innovative tools from Google that can be used for internet marketing.
The average web-savvy professional is already familiar with most of the internet tools that Ariel presented, such as Google Trends. Google Trends allows you to see how many people visited a website over a specified amount of time, and what websites were visited after visitors' left that site.
One Google tool that Ariel mentioned, however, is less known. It's Google Insight for Search, which can be used to measure the volume of a Google search term in any location over a specified amount of time. For example, you can see the volume of people in the United States that searched for "cheap hotels in the Jerusalem area" in the year 2010, broken down by month.
Insight for Search provides the Internet marketing professional with useful data to support ad campaign decisions. Let's say that every May from 2006-2010, there was a spike in the amount of people in the U.S. who searched on Google for a "cheap Jerusalem hotel." If you are a hotel marketing professional in Jerusalem, it would make sense for you to a) increase your hotel's U.S. advertisements in May and b) angle those advertisements to focus on how your hotel has affordable rooms.
The best part of Ariel's presentation was when he mentioned that Insight for Search, as well as many of Google's other tools, were developed by Google's R & D office in Israel. In fact, among Google's various branches, Israel is known to contribute a disproportionate amount to Google's innovation.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Book Review of Dan Gordis' Aliyah Memoirs
Like most writers, I am an avid reader, and with aliyah looming on the horizon for us, I have been particularly interested in reading aliyah-related memoirs.
I recently discovered two aliyah memoirs that I had previously never heard of. They are by Dan Gordis, a frequent contributor to the New York Times' Op-Ed Section and Senior Vice President of the Shalem Center (a powerful think thank in Jerusalem). While looking for Gordis' most recent book "Saving Israel" in the library, I discovered that Gordis also wrote 2 memoirs based on his family's aliyah experiences.
Gordis' two memoirs are titled, "Home to Stay
" and "Coming Together, Coming Apart
." They are both fantastic reads and both are insightful. Here are three things I particularly appreciated about both books:
1. Gordis is able to find deeper meaning in an isolated event. For example, he finds the 2003 collapse of a wedding hall in Talpiyot to be an apt metaphor for the country of Israel at the time: "[t]he wedding hall is a metaphor for the whole country - one layer collapses and destroys everything below, killing everyone in its wake" [Home To Stay].
2. Gordis is really an independent thinker. I lean to the right, and that affects all of my perspectives. You can predict my views on an issue 100% of the time because of my right leaning tendencies. Gordis is different, however; he analyzes each situation independently. He admits to seeing both sides on the issue of whether the "Gaza Withdrawal" was proper, oscillating between both sides of the issue.
3. Gordis is able to write about abstract situations and feelings that is commonplace to many but rarely expressed in words. For example, take the following excerpt where Gordis describes going out to eat for his wife's birthday:
"When we went out for dinner for Beth's birthday in September, we were in a restaurant with a whole variety of couples: an Ethiopian couple, some Russians, an Israeli couple, us, and selected others from all over the place. Beth remarked that the whole country was a modern-day miracle, and then asked, "If you have a chance to live your life as part of a miracle, how do you walk away from that?" [Home To Stay].
All in all, Gordis' two aliyah memoirs are the best aliyah memoirs I've come across. I would recommend them to everyone, whether they plan on making aliyah, have already made aliyah, or even heard the word "aliyah" uttered in a sentence.
I recently discovered two aliyah memoirs that I had previously never heard of. They are by Dan Gordis, a frequent contributor to the New York Times' Op-Ed Section and Senior Vice President of the Shalem Center (a powerful think thank in Jerusalem). While looking for Gordis' most recent book "Saving Israel" in the library, I discovered that Gordis also wrote 2 memoirs based on his family's aliyah experiences.
Gordis' two memoirs are titled, "Home to Stay
1. Gordis is able to find deeper meaning in an isolated event. For example, he finds the 2003 collapse of a wedding hall in Talpiyot to be an apt metaphor for the country of Israel at the time: "[t]he wedding hall is a metaphor for the whole country - one layer collapses and destroys everything below, killing everyone in its wake" [Home To Stay].
2. Gordis is really an independent thinker. I lean to the right, and that affects all of my perspectives. You can predict my views on an issue 100% of the time because of my right leaning tendencies. Gordis is different, however; he analyzes each situation independently. He admits to seeing both sides on the issue of whether the "Gaza Withdrawal" was proper, oscillating between both sides of the issue.
3. Gordis is able to write about abstract situations and feelings that is commonplace to many but rarely expressed in words. For example, take the following excerpt where Gordis describes going out to eat for his wife's birthday:
"When we went out for dinner for Beth's birthday in September, we were in a restaurant with a whole variety of couples: an Ethiopian couple, some Russians, an Israeli couple, us, and selected others from all over the place. Beth remarked that the whole country was a modern-day miracle, and then asked, "If you have a chance to live your life as part of a miracle, how do you walk away from that?" [Home To Stay].
All in all, Gordis' two aliyah memoirs are the best aliyah memoirs I've come across. I would recommend them to everyone, whether they plan on making aliyah, have already made aliyah, or even heard the word "aliyah" uttered in a sentence.
Friday, June 4, 2010
Israel's Indomitable Spirit, Part II
My last post was about Israel's indomitable spirit.
I came across the following true story and video that demonstrates this point.
Last Tuesday, a vociferous and angry pro-Arab demonstration gathered outside of the Israeli Consulate in Los Angeles. Daniel Pereg, a high school student, showed up on the scene, by himself, proudly waving an Israeli flag to show his solidarity with Israel and the IDF. The pro-Arab demonstration became incensed, angrier, and close to violence. Yet Daniel bravely persisted to march around with his flag, pretending to be oblivious of the demonstration's growing anger and excitement.
When asked why he was there, he responds: "I came out because I want to defend Israel." Again, here is a young teenager, defiant to the world with his faith and conviction in the Jewish people and the country of Israel.
I came across the following true story and video that demonstrates this point.
Last Tuesday, a vociferous and angry pro-Arab demonstration gathered outside of the Israeli Consulate in Los Angeles. Daniel Pereg, a high school student, showed up on the scene, by himself, proudly waving an Israeli flag to show his solidarity with Israel and the IDF. The pro-Arab demonstration became incensed, angrier, and close to violence. Yet Daniel bravely persisted to march around with his flag, pretending to be oblivious of the demonstration's growing anger and excitement.
When asked why he was there, he responds: "I came out because I want to defend Israel." Again, here is a young teenager, defiant to the world with his faith and conviction in the Jewish people and the country of Israel.
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
The Flotilla and Israel’s Indomitable Spirit
I had the pleasure of hearing Elliott Abrams speak last month at a symposium organized by the Baltimore Zionist District. The symposium was titled “U.S.-Israel Relations In A New Era,” and Abrams, who held important positions in Ronald Reagan’s and George W. Bush’s administrations, was the keynote speaker.
Abrams gave a passionate and enlightening speech, in which he delineated three waves of aggression that the country of Israel has fought against:
In the FIRST WAVE of aggression, Israel’s neighbors (Egypt, Syria, Jordan, etc) attempted to destroy Israel by using military force. These were the wars of 1948, 1956, 1967, and 1973. These wars were unsuccessful, however, and the last major war against Israel was in 1973.
In the SECOND WAVE of aggression, terrorism rose to predominance, because waging war proved to be unsuccessful. The Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) grew to stature as the major terrorist association against Israel after murdering 12 Israeli athletes at the Olympic games in Munich, Germany. This terrorism includes the First and Second Intifadas, and it only ended recently.
According to Abrams, we are now witnessing a THIRD WAVE of aggression against Israel. This is a public relations attempt to delegitimize Israel, where Israel’s “acts of self-defense” are spun by the media to be “acts of aggression." For example, both Operation Cast Lead and the erection of the West Bank barriers were measures that Israel took to defend itself and maintain security. However, the media and global opinion considered these to be "acts of aggression.” Turning self-defense into "acts of aggression" is typical of this THIRD WAVE.
Abrams’ comments may be considered prescient in light of the recent events of the Flotilla. After raiding an “aid flotilla” bound for Gaza, an Israeli navy command killed 9 people. Israel has received widespread international condemnation for this action. However, the aid was organized by a Turkish group connected to several global jihadist terrorist movements, including al Qaeda — this is a fact that is being underreported. Additionally, Israel had offered to distribute “the aid” to Gazans, if only the flotilla would first dock into Ashdod, instead of heading straight to Gaza.
As the Wall Street Journal put it: “[T]his was a no-win situation. Allow the ships to dock in Gaza and they would unload supplies that might be used to arm Hamas. Stop the ships and you risk a public relations disaster.” In other words, this event is quintessential of the third wave of aggression, where Israel's actions to defend itself is unacceptable to the world.
Abrams concluded his speech with a story. At the moment, several European countries refuse to play Israel's national anthem, Hatikva, at international sporting events. Last November, Dana Sterlinkov won a gold medal for fencing at the Cadet World Cup in Austria. When she ascended the podium to receive her medal, Hatikva was not played! So she improvised, and began to sing it herself. Soon after, the rest of her team and Jews in the audience joined along.
Sterlinkov's actions were courageous, especially considering that she was only 14 at the time. Her actions represent the national mood of Israel; despite international condemnation that threatens Israel's existence, Israel continues to be brave and march ahead. Much like Sterlinkov, Israel’s courage is indomitable, and she will continue to thrive. This is the courage that has allowed Jews to survive 2,000 years without a homeland, and it's the courage that led Jews to rebuild after World War II.
To conclude, here is a link that I found last week and shook my very essence. It is an old BBC recording of survivors from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, singing Hatikva five days after liberation.
Abrams gave a passionate and enlightening speech, in which he delineated three waves of aggression that the country of Israel has fought against:
In the FIRST WAVE of aggression, Israel’s neighbors (Egypt, Syria, Jordan, etc) attempted to destroy Israel by using military force. These were the wars of 1948, 1956, 1967, and 1973. These wars were unsuccessful, however, and the last major war against Israel was in 1973.
In the SECOND WAVE of aggression, terrorism rose to predominance, because waging war proved to be unsuccessful. The Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) grew to stature as the major terrorist association against Israel after murdering 12 Israeli athletes at the Olympic games in Munich, Germany. This terrorism includes the First and Second Intifadas, and it only ended recently.
According to Abrams, we are now witnessing a THIRD WAVE of aggression against Israel. This is a public relations attempt to delegitimize Israel, where Israel’s “acts of self-defense” are spun by the media to be “acts of aggression." For example, both Operation Cast Lead and the erection of the West Bank barriers were measures that Israel took to defend itself and maintain security. However, the media and global opinion considered these to be "acts of aggression.” Turning self-defense into "acts of aggression" is typical of this THIRD WAVE.
Abrams’ comments may be considered prescient in light of the recent events of the Flotilla. After raiding an “aid flotilla” bound for Gaza, an Israeli navy command killed 9 people. Israel has received widespread international condemnation for this action. However, the aid was organized by a Turkish group connected to several global jihadist terrorist movements, including al Qaeda — this is a fact that is being underreported. Additionally, Israel had offered to distribute “the aid” to Gazans, if only the flotilla would first dock into Ashdod, instead of heading straight to Gaza.
As the Wall Street Journal put it: “[T]his was a no-win situation. Allow the ships to dock in Gaza and they would unload supplies that might be used to arm Hamas. Stop the ships and you risk a public relations disaster.” In other words, this event is quintessential of the third wave of aggression, where Israel's actions to defend itself is unacceptable to the world.
Abrams concluded his speech with a story. At the moment, several European countries refuse to play Israel's national anthem, Hatikva, at international sporting events. Last November, Dana Sterlinkov won a gold medal for fencing at the Cadet World Cup in Austria. When she ascended the podium to receive her medal, Hatikva was not played! So she improvised, and began to sing it herself. Soon after, the rest of her team and Jews in the audience joined along.
Sterlinkov's actions were courageous, especially considering that she was only 14 at the time. Her actions represent the national mood of Israel; despite international condemnation that threatens Israel's existence, Israel continues to be brave and march ahead. Much like Sterlinkov, Israel’s courage is indomitable, and she will continue to thrive. This is the courage that has allowed Jews to survive 2,000 years without a homeland, and it's the courage that led Jews to rebuild after World War II.
To conclude, here is a link that I found last week and shook my very essence. It is an old BBC recording of survivors from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, singing Hatikva five days after liberation.
Friday, May 21, 2010
New Daily Email With Inspiration For Living In Israel
A new yahoo email list was started recently that sends a "daily boost of positive sayings, ideas, quotes, thoughts, verses etc about being in, living in, experiencing Israel, the honor of living in Israel and the uniqueness of the Land, People and Torah."
You can sign up for this daily email by sending an email to
livingandlovingisrael-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
or by visiting the group's homepage at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/livingandlovingisrael
You can sign up for this daily email by sending an email to
livingandlovingisrael-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
or by visiting the group's homepage at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/livingandlovingisrael
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Video: Everything Stops for Yom Hazikaron Siren (2010)
This video was taken on Yom Hazikaron, 2010, at the moment the siren blew. It is striking how everyone stands still, paying respect to those who sacrificed their lives so that Israel can exist.
(Video Source: Jewlicious)
Halachic Implications of Yom Ha'atzmaut
Jewish law (halacha) is rife with controversy, especially when it comes to the newly created Jewish state. It has been debated whether halacha allows the creation of a new holiday (Yom Ha'atzmaut) and where it's okay to say hallel and suspend the Omer mourning restriction for this new holiday.
The Gush Yeshiva wrote a wonderful essay summarizing the different opinions conerning these issues. Here is a short summary of the essay:
Is It Bal Tosef To Create a New Holiday?
There are many sources to support creating a personal or communal commemoration of a miraculous event (R. Moshe Alshakar in Teshuvot Maharam Alshakar, cited by the Magen Avraham (686), the Chatam Sofer, R. Ovadiah Hadayah, Yehudah Dovid Eisenstein, the Chayei Adam). This was quite common in Europe.
However, at least one source (R. Chezekiah da Silva's perush to Shulchan Arukh (Orach Chaim 696)) says that we many no longer establish a new holiday after the second temple. Others argue that instituting a festive day for the entire Jewish People to celebrate, even those who did not personally experience the miraculous events, constitutes a violation of the Biblical injunction of "bal tosef" (Devarim 4:2) based on the Ramban Devarim 4:2) who implies that this injunction may also include adding a new holiday.
R. Hadaya (Yaskil Avdi 8, hashmatot 4) and R. Meshulam Roth, a member of the Israeli Chief Rabbinic Council, argued strongly in favor of establishing a festive day in commemoration of the establishment of the State of Israel.
Is Hallel Appropriate For Yom Ha'atzmaut?
A number of Rishonim derive from Pesachim (117) that if the entire nation is saved from danger, they may recite Hallel. They disagree as to whether this applies to individuals as well and whether this Hallel should be recited with a blessing.
R' Hadaya rules that Hallel should be recited without a blessing on Yom Ha-Atzmaut. R. Meshulem Roth (in the responsum cited above) argues that Yom Ha-Atzmaut should be observed as a festive day, and that naturally one should recite Hallel as well.
Rav Soloveitchik is cited in Nefesh Ha-Rav (pg. 97) as objecting to saying Hallel on Yom Ha'atzmaut, as he objected to any other change of the liturgy. He sanctioned, however, reciting half-Hallel, without a blessing, at the end of Shacharit, as this does not constitute a major change in the liturgy.
Can The Mourning of Sefirat Ha'Omer Be Suspended for Yom Ha'atzmaut
Yom Ha-Atzmaut comes out during Sefirat Ha'Omer, which a customary period of mourning. R. Yitzchak Nissim (1896-1981), former Sephardic chief rabbi of Israel (1955-1972), ruled that one may hold weddings and take haircuts on Yom Ha-Atzmaut (Sinai, April-May, 1958).
R. Hadaya (Yaskil Avdi 6:10) rejects this and rules that one should continue his observance of the mourning practices of the omer.
R. Soloveitchik also maintained that the mourning practices of the omer should not be suspended in order to celebrate Yom Ha-Atzmaut.
The Gush Yeshiva wrote a wonderful essay summarizing the different opinions conerning these issues. Here is a short summary of the essay:
Is It Bal Tosef To Create a New Holiday?
There are many sources to support creating a personal or communal commemoration of a miraculous event (R. Moshe Alshakar in Teshuvot Maharam Alshakar, cited by the Magen Avraham (686), the Chatam Sofer, R. Ovadiah Hadayah, Yehudah Dovid Eisenstein, the Chayei Adam). This was quite common in Europe.
However, at least one source (R. Chezekiah da Silva's perush to Shulchan Arukh (Orach Chaim 696)) says that we many no longer establish a new holiday after the second temple. Others argue that instituting a festive day for the entire Jewish People to celebrate, even those who did not personally experience the miraculous events, constitutes a violation of the Biblical injunction of "bal tosef" (Devarim 4:2) based on the Ramban Devarim 4:2) who implies that this injunction may also include adding a new holiday.
R. Hadaya (Yaskil Avdi 8, hashmatot 4) and R. Meshulam Roth, a member of the Israeli Chief Rabbinic Council, argued strongly in favor of establishing a festive day in commemoration of the establishment of the State of Israel.
Is Hallel Appropriate For Yom Ha'atzmaut?
A number of Rishonim derive from Pesachim (117) that if the entire nation is saved from danger, they may recite Hallel. They disagree as to whether this applies to individuals as well and whether this Hallel should be recited with a blessing.
R' Hadaya rules that Hallel should be recited without a blessing on Yom Ha-Atzmaut. R. Meshulem Roth (in the responsum cited above) argues that Yom Ha-Atzmaut should be observed as a festive day, and that naturally one should recite Hallel as well.
Rav Soloveitchik is cited in Nefesh Ha-Rav (pg. 97) as objecting to saying Hallel on Yom Ha'atzmaut, as he objected to any other change of the liturgy. He sanctioned, however, reciting half-Hallel, without a blessing, at the end of Shacharit, as this does not constitute a major change in the liturgy.
Can The Mourning of Sefirat Ha'Omer Be Suspended for Yom Ha'atzmaut
Yom Ha-Atzmaut comes out during Sefirat Ha'Omer, which a customary period of mourning. R. Yitzchak Nissim (1896-1981), former Sephardic chief rabbi of Israel (1955-1972), ruled that one may hold weddings and take haircuts on Yom Ha-Atzmaut (Sinai, April-May, 1958).
R. Hadaya (Yaskil Avdi 6:10) rejects this and rules that one should continue his observance of the mourning practices of the omer.
R. Soloveitchik also maintained that the mourning practices of the omer should not be suspended in order to celebrate Yom Ha-Atzmaut.
Monday, April 19, 2010
Yom HaZikaron: Story of Dvir Emanuelof, a Kadosh Soldier Killed During Operation Cast Lead
The following story was written by Daniel Gordis and published on chabad.org's website.
The story is truly amazing (and true). Please read it until the end.
Daniel Gordis is the author of numerous books on Jewish thought and currents in Israel. His most recent book is Saving Israel: How the Jewish State Can Win a War That May Never End. A man who sits next to me in shul has been raving about this book all year long, so it's probably a good read. Gordis made aliyah in 1998.
A Hug from Heaven
By Daniel Gordis
It's been almost a year since St.-Sgt. Dvir Emanuelof became the first casualty of Operation Cast Lead, losing his life to Hamas mortar fire just as he entered Gaza early in the offensive. But sitting with his mother, Dalia, in her living room last week, I was struck not by loss, but by life. And not by grief, but by fervent belief. And by a more recent story about Dvir that simply needs to be told.
This past summer, Dalia and some friends planned to go to Hutzot Hayotzer, the artists' colony constructed each summer outside Jerusalem's Old City walls. But Dalia's young daughter objected; she wanted to go a week later, so she could hear Meir Banai in concert.
Stunned, Dalia turned around and saw the father holding a babyDalia consented. And so, a week later, she found herself in the bleachers, waiting with her daughter for the performance to begin. Suddenly, Dalia felt someone touch her shoulder. When she turned around, she saw a little boy, handsome, with blond hair and blue eyes. A kindergarten teacher by profession, Dalia was immediately drawn to the boy, and as they began to speak, she asked him if he'd like to sit next to her.
By now, though, the boy's father had seen what was unfolding, and called over to him, "Eshel, why don't you come back and sit next to me and Dvir?" Stunned, Dalia turned around and saw the father holding a baby. "What did you say his name is?" she asked the father.
"Dvir," responded Benny.
"How old is he?" Dalia asked.
"Six months," was the reply.
"Forgive my asking," she continued, "was he born after Cast Lead, or before?"
"After."
Whereupon Dalia continued, "Please forgive my pressing, but can I ask why you named him Dvir?"
"Because," Benny explained to her, "the first soldier killed in Cast Lead was named Dvir. His story touched us, and we decided to name our son after him."
Almost unable to speak, Dalia paused, and said, "I'm that Dvir's mother."
Shiri, the baby's mother, had overheard the conversation, and wasn't certain that she believed her ears. "That can't be."
"It's true."
"What's your last name?"
"Emanuelof."
"Where do you live?"
"Givat Ze'ev."
"It is you," Shiri said. "We meant to invite you to the brit milah, the circumcision, but we couldn't."
"It doesn't matter," Dalia assured her, "You see, I came anyway."
And then, Dalia told me, Shiri said something to her that she'll never forget - "Dvir is sending you a hug, through us."
Shiri felt as though she were looking at an angelAt that point in our conversation, Shiri told me her story. She'd been pregnant, she said, in her 33rd or 34th week, and during an ultrasound test, a potentially serious problem with the baby was discovered. After consultations with medical experts, she was told that there was nothing to do. The baby would have to be born, and then the doctors would see what they could do. A day or two later, she was at home, alone, anxious and worried. She lit Chanukah candles, and turned on the news. The story was about Dvir Emanuelof, the first soldier killed in the operation. She saw, she said, the extraordinarily handsome young man, with his now famous smile, and she felt as though she were looking at an angel.
A short while later, Benny came home, and Shiri said to him, "Come sit next to me." When he'd seated himself down next to her, Shiri said to Benny, "A soldier was killed today."
"I heard," he said.
"What do you say we name our baby after him?" Shiri asked.
"Okay," was Benny's reply.
They told no one about the name, and had planned to call Dalia once the baby was born, to invite her to the brit milah. But when Dvir was born, Shiri and Benny were busy with medical appointments, and it wasn't even clear when they would be able to have the brit. By the time the doctor gave them the okay to have the brit, it was no longer respectful to invite Dalia on such short notice, Shiri told me. So they didn't call her. Not then, and not the day after. Life took its course and they told no one about the origin of Dvir's name, for they hadn't yet asked Dalia's permission.
So no one knew, until that moment when a little blond-haired, blue-eyed boy - whom Dalia now calls "the messenger" - decided to tap Dalia on the shoulder. "Someone's looking out for us up there," Shiri said quietly, wiping a tear from her eye, "and this no doubt brings Him joy."
It was now quiet in Dalia's living room, the three of us pondering this extraordinary sequence of events, wondering what to make of it. I was struck by the extraordinary bond between these two women, one religious and one traditional but not religious in the classic sense, one who's now lost a husband and a son and one who's busy raising two sons.
Unconnected in any way just a year ago, their lives are now inextricably interwoven. And I said to them both, almost whispering, "This is an Israeli story, par excellence."
As if they'd rehearsed the response, they responded in virtual unison, "No, it's a Jewish story."
It is a story of shared destiniesThey're right, of course. It is the quintessential Jewish story. It is a story of unspoken and inexplicable bonds. It is a story of shared destinies.
These are not easy times. These are days when we really could use a miracle or two. So perhaps it really is no accident that now, when we need it most, Dvir is sending us all a hug from heaven above.
The story is truly amazing (and true). Please read it until the end.
Daniel Gordis is the author of numerous books on Jewish thought and currents in Israel. His most recent book is Saving Israel: How the Jewish State Can Win a War That May Never End. A man who sits next to me in shul has been raving about this book all year long, so it's probably a good read. Gordis made aliyah in 1998.
A Hug from Heaven
By Daniel Gordis
It's been almost a year since St.-Sgt. Dvir Emanuelof became the first casualty of Operation Cast Lead, losing his life to Hamas mortar fire just as he entered Gaza early in the offensive. But sitting with his mother, Dalia, in her living room last week, I was struck not by loss, but by life. And not by grief, but by fervent belief. And by a more recent story about Dvir that simply needs to be told.
This past summer, Dalia and some friends planned to go to Hutzot Hayotzer, the artists' colony constructed each summer outside Jerusalem's Old City walls. But Dalia's young daughter objected; she wanted to go a week later, so she could hear Meir Banai in concert.
Stunned, Dalia turned around and saw the father holding a babyDalia consented. And so, a week later, she found herself in the bleachers, waiting with her daughter for the performance to begin. Suddenly, Dalia felt someone touch her shoulder. When she turned around, she saw a little boy, handsome, with blond hair and blue eyes. A kindergarten teacher by profession, Dalia was immediately drawn to the boy, and as they began to speak, she asked him if he'd like to sit next to her.
By now, though, the boy's father had seen what was unfolding, and called over to him, "Eshel, why don't you come back and sit next to me and Dvir?" Stunned, Dalia turned around and saw the father holding a baby. "What did you say his name is?" she asked the father.
"Dvir," responded Benny.
"How old is he?" Dalia asked.
"Six months," was the reply.
"Forgive my asking," she continued, "was he born after Cast Lead, or before?"
"After."
Whereupon Dalia continued, "Please forgive my pressing, but can I ask why you named him Dvir?"
"Because," Benny explained to her, "the first soldier killed in Cast Lead was named Dvir. His story touched us, and we decided to name our son after him."
Almost unable to speak, Dalia paused, and said, "I'm that Dvir's mother."
Shiri, the baby's mother, had overheard the conversation, and wasn't certain that she believed her ears. "That can't be."
"It's true."
"What's your last name?"
"Emanuelof."
"Where do you live?"
"Givat Ze'ev."
"It is you," Shiri said. "We meant to invite you to the brit milah, the circumcision, but we couldn't."
"It doesn't matter," Dalia assured her, "You see, I came anyway."
And then, Dalia told me, Shiri said something to her that she'll never forget - "Dvir is sending you a hug, through us."
Shiri felt as though she were looking at an angelAt that point in our conversation, Shiri told me her story. She'd been pregnant, she said, in her 33rd or 34th week, and during an ultrasound test, a potentially serious problem with the baby was discovered. After consultations with medical experts, she was told that there was nothing to do. The baby would have to be born, and then the doctors would see what they could do. A day or two later, she was at home, alone, anxious and worried. She lit Chanukah candles, and turned on the news. The story was about Dvir Emanuelof, the first soldier killed in the operation. She saw, she said, the extraordinarily handsome young man, with his now famous smile, and she felt as though she were looking at an angel.
A short while later, Benny came home, and Shiri said to him, "Come sit next to me." When he'd seated himself down next to her, Shiri said to Benny, "A soldier was killed today."
"I heard," he said.
"What do you say we name our baby after him?" Shiri asked.
"Okay," was Benny's reply.
They told no one about the name, and had planned to call Dalia once the baby was born, to invite her to the brit milah. But when Dvir was born, Shiri and Benny were busy with medical appointments, and it wasn't even clear when they would be able to have the brit. By the time the doctor gave them the okay to have the brit, it was no longer respectful to invite Dalia on such short notice, Shiri told me. So they didn't call her. Not then, and not the day after. Life took its course and they told no one about the origin of Dvir's name, for they hadn't yet asked Dalia's permission.
So no one knew, until that moment when a little blond-haired, blue-eyed boy - whom Dalia now calls "the messenger" - decided to tap Dalia on the shoulder. "Someone's looking out for us up there," Shiri said quietly, wiping a tear from her eye, "and this no doubt brings Him joy."
It was now quiet in Dalia's living room, the three of us pondering this extraordinary sequence of events, wondering what to make of it. I was struck by the extraordinary bond between these two women, one religious and one traditional but not religious in the classic sense, one who's now lost a husband and a son and one who's busy raising two sons.
Unconnected in any way just a year ago, their lives are now inextricably interwoven. And I said to them both, almost whispering, "This is an Israeli story, par excellence."
As if they'd rehearsed the response, they responded in virtual unison, "No, it's a Jewish story."
It is a story of shared destiniesThey're right, of course. It is the quintessential Jewish story. It is a story of unspoken and inexplicable bonds. It is a story of shared destinies.
These are not easy times. These are days when we really could use a miracle or two. So perhaps it really is no accident that now, when we need it most, Dvir is sending us all a hug from heaven above.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Roundup of Israel Blogs Issue #2
Here is the weekly thursday roundup of different blogs coming from Israel or about Israel. Please contact me if you would like your blog to be included in this list.
*A Mother In Israel discusses Israeli baby names.
*A Soldier's Mother posts a message to Anat Kam, an Israeli soldier who stole classified documents.
*Bat Aliyah talks about what to say to her friends that want to make aliyah but aren't able to yet.
*Rav Reuven Spolter notes some observations about the yishuv Otniel. The picture to the right is the famous hesder yeshiva in Otniel.
*Esser Agaroth blogs about eating locuts. The picture to the left is a locust from the 1915 locust plague in Israel.
*Rav Zev Shandalov writes personal reflections following Yom Hashoa in Israel.
*Deena writes at Habitza about why people bring challenges into their lives.
*Igoogledisrael comments how March was a record breaker for Israel's tourism.
*Ruti Mizrachi at Ki Yachol Nuchal! blogs about children collecting wood for Lag B'omer.
*Yisroel Medad at My Right Word shares some pictures from the top of the Hurva synagogue.
*One Tired Ema has a call for help. She is looking for advice on how to get her friend's children registered in Maamad Israeli schools.
*Miriam Woelke shares some positive thinking for Rosh Chodesh Iyar.
*Batya Medad tells us why she is different than everyone else in her generation.

*Benji Levitt blogs from Ben Gurion airport.
*The Muqata points us to this ridiculous newpaper article from Britain. The article does not believe Israeli tourism brochures should include pictures of the Kotel.
*Brian at This Norman Life was irked about the Simpson's episode in Israel.
Thanks for reading this roundup!
Want to Buy an Ereader for Israel? Don't Buy the iPAD.
I recommend that you buy yourself an ebook reader if you're making aliyah and want to be able to access and read books in English while living in Israel. An ebook reader is a electronic device designed for reading digital books and periodicals. With an ebook reader, you can download and read books in English from anywhere in the world, within a matter of minutes.
There are currently 3 main manufacturers of ebook readers: Amazon's Kindle, Barnes & Noble's Nook, and now — Apple's iPad. Apple’s iPad (considered to be in a category between the smartphone and the laptop computer) is the newest ebook reader to the market, released earlier this month on April 3rd.
At this point, however, it is not legal to have an iPad in Israel. Israel's Communications Ministry has blocked imports of iPads and ordered customs officials to confiscate the units when people enter the country carrying iPads. Israel says the wireless technology that Apple uses in the iPad is not compatible with the country's wifi standards. Ben-Gurion International Airport's customs division has impounded 10 iPads so far.
UPDATE 04/19/2010: The Wall Street Journal openly wonders why Israel is banning the iPad. They write that: "Some technology experts have speculated the ban could have to do with fears that the more powerful wireless frequency used by American devices could interfere with Israeli military communications technology."
There are currently 3 main manufacturers of ebook readers: Amazon's Kindle, Barnes & Noble's Nook, and now — Apple's iPad. Apple’s iPad (considered to be in a category between the smartphone and the laptop computer) is the newest ebook reader to the market, released earlier this month on April 3rd.
At this point, however, it is not legal to have an iPad in Israel. Israel's Communications Ministry has blocked imports of iPads and ordered customs officials to confiscate the units when people enter the country carrying iPads. Israel says the wireless technology that Apple uses in the iPad is not compatible with the country's wifi standards. Ben-Gurion International Airport's customs division has impounded 10 iPads so far.
UPDATE 04/19/2010: The Wall Street Journal openly wonders why Israel is banning the iPad. They write that: "Some technology experts have speculated the ban could have to do with fears that the more powerful wireless frequency used by American devices could interfere with Israeli military communications technology."
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Amazing Facts About The Country of Israel
(Source: aish.com)
Israel is the 100th smallest country, and has about 1/1000th of the world's population. It is only 62 years old,
Israel is the 100th smallest country, and has about 1/1000th of the world's population. It is only 62 years old,
Only 62 years old, 7 million people strong (less than Virginia), and smaller in size than New Jersey, surrounded by enemies, under constant threat and possessing almost no natural resources, and yet…
- Relative to its population, Israel is the largest immigrant-absorbing nation on earth. It has absorbed 350% of its population in 60 years.1
- Israel is the only country in history to have revived an unspoken language.
- Since the founding of the state, Israel has more Nobel Prices per capita than any other country. It has more laureates in real numbers than China, Mexico and Spain.2
- Israel has the 8th longest life expectancy (80.7 years), longer than the UK, US, and Germany3
- Israeli films were nominated three years in a row for the Academy Award's Best Foreign Film4
Environment
- Israel is the only country that entered the 21st century with a net gain in its number of trees, even more remarkable -- in an area that's mainly desert.5
- Over 90% of Israeli homes use solar energy for hot water, the highest percentage in the world.6, 7
- Israel will be the first country to host a national electric car network.8
- Israel is ranked in the top five Cleantech countries of the world, and operates the world’s largest desalinization plant.9
- Israeli companies are producing the largest solar energy production facility in the world.
Science & Technology
- Israel leads the world in the number of scientists and technicians in the workforce, 63% more than the U.S. It also has the most physicians and engineers per capita.10
- Israel's scientific research institutions are ranked 3rd in the world.11
- Israel is ranked 2nd in space sciences.12
- Israel produces the 3rd most scientific papers per capita, and the most in stem cell science.13
- More Israeli patents are registered in the United States than from Russia, India and China combined (combined population 2.5 billion). It leads the world in patents for medical equipment.11, 14, 15
- Israeli companies invented the drip irrigation system, discovered the world’s most used drug for multiple sclerosis, designed the Pentium NMX Chip technology and the Pentium 4 and Centrium microprocessors, created Instant Messenger (ICQ), and Israeli cows produce more milk per cow than any other in the world!
Business
- Israel has the 3rd highest rate of entrepreneurship among women in the world.16
- Israel has attracted the most venture capital investment per capita in the world, 30 times more than Europe17
- Israel has more NASDAQ-listed companies than any country besides the US -- more than all of Europe, India, China and Japan combined.18
- In proportion to its population, Israel has the largest number of startup companies in the world. In absolute numbers, Israel has more startups than any country other than the U.S.19
Defying the Odds
- Israel is the only country whose indigenous population returned to its native land after 2,000 years of forced exile.
- There are 26 official Muslim states in the world, and 18 official Christian states, but there is only one Jewish state.20
Friday, April 9, 2010
Obama's Passover Seder at the White House
Yes, President Obama hosted a Passover seder at the White House on the second night of Passover. You can read all about it, including what was served at the meal, on Politics Daily's website.
In the picture above, President Obama is dipping his fingers to commemorate the 10 plagues that the Egyptains were afflicted with.
The are many potential captions for the above picture. My caption is: "Obama learns from the Hagadah." One of the lessons from the Hagada is that both history and G-d takes the side of the Jews and the land of Israel. This is said clearly in Chapter 12 of Genesis: "I will bless those who bless you." Obama will hopefully take this lesson into consideration before making future policy decisions regarding Israel.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Roundup of Israel Blogs Issue #1
The "Round-Up of Israel Blogs" is a new feature. Every thursday, I will have a roundup of different blogs coming from Israel or about Israel.
Please contact me if you would like your blog to be included in this list.
* Deena at Habitza shares the exciting news that 2 of her friends from Katamon (aka the Bitza) are engaged!
* Ilene Rosenblum describes her experience using a Breslover Hagadah this past Pesach.
* A Mother in Israel discusses a gas mask distribution dilemma - what to tell the kids?
* Rav Spolter at Chopping Wood posts an audio shiur on Aharon's role in Parashat Shemini.
* Esser Agaroth discusses what he has heard on the street about kitniyot on Pesach.
* Rav Zev Shandalov describes what chol moed is like is in Israel.
* Igoogledisrael tells us why the Kinneret is NOT the place to visit on Chol Moed.
* Yehoshua Halevy shares another one of his beautiful pictures. The picture this time is a beautiful shot of the Old City, taken from a distance.
* Ruti Mizrachi reminds us to not forget to bake Shissel Challah this week for good luck!
* Miriam Woelke shares some pictures she took of the Kaliver Rebbe who visited the Kotel on Chol Moed.
* Batya Medad shows up some of the exquisitve meals she made for Shabbat Pesach.
* The Muqata tells us why Obama is good for aliya.
* The Normal Life tells us about some trips he made to the Galil and the Golan over chol moed.
* Rafi at Israel Easy asks whether it is better today to live in Israel than the US?
* Aliyah Blog discusses Ravi Lichtenstein's review of The Eye of the Storm.
* Reb Akiva at Mystical Paths talks about how a kassam rocket landed in the area he was in on his chol moed trip.
* Rabbi Tzvi Fishman blogs about how it could not be clearer from the straightforward reading of the Torah that G-d wants the Jewish People to live in Israel.
Please contact me if you would like your blog to be included in this list.
* Deena at Habitza shares the exciting news that 2 of her friends from Katamon (aka the Bitza) are engaged!
* Ilene Rosenblum describes her experience using a Breslover Hagadah this past Pesach.
* A Mother in Israel discusses a gas mask distribution dilemma - what to tell the kids?
* Rav Spolter at Chopping Wood posts an audio shiur on Aharon's role in Parashat Shemini.
* Esser Agaroth discusses what he has heard on the street about kitniyot on Pesach.
* Rav Zev Shandalov describes what chol moed is like is in Israel.
* Igoogledisrael tells us why the Kinneret is NOT the place to visit on Chol Moed.
* Yehoshua Halevy shares another one of his beautiful pictures. The picture this time is a beautiful shot of the Old City, taken from a distance.
* Ruti Mizrachi reminds us to not forget to bake Shissel Challah this week for good luck!
* Miriam Woelke shares some pictures she took of the Kaliver Rebbe who visited the Kotel on Chol Moed.
* Batya Medad shows up some of the exquisitve meals she made for Shabbat Pesach.
* The Muqata tells us why Obama is good for aliya.
* The Normal Life tells us about some trips he made to the Galil and the Golan over chol moed.
* Rafi at Israel Easy asks whether it is better today to live in Israel than the US?
* Aliyah Blog discusses Ravi Lichtenstein's review of The Eye of the Storm.
* Reb Akiva at Mystical Paths talks about how a kassam rocket landed in the area he was in on his chol moed trip.
* Rabbi Tzvi Fishman blogs about how it could not be clearer from the straightforward reading of the Torah that G-d wants the Jewish People to live in Israel.
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Just Remember: Obama Doesn't Rule The World
A Strained Relationship
The U.S. and Israel's current strained relationship is causing much concern globally, both in the Jewish world and within conservative circles. The U.S. has publicly delivered rebuke to Israel multiple times this year, most recently earlier this month. On March 12th, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton rebuked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for planning to build new Jewish housing in east Jerusalem, calling it "a deeply negative signal" for ties with the U.S..
Rav Druckman's Perspective
The U.S. and Israel's current strained relationship is causing much concern globally, both in the Jewish world and within conservative circles. The U.S. has publicly delivered rebuke to Israel multiple times this year, most recently earlier this month. On March 12th, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton rebuked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for planning to build new Jewish housing in east Jerusalem, calling it "a deeply negative signal" for ties with the U.S..
Rav Druckman's Perspective
Rabbi Chaim Druckman, a former MK and currently the head of the Bnei Akiva movement, made an important statement earlier this week, which I believe is the proper Jewish perspective for reacting to current events such as U.S. rebuke if Israel.
”Obama thinks he holds the wheel in his hands and that he leads the world, but the People of Israel deal with the Almighty, Who leads the world. He holds the true steering wheel in His hands, while Obama holds a fake wheel." (Source: Arutz Sheva)
Our Work for Pesach
It is important for everyone to keep Rav Druckman's message in mind - the Ribbono Shel Olam controls the world and decides the future of the Jewish people in the Land of Israel. Therefore, we must pray to Him and do mitzvot to gain favor in His eyes in order to secure a peaceful and stable future for Israel. This is especially pertinent to remember as we approach Passover. Passover is a time of great inspiration. We recall the past geula from Egypt and the fact that there will be a future geula. With this great inspiration, it's possible to reach great heights in the service of the Creator and it's an ideal time to look for ways to improve one's divine service
It is important for everyone to keep Rav Druckman's message in mind - the Ribbono Shel Olam controls the world and decides the future of the Jewish people in the Land of Israel. Therefore, we must pray to Him and do mitzvot to gain favor in His eyes in order to secure a peaceful and stable future for Israel. This is especially pertinent to remember as we approach Passover. Passover is a time of great inspiration. We recall the past geula from Egypt and the fact that there will be a future geula. With this great inspiration, it's possible to reach great heights in the service of the Creator and it's an ideal time to look for ways to improve one's divine service
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
8 Ways To Improve Your Hebrew

The following are 8 Hebrew language resources that I have found helpful. Please note that I already have a basic grasp of Hebrew (i.e. how to read Hebrew text, basic vocabulary, etc). These resources have helped me to build upon those basic Hebrew language skills.
1. Index cards.
Most of us have not used index cards since high school. I don't know of any better way to reviewing Hebrew vocabulary and phrases than index cards. They are easily carried around for spontaneous review and can be sorted.
2. Rosetta Stone
Rosetta Stone is a popular software program that "uses a combination of images, text, and sound, with difficulty levels increasing as the student progresses, in order to teach various vocabulary terms and grammatical functions intuitively, without drills or translation" (Wikipedia). Rosetta is used to train U.S. Army and State Department personnel before deployment to foreign countries.
I take notes while I go through each lesson and later transpose them to index cards for review. Rosetta is great for expanding and reinforcing vocabulary and for learning grammar essentials.
3. Pimsleur
The Pimsleur method is a series of audio CDs to help build conversational Hebrew skills. Instead of teaching pure vocabulary and grammar like Rosetta, Pimsleur teaches you how to have conversations. For example, Rosetta teaches you how to say "I prefer the red dress over the blue dress" while Pimsleur teaches you "Here is 5 shekels for the beer." In my mind, both Rosetta and Pimsleur are necessary. Each teaches the student a different skill.
Both Rosetta Stone and Pimsleur comes in 3 levels and can be bought through Amazon's website.
4. Reshet Bet and the Israel Radio Toolbar
A big challenge to being functional in Hebrew is learning how to understand native Israelis when they speak. Listening to Israeli radio, such as Reshet Bet's "Hayom Haze," is a great way to attune your ear to the native Israeli's Hebrew. Hayom Haze, recorded twice daily, can be listened to on demand over the internet (see links to Hayom Haze on Tsvi Sadan's website).
The "Israel Radio Toolbar" for Internet Explorer is an excellent tool for listening to Reshet Bet and other Israeli radio stations. You can also watch Israeli TV and the Knesset live using the toolbar.
5. Arutz Sheva
Arutz Sheva is an Israeli media network affiliated with the Religious Zionist movement. However, even if you don't associate yourself with Religous Zionism, Arutz Sheva's podcasts in Hebrew are great for downloading and listening to radio programs on the go. For example, I listen to a show by Yehudit Fogel on advice for families. I listen to the show in the car and it has helped me tremendously to understand native Hebrew.
I do not know of any other source of downloadable podcasts in Hebrew. Please let me know if you know of other sites with downloadable content.
6. Lo Lifnei Hayeladim
"Lo Lifnei Hayeladim" is an Israeli sitcom similar to Saturday Night Live. It is shown on Israeli TV at "Arutz 10" and is fantastic because it displays Hebrew subtitles underneath. The subtitles help me follow what the characters are saying when I don't understand them orally. Since the show is comprised of short skits, I have learned vocabulary specific to various types of situations, such as vocabulary for job interviews. Every episode ever aired is available online. The downside of this show is that the skits are not always clean.
7. Hamatchil
Hamatchil is a weekly newspaper with articles relating to world news, Israel news, and Jewish holidays. It is designed for non-native speakers and is written in easy Hebrew with nekudot and definitions after hard words. Reading this newspaper is excellent for building vocabulary, especially vocabulary relating to contemporary issues.
8. Rav Chaim Sabato books.
Rav Chaim Sabato is a Cairo-born Israeli rabbi who studied in Mercaz Harav and founded the Hesder yeshiva in Maale Adumim. He has four popular novels in Hebrew that are easy to read, several of which have been translated into English.
I am currently reading his second novel, Tiyum Kavanot, which is a moving account of his experiences as a soldier in the Yom Kippur War. It is a great book and I highly recommend that you read it. It has been translated into English by Toby Press and is titled Adjusting Sights.
For links to other Hebrew learning resources, see Jacob Richman's "Learn Hebrew Sites" and Nefesh B'Nefesh's "Ulpan and Hebrew Learning Resources Online."
Monday, March 22, 2010
Rav Aharon X2
Must the walls that separate our communities and our institutions soar quite so high, the interposing moat plunge quite so deep? Shall we never sled again?"
A CALM VIEW OF RAGING ISSUES

While it's refreshing to read a charedi rav's perspective on these controversial issues (rather than the traditional approach of simply ignoring that issues exist), I still had serious issues with certain parts of the book. But this is what I expected for a book that promises to deal with controversial issues. For example, one of Rabbi Feldman's goals in writing the book was "to expose the vacuity of the Zionist ideology" (p. 3) while also demonstrating how the "religious community is a viable, flourishing society...filled with concern for one another" (p.14). In reading these two statements, I felt Rav Feldman was implying that being religious and Zionistic are not compatible.
A CALM RESPONSE TO A CALM VIEW

It turns out that the two rabbis have much in common. Both studied in the same Baltimore yeshiva (in which Rav Lichtenstein fondly remembers "the chilling warmth of joint sledding in Druid Hill Park on Sunday afternoons") and both learned under Rav Yitzchak Hunter at Yeshivat Chaim Berlin.
THE PLEA FROM RAV LICHTENSTEIN
Despite a shared past, Rav Lichtenstein's prupose for writing the article was to bring to attention certain diffucltuies that he found in the book. Rav Lichtenstein is a leader in the religious Zionist world while Rav Feldman is a top charedi rov in the U.S., and their points of dissention could have been predicted. Rav Lichtenstein critique of the section of the book titled Zionsim is that he wonders: "...is it indeed desirable...to engage in a foray of utter denial of Jewish worth to what the Zionist enterprise...hath wrought?" And in dealing with a contemporary feminist issue, Rav Lichtenstein bring sources to dispute Rav Feldman's statement that "“that the classic authorities agree unanimously that women are forbidden to wear tefillin.”
The conclusion of the article struck the deepest chord with me. As I mentioned above, Rav Lichtenstein remembers sledding with Rav Feldman as a youth. Rav Lichtenstein concludes by writing:
"That pair of juvenile prattling sledders is now well past seventy-five. It stands to reason and is, presumably, mandated by joint mission, that our worlds meet and attain mutual fruition. As we both painfully know, however, this occurs all too rarely. Must the walls that separate our communities and our institutions soar quite so high, the interposing moat plunge quite so deep? Shall we never sled again?"
WHAT'S NEXT
I currently live in Baltimore and have heard reports that Rav Lichtenstein's article has circulated throughout the Ner Israel beis medarsh. Rav Feldman is purported to have drafted a response to Rav Aharon Lichtenstein's article, which will be published in the next Jewish Action. I look forward to reading it.
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Negative Feelings Towards Aliyah
"What are we seeing here? Jobs. Jobs, jobs, jobs." - Rachel Berger, NBN
NEGATIVITY TOWARDS THE IDEA OF MOVING TO ISRAEL
The amount of people who have reacted negatively to my decision to make aliyah is overwhelming.
Take Susan S., who has lived in Israel for over 20 years. In response to a post that I wrote on a yahoo listserve, she stated: "I guess you're religious. I can't see why anyone would otherwise want to make Aliya these days. The situation here is pretty terrible from all points of view, and the only good thing is the weather in the winter." Her response was typical. Others responses wondered why I would move to a country that "Amenijad has in his sights" and they believed that "Israel has too many Americans anyways and besides, there are no jobs here." Similarly, one of my former rebbeim from yeshiva happened to be in town last week. He lives in Telstone, Israel and he called me mushugana, mentioning that many of his neighbors are unemployed.
In America, I have received similar luke-warm to outright pessimistic comments. An owner of a local kosher restaurant overheard my wife speaking about our decision to make aliyah. He interrupted her mid-sentence to tell her that he once made aliyah in the early 80s. He shouted - "In Israel, employers won't even give you enough money to cover basic needs!" He was appreciative that his aliyah failed so that his kids wouldn't have to go to the army.
ARE THERE REALLY NO JOBS IN ISRAEL?
The message I received on my pilot trip was drastically different. If my pilot trip was a novel, its theme would be similar to Jacob Richman's CJI webpage: "Reason #843,008 to make aliyah: There are jobs in Israel!." I met with Rachel Berger from Nefesh B'Nefesh's employment division in its large headquarters in Jerusalem. She went through various websites with job listings (such as Linked-In groups). As she went through each source of employment information, she would repeat the mantra: "What are we seeing here? Jobs. Jobs, jobs, jobs."
By the way, the official NBN statistic is that 97% of NBN's olim find a job within their first year of living in Israel.
I also met with successful olim, like Goel Jasper, Paul Shindman, and Paula Stern, who immigrated to Israel years before and were successful in their careers. The official reason for meeting these olim was to spend 20 minutes to find out general information about particular careers in Israel. However, each meeting ended up being an intense session that took several hours. We discussed how they started in Israel, what their Israel experience has been like, and about how there are definitely jobs for Olim in Israel!
Most importantly, I met with a friend, David C., who made aliyah several years ago. David is my hero and in my mind, the epitome of the successful oleh. He could be the NBN poster child. He has worked diligently to make a name for himself in Israel in the field of internet marketing -- and he has been extremely successful. With David as an example, I see that it is possible to make it in Israel.
YOU HAVE TO TRY

I guess my reasons to moving to Israel are similar. Ostensibly, it is totally crazy that I am moving. I have a very decent job, my wife and I are both slated to receive promotions in the near future, etc. However, something inside both of us is screaming that we belong in Israel. Yes, it is risky. However, my wife and I both feel that we have to try to make it in Israel.
Friday, March 5, 2010
Hilarious! 10 Ways to Know Your Aliyah Is Successful.
This list comes from Ilene Rosenblum and was written in the spirit of Purim. It's very funny. Ilene is an olah and an incredibly talented freelance writer and digital media developer. She has a very interesting blog, Aliyah L'Torah, which is worth following. Thanks, Ilene.
Israeli culture can be difficult to adjust to, but it gets easier with time. Here are some signs that you are blending in well:
#10. You met your 70-year-old Shabbat host when she shoved you aside in order to get on the empty bus.
#9. Your chain-smoking sherut driver doesn’t stay in the lane, but, Baruch Hashem, he says Tehillim.
#8. All of your 5 sons carry a gun. And so does your rabbi.
#7. Your morning commute involves hitchiking.
#6. Your Russian is coming along nicely.
#5. You wear a winter coat and hat when it is 18 degrees C outside. Sandals, however, are appropriate in any weather, or during any lifecycle event.
#4. You were set up on a shidduch during a job interview.
#3. You have no problem using a storage closet as a dressing room even though it doesn’t have a mirror, or a door. The cab driver idling by the storefront will tell you if the clothes are mat’im.
#2. You have eaten schnitzel for breakfast.
#1. You really begin your grocery shopping once you’ve put your cart in the checkout line.
A commenter to Ilene's blog added another one:
"The men mending the roof opposite, when they heard me ‘kvetch’ about the rain “Gveret, zarich le’hagid Baruch Hashem le’kol ha’geshem” – and I’m not even sure they were Jewish !!"
10 Ways to Know Your Aliyah Is Successful
Israeli culture can be difficult to adjust to, but it gets easier with time. Here are some signs that you are blending in well:
#10. You met your 70-year-old Shabbat host when she shoved you aside in order to get on the empty bus.
#9. Your chain-smoking sherut driver doesn’t stay in the lane, but, Baruch Hashem, he says Tehillim.
#8. All of your 5 sons carry a gun. And so does your rabbi.
#7. Your morning commute involves hitchiking.
#6. Your Russian is coming along nicely.
#5. You wear a winter coat and hat when it is 18 degrees C outside. Sandals, however, are appropriate in any weather, or during any lifecycle event.
#4. You were set up on a shidduch during a job interview.
#3. You have no problem using a storage closet as a dressing room even though it doesn’t have a mirror, or a door. The cab driver idling by the storefront will tell you if the clothes are mat’im.
#2. You have eaten schnitzel for breakfast.
#1. You really begin your grocery shopping once you’ve put your cart in the checkout line.
A commenter to Ilene's blog added another one:
"The men mending the roof opposite, when they heard me ‘kvetch’ about the rain “Gveret, zarich le’hagid Baruch Hashem le’kol ha’geshem” – and I’m not even sure they were Jewish !!"
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Kumah.org Aliyah Revolution
I received a really cool album in the mail today. It's from kumah.org and was free. It's called the Aliyah Revolution Album.
Per the note that was included in the album cover:
"The Aliyah Revolution Album" is not about making it in Israel. It is about having the strength to break out of the powerful gravitational pull of America and the other countries of the Diaspora. The purpose of the music collected here is to give you strength and inspiration in those moments when you need a reminder or a boost - when the exile is getting you down. Music is a powerful medicine to mend the broken spirit, and that is what our nation needs now more than ever - spirit! We need guts to wake up, to get up, to stop being afraid. This album is about the freedom of fearlessness and the wings to fly home.
Here is the youtube video advertisement for the album.
Per the note that was included in the album cover:
"The Aliyah Revolution Album" is not about making it in Israel. It is about having the strength to break out of the powerful gravitational pull of America and the other countries of the Diaspora. The purpose of the music collected here is to give you strength and inspiration in those moments when you need a reminder or a boost - when the exile is getting you down. Music is a powerful medicine to mend the broken spirit, and that is what our nation needs now more than ever - spirit! We need guts to wake up, to get up, to stop being afraid. This album is about the freedom of fearlessness and the wings to fly home.
Here is the youtube video advertisement for the album.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
My Nefesh B'Nefesh Essay
(We have returned from our pilot trip, and I really have so much to report, and to write about. However, all of my time for the past 2 weeks has been spent getting over pneumonia, and filling out the Nefesh B'Nefesh application that is due this week.
However, part of the Nefesh B' Nefesh application is a supporting statement (i.e. essay) on why you want to make aliyah. I thought I would include a draft of my essay here as a post. I am in the process of revising this essay and will repost when it's final)
However, part of the Nefesh B' Nefesh application is a supporting statement (i.e. essay) on why you want to make aliyah. I thought I would include a draft of my essay here as a post. I am in the process of revising this essay and will repost when it's final)
The land and State of Israel have been pivotal in forming my Jewish identity.
Let me explain.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Snow "State of Emergency" Best Thing to Happen
Its official. At this point, this winter season has broken the record as Maryland's snowiest winter ever.
Its like Jadis, the White Witch, has come from Narnia and made it "always winter" here. We received 3 feet of snow (yes, thats right, 3 whole feet) over Shabbos and only a few days later, another foot and a half of white fluff is being deposited on my steps as I write this blog post. The Baltimore Sun is now reporting that two more snow storms are on its way for the following week.
Surprisingly, the result of all this snow in our lives has been positive. Sure, there has been some hysteria (my mother calls every few hours to make sure I'm okay) and rumors of unfortunate events have spread, where purportedly emergency personnel were unable to make it to a "scene" quickly enough to save a life. And in a more trivial matter, my wife had to wait over an hour to check out at the local supermarket yesterday before the beginning of the storm.
THE POSITIVE EFFECTS OF A SNOW STORM
However, the real effect of these snow storms and self-proclaimed "state of emergency" has been positive. Mainly, the Jewish community here in Baltimore has come together like never before. Usually, with our houses spread out from each other, with having to drive to get anywhere, and with over 10 shuls within a convenient walking distance, I don't see my neighborhoods. Its not exaggerating to say that I only see my immediate next neighbor only several times a year.
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Am I Allowed To Move To Israel?
(The following is a post from the blog Mystical Paths that I copied here. Its fantastic.)
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I received the following question from a reader...
How is it that you have/are promoting aliyah if (you know?) :
The Talmud explains That we have been foresworn, by three strong oaths, not to ascend to the Holy Land as a group using force, not to rebel against the governments of countries in which we live, and not by our sins, to prolong the coming of moshiach; as is written in Tractate Kesubos 111a.
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I received the following question from a reader...
How is it that you have/are promoting aliyah if (you know?) :
The Talmud explains That we have been foresworn, by three strong oaths, not to ascend to the Holy Land as a group using force, not to rebel against the governments of countries in which we live, and not by our sins, to prolong the coming of moshiach; as is written in Tractate Kesubos 111a.
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
A Spiritual and Halachic Guide to Making Aliyah
(Here is the information for a new book on the halachos of making aliyah and and below is review from Arutz Sheva)
Oleh Chadash
The New Immigrant to Israel
A Spiritual and Halachic Guide to Making Aliyah
Rabbi Mordechai Friedfertig – former Rabbi of Kehillat Ohr Tzion in Buffalo, NY, and now spreading Ha-Rav Shlomo Aviner's Torah for Yeshivat Ateret Yerushalayim and living in Ma'ale Adumim - has authored a new book on halachot, customs and insights relating to all stages of making aliyah. "Oleh Chadash" – A Spiritual and Halachic Guide to Making Aliyah is a single, 2-sided volume (175 pages) with the full text in both English and Hebrew. Many of the halachot and insights are based upon the teachings of Ha-Rav Aviner.
Oleh Chadash
The New Immigrant to Israel
A Spiritual and Halachic Guide to Making Aliyah
Rabbi Mordechai Friedfertig – former Rabbi of Kehillat Ohr Tzion in Buffalo, NY, and now spreading Ha-Rav Shlomo Aviner's Torah for Yeshivat Ateret Yerushalayim and living in Ma'ale Adumim - has authored a new book on halachot, customs and insights relating to all stages of making aliyah. "Oleh Chadash" – A Spiritual and Halachic Guide to Making Aliyah is a single, 2-sided volume (175 pages) with the full text in both English and Hebrew. Many of the halachot and insights are based upon the teachings of Ha-Rav Aviner.
Monday, February 1, 2010
Thursday, January 28, 2010
It Takes Less Money To Live in Israel
(The following is from Breslov.org)
One of the things that really kills me, now that I’m living in Eretz Yisroel, is how much money I had in the UK, that I wasted on nonsense. We were tremendously in debt in the UK. Even though I had my own high-earning business and my husband was a lawyer, we still spent far more than we earned every month.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Why Aliyah Is Important For You
(The following is a post from Kumah.)
Wherever you might be right now there is one thing that is certain, you are a Jew. You might be a Jew living in New York, you might be a Jew living in London, you might even be an accountant. Its even possible that you might be looking for a whole new way to identify yourself, either way no matter what, you are a Jew first and a Jew last. It is important to clarify that because by speaking of Aliyah and its importance we need to understand what being a Jew and living in Israel has to do with each other. There are many countries and regions in the world filled with all kinds of people. There is but one country promised to one people, explicitly stated by G-d, and that is the land of Israel for the Jewish people...
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
One Woman's Description Of Why Her Aliyah Was Succesful
I do not, and have not regretted or questioned my decision to make Aliyah.
Even once since I opened my Tik with the Jewish Agency in October of 2006 right up until now. Not to say I haven't encountered ˜challenges". I am in my third apartment, and my 5th job. But one can have these issues in the US, especially these days.
I firmly believe that my Aliyah has been successful because, in addition to all the great things listed on the attached document, I DECIDED that it was going to be successful. All I needed to do was work out all the details.
For anyone considering making Aliyah-while having a contingency plan in mind to address the remote possibility that you would ever return to the US permanently, consider the following comment I made to my friends when they asked me why I would sell my house, what if I have to come back?
I knew they just didn't want me to go because they would miss me. But, as I told them, if I am making plans for what I would do if it doesn't work out, then why am I going in the first place? My Aliyah IS GOING TO WORK. Period.
And it has.
Even once since I opened my Tik with the Jewish Agency in October of 2006 right up until now. Not to say I haven't encountered ˜challenges". I am in my third apartment, and my 5th job. But one can have these issues in the US, especially these days.
I firmly believe that my Aliyah has been successful because, in addition to all the great things listed on the attached document, I DECIDED that it was going to be successful. All I needed to do was work out all the details.
For anyone considering making Aliyah-while having a contingency plan in mind to address the remote possibility that you would ever return to the US permanently, consider the following comment I made to my friends when they asked me why I would sell my house, what if I have to come back?
I knew they just didn't want me to go because they would miss me. But, as I told them, if I am making plans for what I would do if it doesn't work out, then why am I going in the first place? My Aliyah IS GOING TO WORK. Period.
And it has.
Monday, January 25, 2010
Only In Israel: Computer Program Ensures That Chametz Not Sold On Pesach
Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi Yonah Metzger Shlita explained on Wednesday that last year, realizing that unacceptable realities exist regarding the sale of chametz on Pesach, compelling him to act, and do so immediately following Pesach last year.
The Rav explained that in many cases, stores segregate chametz items in a corner, behind a curtain or sheets, and too often, shoppers will reach into that area during yomtov and take something out, which is brought to the cashier and purchased, many times without anyone noticing.
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Charedim Are Entering the Army!
The number of hareidi-religious men in the army is on the rise: Over 1,000 in the IDF, and nearly another 1,100 in National Service.
So reports the “Freedom of Religion and Conscience” organization in its latest report. The group’s Deputy Director, Haaretz reporter Shachar Ilan, submitted the report to MK Yochanan Plesner (Kadima); Plesner chairs the Knesset supervisory committee on the implementation of the Tal Law that outlines the framework for the enlistment of hareidi men.
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Living Safely in a Non-Jewish Country Is Only Temporary
(Here is an interesting Dvar Torah that some may find inspirational for making aliyah)
The path to redemption in joy is open for every single Jew in the world. You need but get on a plane and come home to Israel, leaving the exile behind you. For sure, Jews in many countries are still living in comfort, plenty and safety. But the only guarantee we have is that one day, this will come to an end.
The path to redemption in joy is open for every single Jew in the world. You need but get on a plane and come home to Israel, leaving the exile behind you. For sure, Jews in many countries are still living in comfort, plenty and safety. But the only guarantee we have is that one day, this will come to an end.
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Nefesh B Nefesh Is Awesome
(This is an interesting blog post that I found defending Nefesh B'Nefesh against an editorial from Michal Hirsh at Jpost).
Michael Hirsch published in The Jerusalem Post an article entitled "American Aliya - An Exercise in Futility." (The article can also be found here, at Matzav.com.) In his essay, Hirsch basically slam-dunks into the ash can the entire program of Nefesh B'Nefesh, apparently because it has not emptied the Jewish streets of America into flights headed for Israel. The article was subsequently published by the estimable Rebbetzin Dr. Rivkah Lambert Adler on her "Baltimore Chug Aliyah" list (which can be sought -- and joined! -- at http://groups.yahoo.com).
Michael Hirsch published in The Jerusalem Post an article entitled "American Aliya - An Exercise in Futility." (The article can also be found here, at Matzav.com.) In his essay, Hirsch basically slam-dunks into the ash can the entire program of Nefesh B'Nefesh, apparently because it has not emptied the Jewish streets of America into flights headed for Israel. The article was subsequently published by the estimable Rebbetzin Dr. Rivkah Lambert Adler on her "Baltimore Chug Aliyah" list (which can be sought -- and joined! -- at http://groups.yahoo.com).
Monday, January 18, 2010
Resolving Employment Issues For New Imigrants
(I found this blog entry written by Ron Machol, who works at Israemploy, an organization which assists immigrants to Israel and others prepare for the job market and find work. In one of my roles, I act as an employment advisor, assisting people to identify transferable skills and career paths, create Israeli style CVs/resume, and perform an effective job search)
In my job at Israemploy, I am in touch with many new immigrants and potential immigrants to Israel. While certainly each individual has questions/concerns/problems that are specific to their unique situation, there are issues that are common to many people relocating to a new country. These do not impact new immigrants only, but most new immigrants do consider some of these questions:
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
New Aliyah Memoir
(Comments from Rivka Adler: This one is a breezy read. Great for a long Friday night. Special interest to those in Gush Etzion where the Englards landed, but a great read for anyone in the "aliyah parsha".)
* SETTLING FOR MORE: From Jersey to Judea by Zahava Englard *
Purchase here.
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