Friday 8 October 2021

Up, Up and Away

 211008

8th October 2021

 

Shabbat Shalom!

 

I will not be writing my Shabbat Shalom next week because I am going to New York with Rachel for Joshua's Bar Mitzva! I am so excited. We are only going for one week and will be very caught up with family, so please don't be upset that we won't have time to see anyone. This will be a purely family orientated week spent reconnecting with Daniel's children, my grandchildren, Rachel's niece and nephew, who we haven't seen since the funeral. It will be a week of mixed emotions, of the joy of being with the children and Karen of course, but a deep sadness that my boy will not be there. I can't wait to show them the designs for Dr. Dan's Room and pray that they can come to the opening. I have a sneaky feeling that it will be a Zoom opening thanks to Covid-19.

 

Did you know that we have receptors for temperature and touch and that they determine how and where we feel pain? David Julius together with his co-researcher Arden Papatoutian from the University of California in San Francisco, won the Nobel Prize for their research, which it is believed will be of great importance in dealing with chronic pain and its link to sensing heat, cold and mechanical force. The Prize for most of the sciences is usually overshadowed by the Nobel Prize for Literature or Peace, less dramatic, famous or of public interest yet it is those Nobels which change our lives.  David Julius is a Jew whose family fled the anti-Semitism of Russia and is very proud of his heritage. https://www.jpost.com/breaking-news/nobel-prize-in-medicine-awarded-to-julius-and-patapoutian-680990

 

In October 1986 a young Israeli Air Force Navigator and Weapons Systems Officer, Lieutenant Colonel Ron Arad went missing in action over Lebanon. His disappearance has been a source of human interest ever since. Israeli Secret Service have been looking for him ever since, believing that he could still be alive, but knowing that he was moved from country to country, possibly including and almost certainly orchestrated by Iran. Recent DNA studies suggest that his remains have been found. His wife Tami and daughter Yuval have heard nothing since that fateful day, indeed Yuval was only a baby when he was captured. Tami, unlike others, has said that if his remains are found then Israel should not pay the heavy price of his return.

 

Did you know that United States troops are in Syria? It was announced this week that they will stay there to fight the Islamic State and rebuild a civilian infrastructure. It appears that their presence was in doubt during the last Administration but the current Biden Administration feels that Syria, unlike Afghanistan, can still be saved. It is of ultimate interest to the Kurds of Syria who have been oppressed for many years particularly under the shadow of the current civil war. Kurdistan, a large tract of land and home to the Kurdish people has been occupied by no less than 5 countries; Syria, Armenia, Iraq, Iran and Turkey, none of which is willing to return the land to the Kurdish people. This occupation is constantly under the radar while Israel's "occupation" is constantly under the headlight of international condemnation.

 

The Pandora Papers are clearly well named because they have opened a Pandora's Box of corruption and hidden fortunes. The alleged perpetrators are not known criminals but leaders and esteemed politicians and Royalty. Listen and be disturbed https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHAtIFyDB8k&t=19s

 

Yet another Arab Airline has started regular flights from Ben Gurion Airport. Egyptair began direct flights to Cairo, following Bahraini Airlines,  and of course daily flights to Dubai and Abu Dhabi. As the rest of the world becomes more and more anti-Israel the Arab world is growing closer and closer recognising the fact that the real "Neighborhood Bully" is Iran.

 

Trying to organise a journey these days is not quite as simple as one would think. Booking a flight is the easy part even though most flights (including ours) are changed, moved and cancelled at some point. Then there is the paperwork! It starts with the normal green pass which states that one has been vaccinated 3 times or recovered from Covid in the last 6 months. Then there is the international declaration of vaccination – for travel. Next the declaration form which states that one is able to fly and has taken all the necessary tests before flying; now for the PCR test taken at the airport within 48 hours prior to flying, yes at the airport so one has to go to the airport before going to the airport. One then waits patiently for the result of the PCR and prints it off to add to the very bulky sheaf of papers, because although it can be on one's phone all we need is a WhatsApp situation whereby one of the applications or even worse emails, is hacked and falls.

 

I always try to fly El Al. It isn't that they are necessarily the most luxurious, although they are very comfortable and don't have those awful, sticky, leather seats that so many airlines prefer; it's the sense that one is home. The crew is fun, the food is more than palatable, the movies good, and if Heaven forbid, anyone feels poorly there is always a doctor on board! There is something heartwarming about hearing Hebrew, listening to the familiar music as one boards the aeroplane, the knowledge that despite the announcement to stay in ones seat on landing that at least 50% of the passengers will jump up and hope to find their carry-on luggage before the "ping" which tells us we are at the gate! The pilots are IAF trained and the crew all speak great English, most speak other languages and all are Israeli, of all faiths.

 

This week has been filled with unexpected guests. I am not surprised and I love it, which is why I have an extra freezer filled with home-made cakes and quiches! New neighbours have learned that our door is always open for a cup of coffee or tea and something fresh from the oven. So far all entertaining has been outside on our veranda – I love the gasps of surprise when guests walk out of the full width doors and see the fabulous flowers. Our lovely upstairs neighbour Benny arrived with some bulbs, excess to their needs because he knows all about my love of gardening since he looks down upon the array of brightly coloured flowers and the burgeoning fruit trees. Benny and his wife Osnat had carefully preserved the bulbs in dry earth and although they appear somewhat shriveled they should produce spring colour. Next year I will explain to them that if one lifts bulbs the best thing to do with them is lay them dry in a dark cupboard – but that I used to leave them to multiply on their own in the earth as nature intended!!!

 

For some time now I wanted to visit the wonderful Lola Cohen since she lost her husband Norman. They really have been a power couple in the world of Hasbara (dissemination of positive information about Israel). Lola is still active but finds it hard to get about- but is still a beautiful, bright woman at nearly 90 years old. While admiring her outreach to the Christian world especially their close friendship with Canon Andrew White, I have an admission to make – I not only love Lola for who she is but for her phenomenal, unbeatable, unmatched Shortbread biscuits!!!Nobody, but nobody can bake shortbread biscuit like Lola. I hope that now that we have a lift right up to the apartment and she won't have the trial of two flights of stairs in front of her Lola's daughter Stephanie will bring her to visit. Obviously with shortbread biscuits!

 

I'm almost packed, done between visitors and stocking the freezer for Zvi who has already been invited by numerous friends and neighbours, and all I have left to do is the PCR test with Rachel tomorrow night. Tonight we are alone, but tomorrow we will celebrate Leor's birthday. Friends tell me I'm crazy having 15 people for Shabbat lunch the day before flying to the USA, but it'll be fine. The menu begins with "Orange soup" a blended smooth soup with all sorts of veggies, leeks, courgettes, carrots, pumpkin, sweet potato, potato and red lentils, with s&p, garlic, ground coriander, turmeric, all blended together into "Orange Soup". The children have no idea that they are eating healthy lentils! We will then have loads of salads, stuffed peppers, spring chicken nuggets in teriyaki, ground beef patties and probably roast potatoes. Dessert? Apple compote and a delicious pareve chocolate birthday cake which came from our friend Moshe's bakery in Ramot.

 

Before lunch, Zvi will take Ella and Yonatan to our neighbour's home where he has built a real ninja course – they love it!

 

And so to music.

 

I thought about playing "Leaving on a Jet Plane but that it just to corny so why don't we listen to the ultimate American Jewish Barry Sisters? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4DG6kp4ed5Q

 

Erev Shabbat, Sabbath Eve, has many aspects that are missed. The most important is the sharing of the wonders with a lonely stranger, what is a blessing if it is just for us and ours? Although this presentation is, for some unknown reason, in a large mansion, the warmth of the Shabbat is apparent, the songs familiar and the family element clear. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bjd539KCwFw

 

Ana Bekoach, Please One of Great Power – a Kabbalistic prayer that it is thought can change our view of the world and the world's direction. Perhaps we should all pray together? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y1gkqO91YYc

 

I wish you all a weekend of peace and contemplation and Shabbat of family. This week's Torah reading is the story of Noah, filled with pain, mystery and family feuds!

 

Shabbat Shalom from Jerusalem, centre of our world, heart of our faith.

 

Sheila 

Friday 1 October 2021

Acharei ha chagim - After the Festivals

211001

1st of October 2021

 

Shabbat Shalom, Blessed Tabernacles

 

There is an expression in Israel used by anyone who wants to put things off, in other words to procrastinate, "Acharei ha Chagim" which means after the Festivals meaning the festivals of the month of Tishrei. Basically that means they will never really get to the task in hand! Well, we are now after the festivals, Acharei ha Hagim, so it's high time to get things done.

 

Confusion as to which day of the week it really is because this year the festivals fell on Mondays, Tuesdays and a Wednesday, and then one has Shabbat in the middle and one's body clock goes just a might haywire. Luckily I remembered that it is time to talk to you about Simchat Torah or the Joy of Torah.

 

It is not only fascinating and joyous as the Torah is carried around the synagogue as a dancing partner, to be kissed and revered, there is a definite purpose to our joy; after all, we end the readings with the last verse of Deuteronomy and begin again with Genesis. I tis a time for children to receive sweets and chocolates, even those who are not normally allowed such things before food!

 

This year we went to the synagogue in our beautiful old building in our park. The service was wonderful, children laughing and giggling in delight and since it was a "Jerusalem" service they men brought the Sefer Torah, beautifully encased in silver and enamel, are brought for the women to kiss as well. The community gave Zvi the huge honour of being given the first "Hakafah" or circling of the synagogue in honour of his help in setting things up. Immediately after the service the officers of the synagogue set out a "seudah" or meal of wonderful Middle Eastern foods and salads on the grass of the park and the fun continued! We left feeling an even greater part of the community.

 

Even a short while ago, I couldn't have made the following statements. The Saudis have made huge changes in their school curriculum, still a way to go but nonetheless, they are talking to Impact-se, along with other Arab States, learning how to change. Foreign Minister Lapid has flown to Bahrain to open the Israeli Embassy and to meet His Majesty King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa and Crown Prince and Prime Minister, Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa; incredibly, the Bahrainis have started direct flights from Ben Gurion Airport. The $7 billion  Dubai Expo 2020 opens today, in a spectacular including performances by Lang Lang and Andre Bocelli and for the first time in an Arab country Israel has a pavilion showing our way of life, our industry and our inventions.. The Abraham Accords combined with a huge amount of diplomatic work have really borne fruit.

 

The gradual and sometimes painful opening of Arab countries has another first, Najla Bouden Ramadhane, a university engineer with no political background, has been appointed by President Kais Saied to fill the post of Prime Minister of Tunisia, the first woman leader in the Arab world.

 

In the meantime Prime Minister Bennett spoke to the plenum of the United Nations in New York City. Unlike his predecessor there were no tricks, although not a performer, he spoke in measured, clear tones, in excellent English and despite the near empty plenum his words hit the correct audience through television and the Zoomers who listened carefully to every word. The Iranians were not thrilled by the Prime Minister's words about Israel being able to defend herself but that's fine and we can if we have to. One aspect of his speech that did not please the Israeli Medical establishment is when he said that the Covid policies could not be decided by the Medical experts but rather in cooperation with the leaders of the country.

 

In the USA attempts by "The Squad" in the Congress to censure Israel and the Iron Dome failed miserably with the vote of 420 -9 for Israel, but anti-Semitism is on the rise and not only in the USA. One example caught my eye in the press; Kaleb Cole, self-proclaimed Nazi leader of the "Atomwawaffen" Neo-Nazi , has been sentenced to prison after sending offensive mails to ADL personnel and many other racist, anti-Semitic crimes. Students all over the USA in particular and the West in general do not know what "Never Again" means because it is happening again and our young people re so badly educated in their heritage that they have become anti-Israel because it is fashionable and they believe the lies fed to them daily on campus – lies of Goebbels proportions. 83 years after the Munich Agreement was signed by Italy, France, Britain and Nazi Germany allowing the annexation of the Sudetenland, a large part of Czechoslovakia inhabited mostly by Germans. This naïve move led to the Third Reich. Why do I say naïve? Because nobody understood the sheer horror of the German War machine and their insane leader. Kaleb Cole is not alone in the USA and students are not the only ones being taught that Israeli an evil occupier of land that belongs to the Palestinian people, or that Jews are responsible for the Covid outbreak. If the Saudis, Bahrainis, Egyptians, Moroccans, Emeratis and many more have removed hate from their curriculum understanding that for so many years they have fed their children racist lies, hate education, why can't our universities and colleges control hate speech? When does free speech spill over into the inculcation of hatred to our students? When did the sport of beating an "obvious" Jew become acceptable?

 

Israeli school children are back at school! It finally happened and only time will tell if it is the right decision or not. The teachers are pretty angry that they have to check each child's note, at the school gate, showing proof of frequent PCR testing. It is so important that the children return to being social animals rather than Zoom hermits. I love to see the children setting off, ridiculously large backpacks perched on their shoulders, laughing together as they walk to school. Although there are more and more parents who take their children in the car, the very Israeli phenomenon of small children walking to school unaccompanied still thrills.

 

As you know I usually go for my evening walk around the paths in our park with friends we have made here in our new home and Zvi goes into Jerusalem and meets his good friend Motti Friedman and they walk and talk together then go for coffee opposite our old apartment. This week Zvi persuaded me to try out a new route nearby, a route discovered by Leor as a beautiful bike ride for his girls. We drove 5 minutes down the road, under the construction of a new traffic bridge (Israel is a web of new roads, tunnels and bridges) and parked our car. I knew that we were going to walk alongside the Beit Zayit (meaning house of olives) Reservoir, but also knew it had been drained during construction, but off we set and then despite the dry bed of the reservoir, discovered a delightful path, well set up for both walkers and bicycles, and beautiful greenery climbing either side of the path. It was so beautiful, the air so clear, that I didn't notice the distance and doubled my target! I can't say that there was a great deal of conversation since keeping up with the pace of my man who is two metres tall and wearing his seven league boots took most of my lung capacity!

 

Autumn is bringing much kinder weather and the most beautiful sunrises and sunsets. Since we now face north (a good thing in hot countries) I get to see both the rising and the setting of the sun. I admit that I am a cloud freak, I love clouds, was it Joni Mitchel that sang "Both Sides Now"? In the morning the sun rises over Jerusalem to the East, a huge red ball of fire tinting the city a wonderful red-gold and then, oh then as the sun sinks in the west the clouds become tipped with pink the a fiery red and in the west the moon comes up so quickly that one almost misses it peeking over the horizon. It takes my breath away and friends jump up from the table and rush to their phones to take photos in every direction!

 

This is a country of great unrest at times, surrounded by enemies, but things are changing. Israel is being recognised for her initiative, inventions, outreach to provide aid and succour to countries which cannot help themselves especially in times of natural and human disaster. There are governmental institutions like MASHAV, so much more than a department in the Minstry of Foreign Affairs https://mfa.gov.il/MFA/mashav/What_We_Do/Pages/default.aspx , IsraAid, Save a Child's Heart and so many more who teach modern agriculture to countries that cannot feed their population. I am proud to be an Israeli, wouldn't change that for the world.

 

Today I am going out with some girlfriends instead of cooking! Yes I know it is a miracle. Zvi will head to his parliament of journalists and men who think they can change the world and run the country better than anyone else – something that happens every Friday morning, all over the country. Let me explain, parliaments are just that, a place to "parle" or parley, to talk, where old friends meet up, the group starts when they are young, virile and capable and continues through their dotage. Most parliaments are single sex, for reasons I have yet to discover, and everybody feels able to speak their mind openly and most do, noisily. Of course, this is Israel so the talking is always done around the table of either coffee shop or restaurant. Nobody opens their mouth until satisfied by a good cup of "Café Hafuch" (literally meaning upside down coffee) and some borekas, salads and good pastries. We are a food orientated society and apparently the world accepts that the "Middle Eastern Diet" is the healthiest! A fascinating aspect of these groups is that they also form support groups. If someone is ill, suffers a loss, everyone rallies around them. Many parliaments are from the days of IDF service and continue throughout their life.

 

Gosh it's time to go! So what music would you like this week? I hope you realise that I take requests!

 

Pete Seeger and Ruth Rubin love this song and I used to sing it to my son Gideon, it was his favourite. Tumbalaika, the song of a stringed musical instrument…… https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RTBOMT5bMRs

 

Each morning, as we wake up we thank the Almighty for returning us our soul, our life. Omer Adam, Israeli singer sings a modern version of the prayer. So beautiful https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npRw36_Ftmc

 

Teach Your Children Well, sung by Crosby, Stills and Nash https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zj8FlXGPcOQ

 

I wish you a good weekend, a Shabbat Shalom, a peaceful, thoughtful time surrounded by family and friends. Try holding a parliament – just gather friends for coffee on a morning, and make it a habit.

 

With much love from Jerusalem, still beautiful on my horizon

Sheila

 

 

 

 

 

 Acharei ha Chagim - After the Festivals