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Saturday, May 31, 2014

north tiyul

Hey people who actually read this!
I’m sorry its been a while. Good thing I’m busy.
So a couple of weeks ago we went on a tiyul up North. We did some awesome scenic hikes in the Golan. We also went to Amuka where we all obviously prayed for a “shidduch.” I’ll never fit in with seminary girls hahaha always sticking out.
I got to see some of my “heritage” that day as well. We went to a bunker where chayalim fought for the Golan in 1973 which used to be a part of Syria.
I just have a passion for hiking in Israel. Every step I take I know that I’m exactly where I’m supposed to be and that there’s nowhere I’d rather be.

We all jumped into a maayan, a spring at one point to cool off. We were swimming and everything and I grabbed a rock of a waterfall to hold on and all of a sudden my Hadaya ring falls of. It was very sentimental to me. I bought it on ILEAD and I got Em Eshcachech engraved onto it at a moment of inspiration. Anyways, the first thing that came to mind is how even if I buy a new one, it won’t be the same! One of my friends was like Millie, theres something under my toe but don’t get your hopes up ,its probs a rock. She picked it up and obvs it was my ring. Hashem really loves me. THAT DOESNT HAPPEN! How do you lose a ring in a deep spring of running water and then find it a few minutes later!!??? Totally miracle. This mini-event set the mood for a lot of my friends for the rest of the trip. twas amazinnnnn


efrat/ lag baomer

So for Shabbat of May 16/17 Bracha set a few of us up at her friend's house in Efrat.
Ended up being an awesome family. They made Aliyah 10 years ago. The sons were ages 21 (in army), 20 (in hesder), and 18 (graduating high school)
We chilled with them and their friends all of Friday night and Saturday. Everyone is in the army so naturally, that was all we spoke about the whole time. The guys were telling us how its literally their life. Its what they eat, sleep and breathe. Their short and not so often breaks are their only gasp of air but they spend it with their minds on base. Whose unit is better, who gets better meals (air force), who works hard, who feels like they contribute, etc. Their life concerns at this point in time are at a much different area than mine. They really put things on hold in order to protect us every day. They don't talk about partying and girls the way I'm used to. - no offense boys. The army put them in a position that they have to prioritize their values. The guys were pretty serious about their positions and I couldn't be more thankful to them. I kept on thanking them all weekend! I really look up to these kids. They don't talk about grades, college or anything school related. They have to serve for three years before college even becomes a thing. Just gave me a lot to think about

Lag BaOmer was that night. Israel was a Giant fire! We made smores and pita bread by the fire. Sang danced and had watermelon.

It was like fire and ice


As you all know, Yom Hazikaron and Yom Haatzmaut are back to back. It's a crazy transition!
The night Yom Hazikaron started we went to a Masa event at Letrune
Natan Shiransky spoke which was pretty cool. Different fallen soldiers were being acknowledged for their outstanding acccomplishents. I left this event with such a sense of pride and inspiration. These people were more or less my age and they changed the world! Michael Levine really sticks out to me (I highly recommend watching his documentary) He was a seemingly regular kid like me who loved Israel. He wanted to go into the army but he was too small. Since he couldn't get in, he climbed into a window on the second floor by standing on a dumpster. When we snuck into the office they asked him for his paper work. " What do you mean you have no papers? You can't get in through the front door without them!"

"Who says I came in through the front door?"

This story is always there in my mind reminding me that if I really want something, no matter how big, I can go for it and get it if I want it enough. 

The morning of Yom Hazikaron we went to Har Hertzl, the military Cemetary. 
There were thousands of people there. These people weren't like me. They were visiting their fallen friends and family. During the national siren, everything just froze. I saw soldiers salute by their friends graves, family members with blank stares, if not tears. 
We spent a few hours there. Bibi spoke...
A couple of friends and I walked around visiting graves. I got to speak to Michael Levines mom and thanked her for raising such an inspirational son. So many people were motivated to join the army by him! It's really incredible what one person can do. 
We spoke to family members of many fallen soldiers and heard tons of stories about determination, courage, and bravery. 
Before we left we went to Yoni Netanyahu's grave. A couple of soldiers a few years older than us were there too. By this time the Cemetary was almost empty. We spoke to them about their experiences, motives and future plans. Turns out that these guys were inspired to enlist by Michael Levine who was inspired by Yoni. It came full circle. 
For the rest of the day I felt this pang of guilt inside of me. Why don't I live here?



Yom Hazikaron in Israel with our people is the only way to spend it!!!!
I also recommend the Roi Klein documentary omg so good 

So Yom Haatzmaut. Ahhh amazing 
For the night part we went to some concert in Efrat. Whole world was there. And a lot of flags

During the day we went to Vicky and Rav Berglases house in Neve Aliza which is a settlement that THEY STARTED. They founded my school btw. Amazing people wow
There was a band and we danced in the street and had amazin food 
We played a surprisingly good softball game and then Vicky told us her life story and Aliyah story. I want to be her!!!!!!!!! 
I'm just so happy I get to live in a time that prophecies are coming true! Israel is a state, people dance in the streets and live freely in Israel. 
It's the best place In the world. I never want to leave 😭



Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Shabbat in Neve Daniel

This past Shabbat we had a shabbaton in Neve Daniel which is a yeshoov (settlement) in the Gush. 
On Friday we went to another up and coming yeshoov called Sedei boaz. We met women who found out about this land and decided to settle it. They literally put caravans on top of the hill and had their husbands build houses. It slowly became a community and now 50 families live there. 150 more houses are being built now. It's amazing what people can do. Like the rest of the Gush, the land is originally owned by the government and therefore the settlement is starting off illegally. After some time the government wil (hopefully) legalize it like the rest of the area. 
You can donate a brick for their new shul for 180 shekel ($53) in your name. If you're interested, please let me know and I can arrange it. 😉
So for Shabbat we were scattered throughout different homes in the area. Naomi and I were put in the lovely home of Laura and Chaim Ben David. They're an American family originally from Teaneck / Boca Raton. Laura is the author of "Moving Up: An Aliyah Journal" which is available on Amazon. Lol
Throughout Shabbat we heard a lot of Aliyah stories from people who now live in Neve Daniel. It was all very informative and inspiring. Amazingly, there are girls in my school who are making Aliyah in the near future and some are looking into the army/ national service /  college programs. 

We ended the night with a delish Seuda shilishit and havdala by Rav Eitan 
Stay tuned

Friday, May 2, 2014

Poland- read till the end


About a month ago I went to Poland on a trip called Heritage. I was scared to wait too long to blog about it but the trip had such an impact on me that its still fresh in my mind. I journaled intensely the entire time.
During the few weeks leading up to the trip I was less than excited. I didn’t want to be cold, hungry, tired, and depressed for a week straight. I was dreading the uncomfortable conditions that lay ahead. However, I went in with a neutral attitude and it ended up being one of the most uplifting, spiritual, moving weeks of my life.
Throughout the week we visited ghettos, old towns, monuments, and concentration camps. 
One of the first places we went to was the Warsaw Cemetery. 

Warsaw cemetery

To know who we are is to know who we were. 450,000 people were buried there. (100,000 in a mass grave) Its not only about who was buried there, but who wasn’t. We walked through the cemetery for hours only to realize that we had only seen a fraction of it. The graves we saw were able to tell us tons of Jewish history. A stone that stood out to me was one that said “Esha Tzanuah” (modest woman). What a compliment for a Jewish woman. Another one had a bookshelf with a missing book. The person who died didn’t get to finish what he was supposed to in his lifetime. Those things really make you think. What do I want mine to say? At the end of the day these people were boiled down to their tombstones. We have to strive for the best so that we can be remembered and leave a legacy behind us. 
Some of my favorite places we visited were the Kevarim of Gedolei Torah. In the Warsaw Cemetery we visited Rav Chaim Soloveitchik’s Kever. He’s The Rav’s grandfather. He was a genius! He revolutionized learning, making it conceptual. He cared so much about Emet HaTorah. He was one of the biggest Baalei Hessed in Brisk. People would leave their babies on his doorstep if they had nowhere to go. He would probably come off as ALL intellect. He was really about the heart. I was standing in a place of tremendous Midot and we all said Tehillim. We ended by singing the words to Acheinu around a mass grave. We then poured Adamat Eretz Yisrael on top to honor the Jews who didn’t have the zechut (merit) to be buried in Israel. (Before we came to Poland we all took Israel soil with us packed in plastic bags)

There are so many places I could blog about but I don’t want to bore you so I’m only putting select impactful ones. 
Treblinka- Our brothers and sisters were brought here to be killed more “efficiently”. They were told that their destination would be nice. Adolf Eichmann was in charge of the transports. Poland has 3-5 million Jews and tons of them were killed here because of their large population. Three camps were set up -” Reinhart”. They were to be kept a deep dark secret. Camps were to be away from cities and near railroad tracks. Two million were killed and then Auschwitz & Birkenau were opened. Berlitz (Belsitz) was opened to kill even more Jewry. Then Sobibor to kill by the German border. Then Treblinka where I was standing at that moment. There were so many goods coming in, it was like a gold rush. Russian POWs were officers here and stationed in peoples houses. Fathers gave their daughters and wives to the guards to get their goods. It got to the point where Jews were told to take off their boots because they would get killed anyways. When they got off the train, the water was sold for gold. The whole camp was the size of a soccer field. It was so primitive. Everything was made out of wood. Half the Jews were kept alive to sort through clothing. The worst job was a barber before the gas chambers. Jews also had to take the bodies out to burn them. This camp murdered 8-9 hundred thousand Jews. I cant even think in numbers close to that. Anyone who wasn’t a perfect Arian was put in “Euthanasia Program”. Hitler gathered them to kill anyone not like them. That summer of 1939, they were invited to send their kids to a free summer camp. They were murdered with fatal injections to their hearts. This new group, the T4 commanders killed 100,000 people and established a group who listen to Hitler’s commands. So much corruption here. The Jews being brought to gas chambers were compared to the sheep at the slaughter house with their pathetic eyes. The ride to the camps made people lose their will to live. Without will, you wont survive. When people of Grudno arrived, they tried to attack the SS. 2500 people were killed. Ani Maamin (I believe) was written on a train on the way here. The man who wrote it said hell give 1/2  of his Olam Haba to whoever gets his song to the Rebbi. The song was sang on Yom Kippur- (David Fastag) We sang this song at Treblinka. Upon arrival it looked gorgeous. They saw a clock that they didn’t know was stuck at 6pm and a band played music. Jews who arrived earlier were forced to greet them with smiles against their will, avoiding death. They think their taking a shower on their way to Bialystok. They are told to get their bags and they’ll get them back later. “Anyone not feeling well will be provided transportation.” They look like they’re going to a hospital, but no, they’re seated at the edge of a pit, shot, and thrown in along with the previously killed Jews, and actual garbage. All mixed together. According to semi-reliable numbers, 1.2 million Jews were brought here. Some trains were mostly dead bodies. There were no selections here. Everyone was gassed right away. The Ukranians and Russians had unlimited alcohol and the Jews had food since people were constantly being killed. Imagine Jews cheering when another train came since it meant more food. The guilt they felt....
(I have a lot more to say but I really have to cut it)
People were forced to run (or get out of breath so the gas would work quicker) They went in like stupid goats, unaware. 
We stood around in a circle reading letters/ messages that people wrote shortly before their deaths. I was holding a letter that I read out loud on my turn. I couldn’t comprehend that I was commemorating a family that was killed. An actual family. Who even knows if anyone alive in the world right now even knows who these people are. They could, and probably are, just cut off. Thats it.
“ Were killed: Zelig, Fania, Eliyahu Rozenweld from Brisk on the Bug.” Most of the letters speak of revenge. Vicky read a letter to us that was written in blood to his father, Hashem, to get revenge on the Nazis. Us there was the best revenge. 

People lost 100% hope. Today we know we have Israel to go to which is extremely comforting.

I'm just gonna fast forward to the last day of the trip. Auschwitz. We spent 7 hours there. I saw everything. I could spend hours writing about it (I did, in my journal) but I'm just gonna write about the last part. We were in a barrack with lit candles singing Lecha Dodi. The women who spent time in here would save their butter from the week to make a candle for Shabbat. They would put a string in it and light it. Once they started singing they would hear all the barracks around them go silent listening to them sing Kabbalat Shabbat. We sang for a while until it was time to leave. We walked out while singing in a single file line, carefully climbing over the wire that we weren't really supposed to pass. I was leaving Auschwitz the day I came. I was leaving alive. It was one of the most liberating feelings after hours of just horrible feelings. I was going on a plane back to Israel, the most amazing country in the world. A country I can call home. The country with the best technology, medicine, a revived language, tons of history, the best army, the most scientists and technicians in the workforce.    Israel is a world leader in water renewal, recycling, desalination, and solar heating and invented the drip irrigation system used around the world. 
And much much more. 
  • In every generation we were persecuted if it was crusades, pogroms, inquisitions, anything. But look at is now. I don't know what I did to be born into this incredible nation but I am extremely thankful and now value being a Jew on a whole new level. My Jewish pride is still on a high from this trip and בעזרת-ה׳ it always will be. 
Silent march to Auschwitz
Auschwitz