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Thursday, May 04, 2006
 
NEW KUMMUNIQUE IS HERE (great stuff!)


Shalom! We are proud to present another issue of Kummunique.
This issue is filled with Aliyah and Eretz Yisrael inspiration - so enjoy!

In this issue you will find:

1. "Israel Calls" by Riva Pomerantz
2. "Move-to-Israel Filters" by Amy Eisenstein
3. "A. B. Yehoshua Sparks Uproar In US" By Nathan Guttman
4. "Report: More Jews in Israel Than In Any Other Country" by Seth Freedman


Check it out at KUMMUNIQUE HOME

This is one of the stories you may be interested in:

A. B. Yehoshua Sparks Uproar In US

Author A.B. Yehoshua stirred controversy at the opening panel of the centennial celebration of the American Jewish Committee after saying that only the State of Israel can ensure the survival of the Jewish people. Yehoshua's passionate presentation took other panelists by surprise and became the talk of the conference, which is taking place in Washington all week long.

"For me, Avraham Yehoshua, there is no alternative... I cannot keep my identity outside Israel. [Being] Israeli is my skin, not my jacket. You are changing jackets... you are changing countries like changing jackets. I have my skin, the territory," the author told the audience, adding that Israeli Jews live a Jewish life in a totality that the American Jews do not know.

Yehoshua's statements echoed through the other sessions with many participants expressing their disagreement with the Israeli author's views. On Wednesday, former head of the Mossad, Efraim Halevy, also speaking to the AJC, distanced himself from Yehoshua's arguments and said that the fact that Israel goes to great effort to help Jewish communities around the world proves that Israel sees importance in the Jewish Diaspora.

Yehoshua himself told The Jerusalem Post that he was surprised by the uproar over his arguments. "It seems to me obvious that our Jewish life in Israel is more total than anywhere outside Israel," he said, adding, "I think this is common sense. If they were goyim they would understand it right away."

An activist in a major Jewish organization who attended the opening panel said Yehoshua's arguments "took us back to the Fifties and Sixties," adding that "we are not used to hearing this kind of approach any more."

The American Jewish Committee's centennial events will culminate Thursday with a gala event honored by US President George W. Bush, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

- posted by Yishai @ 5:08 PM Permalink Home
Wednesday, May 03, 2006
 
THE ALIYAH DIALOGUES


Subject: North American Aliya

Dear Kumah,


I am a current graduate student at NYU. I am writing a paper on North American Aliya. I am having trouble verbalizing why North American aliya is so essential to Israel. As a Jew, an Orthodox Jew, I understand why it is important to an individual to return home. Yet, why is it so important for Israel to have Jews come from a country where they are not being persecuted?

Thus far when the question has been posed, the answer has been that the North American Jews will help/have helped improve Israeli economy. I know the answer must be more nuanced.

Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance.

Chag Kasher v'Sameach!

All the best,
Lauren Israel

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Hello Lauren,

My name is Shmuel Goldman. I'm writing to you from the Galilee, from a little settlement called Eshchar, perched on a hilltop between Sachnin and Karmiel.

I just returned from the Yom Hazikaron, Memorial Day, ceremony on our Yishuv. It opened with a first grader lighting the commemoration torch in memory of his grandfather who was killed in the 1973 Yom Kippur War. Our ceremony, like all the Yom Hazikaron ceremonies around Israel, is taken with the utmost seriousness. Every person there is related to or knows personally a soldier who was killed defending our Homeland. Everyone there, regardless of political convictions or religious observance, acknowledges and appreciates the ultimate sacrifice that it takes to survive and thrive as Jews in Israel.

When Jews come Home to Israel, whether they come from America or Russia, France or South Africa, Morocco or Australia, England or Tunisia, they are threads returning to the fabric of the Jewish People, strengthening and reinforcing our historical and divine connection to the Land of Abraham, Sarah, Yitzhak, Rivka, Yaakov, Rachel and Leah. When they remain in the diaspora, they are but tattered remnants exiled by those who tried to destroy us. Our destiny is here and every Jew has his or her place and function in fulfilling that destiny. By choosing to be here, especially when coming from a country like America, you are choosing to take hold of the reigns of Jewish History and guide it in the direction that you deem correct for your people.

In our Yom Hazikaron ceremony tonight, before the Second graders led us in Hatikva, each one said his or her first name, their family name and the number of generations they are in Israel. We had one girl who is fifth generation Israeli, and one who is first generation and all the numbers in between. Some were Ashkenazi, some were Sephardi. Some were religious, some secular. But all are Jews and Israelis whose ancestors have either been here since Joshua led the Nation of Israel home from slavery or whose ancestors dreamt about returning for generations before making their dream a reality. After this historic roll call, they began singing Hatikva. The national anthem of The State of Israel is not about downtrodden Jews leaving persecution and looking for a place of refuge. Hatikva, The Hope, is about All Jews, yearning to act on our soulful impulse of two thousand years to create a free nation in Zion, in Jerusalem. Now is the time.

It's not about why we should leave America. It's about why we should make Aliyah to Israel. America is itself one of G-d's gifts to the world today. America is truly the Land of Comfort and Plenty. But Israel is where it's happening for the Jews. It's where it happened and where it's going to happen. Every Jew in Israel can contribute in his or her own way to securing and improving the future of our country in a way that is much more tangible and direct than a Jew living outside the Land of Israel.

I hope this somewhat answers your questions. If you would like to discuss, feel free to be in touch.

All the best,
Shmuel Goldman


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Dear Lauren,

I received your e-mail from Yishai, and I wanted to reply (even though I know you didn't write to me!).

In my opinion, in order to understand why Jews should return to Israel, one must both understand the impact of aliyah on Israel (as alluded to by your question as to why "it's important for Israel to have Jews come..." ), the impact of aliyah on the Jewish community at large, and the impact of aliyah on the oleh (or in your case, the olah).

Israel needs the aliyah of every Jew. As a state, Israel will be impacted tremendously by the aliyah of intelligent, educated Jews such as yourself and other highly-cultured, highly-trained Jews of the exile. The Jewish people are often referred to in the world as a valuable braintrust - what could be better for our foundling state than the importation of valuable, skilled new citizens? I could go on about the virtues of bolstering a "Jewish majority", but I find that argument to be rather dull.

As a land, Israel yearns for the return of the Jewish people to her soil. As it says in the blessings of the Haftorah, "Blessed are You, L-rd our G-d, King of the Universe, who makes Zion happy with her children." There is nothing more that the Land of Israel could possibly want than to grow you and your children, to nurture you with her fruit, and to inspire you with her vistas. It's what she's built for and her sole purpose on this earth.

As for the Jewish people - they will be much healthier once they unite in Israel. The general malaise of American Jewry is often referred to as a spiritual Holocaust - those who believe that they are safe from persecution in America may have ignored the fact that they are being "loved to death" by the vivacious gentiles of New York, Texas, California... Statistics suggest that for every 2 children you raise in America, one will marry a non-Jew - these are much more realistic and terrifying odds than being treated to a burning cross in your front yard.

Moreover, the Land of Israel is the "natural habitat" of the Jews. Only in Israel can we truly experience our nationhood, the joys and challenges of Torah governance (speedily, in our days!), the sharing of insights from hundreds of years of forced study-abroad. Once unified in Israel, the Jewish people can truly take upon themselves the mantle of their charge - to be a light unto the nations and a priestly nation. Moving to Israel is much less about building a state than it is about building a home - for the Jewish people, for G-d's universal teachings.

On the personal level, how can one explain the gaping lacks in exilic Judaism, as compared with the depth and fullness of Jewish life in Israel? Have you ever taken tithes from the produce in your garden? Do you know what it feels like to stand in a crush of people in Jerusalem in order to receive blessings from the Cohanim three times a year? Have you planted one of the seven species in the soil of Samaria on Tu b'Shevat? Have you made the pilgrimage to visit our Matriarch Sarah in Hevron on parshat Chayeii Sarah? This is the life of Israel - the life which is at once past, present, and future.

Aside from living a more "biblical" Jewish life, consider living a more all-consuming Jewish life. Ask yourself what it would be like to raise your children in a world in which their friends are Jews, their bosses automatically assume that they're not coming in to work on Pesach, on Shabbat, on Yom HaAtzmaut, where practically all the food is kosher? Do you want to live in a world in which it's socially-acceptable to cover your hair with a scarf, a hat, a wig, whether you're a teacher, a lawyer, or a Knesset member, a place where you can write checks using the date on the Jewish calendar, where every bottle of ketchup mentions whether it can be eaten by Ashkenazim on Pesach? Do you want to see the famiy you've been separated from for a thousand years? This is the life of Israel - the life of belonging completely and of owning completely, of giving in abundance and receiving in abundance.

There are obvious attractive qualities in places like America - no imminently-threatening Hamas, two cars (at least) in the driveway, the sense of higher purpose/morality/ability perhaps than some of your neighbors. Consider those temptations G-d's gift to you - the gift of free will. Without them, living in Israel would be obvious. As it is, you have to/get to choose - I hope you will make the best choice for the Land of Israel, for the Jewish people, and for yourself.

All the best,
Malkah Fleisher

P.S. Take a moment to consider the following: "In the Diaspora, whoever increases its settlement (by establishing a home, business, etc) adds to the destruction of the worship of G-d. But in the Land of Israel this same work is considered a mitzvah since it settles the land." The Chatam Sofer, on the Talmud Sukka 36a and Yoreh Deah p. 136

---------------------------------------------------

dear lauren,

an expert i'm not. but opinionated i am. here's what runs through my head:

the judaism that you are practicing is broken no matter how orthodox it might be. any rabbi worth his weight in salt will admit to that. today we are capable of performing less than half (around 250?) of the 613 torah commandments. lauren, that's not us, we were commanded to be whole, not broken. what's missing? you! the american jews returning to israel is another piece to the puzzle, possibly the last piece.

if the jews keep all of the the commandments, then everything is sababa for israel. the jews have no chance of keeping all of the commandments as long as the majority of jews don't live in israel.

this answer may be good for your rabbi, but most likely not with nyu. you're probably looking for more "practical" answers.

i think you should try the angle of what makes a country good or bad. why is the united states different from brazil or russia? i think it comes down to its ideologies. who ever has the best national ideology wins.

so say this is true. now i give you two different national ideologies and it should be clear which country is going to benefit the most from their chosen ideology.

#1 we want to be like all other nations, nothing special. just leave us alone already. if you are among our people and you are being persecuted we'll take you in. otherwise, there's no reason to bother.

#2 our goal is to be a light unto the nations. our people should move here because it is the right thing to do, because as a people we yearn to live together again.

#2 seems much closer to the puritans stating their desire be a city on a hill. call me crazy but i think that desire made the diffrence between a usa and a brazil. it would be interesting if you could back it up in your paper.

getting even more practical, if you live here you will notice that the average israeli is tired. tired of terrorist attacks. tired of false promises of peace. tired of the pressure. this country would benefit greatly with an infusion of new blood. i'll tell you the truth, i've been here for 4 years and i could already use an infusion. it does every israeli good whether they admit it or not that they are told that their country is a desirable place to live.

here's another one: israel has done a pretty good job in its desire to take everything bad from america, big cars, big malls, movies and fast food. but when it comes to the good things about america the israeli doesn't seem to be so interested: free market economy, freedom of speech, democracy, "don't tread on me" attitude. since we already have what is annoying about america, i think the american jews coming here could help bring what is good about america.

good luck. let me know if i could help any further.

Aaron Fox

- posted by Yishai @ 6:34 PM Permalink Home
Tuesday, May 02, 2006
 
Announcing a Great New Aliyah Web Spot


Question: What to you get when you join Kumah's passion for Aliyah with Hashkafah.com's world class expertise in running web forums?

Answer: The greatest new web spot for olim and future olim in the world!

Let me share something I've been working on for a really long time and it's now coming to fruition just in time for Yom Haatzmaut! It a really amazing website for Aliyah minded people and olim. Actually it's a sub-forum of one of the largest Jewish and most active websites (completely free with no ads) in the world! That website is called Hashakafah.com and it been around for several years and is growing rapidly.

Well, today they've created a special section just for olim and future olim called "Making Aliyah.

You'll find the layout of this forum is conducive to constructive conversations and great friendships! Hashkafah.com, with well over 2000 registered members and thousands of more "guests" that visit each day has got to be among the largest and most successful forums of its kind dedicated to all the Anglo-Jewish topics that are discussed there.

So join us and post about anything related to Aliyah... whether is be a question about where to find a washing machine repair man in Kfar Saba or news about a Yom Haatzmaut trip to the Negev or a Divar Torah about living in Eretz Yisrael. Future olim are encouraged to ask current olim all about our experiences making Aliyah. Questions like who did you use to bring a lift? Or post about the infamous water filters vs. bottled water debate. Even ask questions about dating life in the Holyland. And remember, we have a lighter side as well. Share a story about something that happened today that made you proud to be an oleh living in our special country or share a joke that you know we will all appreciate. And if you have to vent - vent! We are olim too we understand!

Check it out by clicking here.

See you there!

Pinchas

- posted by Pinchas @ 12:55 PM Permalink Home
Sunday, April 30, 2006
 
New Internet Films


Two great films for you:

One is about Israel Past

The other is about Israel Future

- posted by Yishai @ 7:13 PM Permalink Home
 
The Shabbat Candle Ladies


Liat, a young Israeli, rushes to catch her bus on this early Friday afternoon. "Shabbat Shalom!" an older lady greets her along with the warmest smile you have ever seen and hands her something small.

The Shabbat table is beautifully set with a handsome tablecloth, dishes, silverware, tall glasses, wine, flowers, challah - covered, and Shabbat candles. There is nothing unusual about that. What is unusual is that this table resides not in an apartment in Meah Sharim but in the middle of the sidewalk directly opposite Jerusalem's Central Bus Station.

Liat does not remember the last time she lit candles on Friday afternoon just before sunset to welcome in the Shabbat, but today she thinks she just might as she examines the two Shabbat "tea-light" candles that were handed to her. Liat smiles back at the older lady "Shabbat Shalom!" she answers.

If you ever happen to find yourself in the vicinity of the Jerusalem Bus Station on Friday afternoon - as so many of us do, be sure to sure to wish a "Shabbat Shalom" to those two or three women standing by that famous awkwardly placed Shabbat Table handing out Shabbat Candles. They are the "Shabbat Candle Ladies" and just watching them for a few minutes makes one so proud to be part of this wonderful land of ours.

A pair of chayalot (female soldiers) curiously approach. "Shabbat Shalom!" "Shabbat Shalom!" they cheerfully respond examining the candles they were handed. One chayalet pauses. "Oh, and Chodesh Tov too!" she remarks, offering the traditional "new month greeting" which this particular Friday just so happens to be as well.

Now a middle aged women passes by. At first she is hesitant but then accepts the small plastic package not altering her brisk stride. She too stops and then returns back to the Shabbat Candle Lady, beaming. She thanks her and the two have a brief minute long discussion. A minute, of course, is an eternity in Jerusalem on a Friday right outside the Central Bus Station.

Now comes a teen boy walking just ahead of his parents. The boy refuses the gift and rushes by - his father calls ahead to him and tell him to wait. The father nods and accepts the candles and continues walking as he shows them to his wife. She says something to him. He returns back to the Shabbat Candle Lady. "Can I have another one?"

They are the Shabbat Candle Ladies.

(Cross-posted at Point of Pinchas)

- posted by Pinchas @ 11:14 AM Permalink Home

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