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“No Jew has the right to yield the rights of the Jewish people in Israel. No Jew has the authority to do so. No Jewish body has the authority to do so. Not even the entire Jewish people alive today has the right to yield any part of Israel.

It is the right of the Jewish people over generations, a right that under no conditions, can be cancelled. Even if Jews during a specific period proclaim they are relinquishing that right, they have neither the power nor the authority to deny it to future generations. No concession of this type is binding or obligates the Jewish people.

Our right to the country–the entire country–exists as an eternal right and we shall not yield this historic right until its full and complete redemption is realized.”

David Ben-Gurion, Israel’s founding father and first prime minister

Photo found at Templar1307′s photostream

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Israel is the only country in the world that . . . .

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Israel is the only country where the same drivers who cuss you and flip you the bird will immediately pull over and offer you all forms of help if you look like you need it.

Israel is the only country in the world with bus drivers and taxi drivers who read Spinoza and Maimonides.

Israel is the only country in the world where no one cares what the rules say when an important goal can be achieved by bending them.

Israel is the only country in the world where reservists are bossed around and commanded by officers, male and female, younger than their own children.

Israel is the only country in the world where “small talk” consists of loud, angry debate over politics and religion.

Israel is the only country in the world where the coffee is already so good that Starbucks went bankrupt trying to break into the local market.

Israel is one of the few places in the world where the sun sets into the Mediterranean Sea.

Israel is the only country in the world whose soldiers eat three sets of salads a day, none of which contain any lettuce (which is not really a food), and where olives ARE a food and even a main course in a meal, rather than something one tosses into a martini.

Israel is the only country in the world where one is unlikely to be able to dig a cellar without hitting ancient archaeological artifacts.

Israel is the only country in the world where the leading writers in the country take buses.

Israel is the only country in the world where the graffiti is in Hebrew.

Israel is the only country in the world where the “black folks” are walking around wearing yarmulkes.

Israel is the only country in the world that has a National Book Week, during which almost everyone attends a book fair and buys books.

Israel is the only country in the world where the ultra-Orthodox Jews beat up the police and not the other way around. 

Israel is the only country in the world where inviting someone “out for a drink” means drinking cola, coffee or tea.

Israel is the only country in the world where bank robbers kiss the mezuzah as they leave with their loot.

Israel is one of the few countries in the world that truly likes and admires the United States.

Israel is the only country in the world that introduces applications of high-tech gadgets and devices, such as printers in banks that print out your statement on demand, years ahead of the United States and decades ahead of Europe.

Israel is the only country in the world that has the weather and landscape of California without the earthquakes.

Israel is the only country in the world where everyone on a flight gets to know one another before the plane lands. In many cases, they also get to know the pilot and all about his health or marital problems.

Israel is the only country in the world where no one has a foreign accent because everyone has a foreign accent.

Israel is the only country in the world where people cuss using dirty words in Russian or Arabic because Hebrew has never developed them.

Israel is the only country in the world where patients visiting physicians end up giving the doctor advice.

Israel is the only country in the world where everyone strikes up conversations while waiting in lines.

Israel is the only country in the world where people call an attaché case a “James Bond” and the “@” sign is called a “strudel”.

Israel is the only country in the world where there is the most mysterious and mystical calm ambience in the streets on Yom Kippur, which cannot be explained unless you have experienced it.

Israel is the only country in the world where sunsets in Jerusalem are gorgeous every evening

Israel is the only country in the world where people read English, write Hebrew, and joke in Yiddish.

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Only Israel

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This song is available, with Yedida Freilich singing, on iTunes.

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I Am a Jew

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In Hebrew, “Ani Yehudi”….

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Lenny Solomon’s version of this song, which is excellent, is available on iTunes.

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Nefesh B’Nefesh – This Way To Jerusalem

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The video is not the best quality, however the message makes it worth watching. If only they helped returning Israelis. (sigh)

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The Aliyah Revolution

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Aliyah for Dummies – Step 1

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When I first started thinking about Aliyah I researched the Internet and found a lot of stuff out there. Sometimes though it is hard to see the trees through the forest. Where do I start?? How do I wade through all the information out there and get to the nuts and bolts? So, as I go through the process I will continue to post steps. Look for Aliyah for Dummies – Step 1, Step 2, Step 3, and so on.

Click here to continue reading….

Steps 2,3 & 4 can be found at the website. Avi, the writer at the site hasn’t updated it since 2008. He had a projected date for his aliyah was September of 2008, so we can presume he’s been too busy with his and his family’s klita to mess with his blog. Anyway, the information on the site is helpful.

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Who is Dvorah Chanah? Part III

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As the feminine half of this team, I always reserve the right to change my mind. And I did.

Even with the wonderful times in America (wonderful mostly because we could once again enjoy the company of our parents, grandparents, siblings, cousins etc.) stuff has happened to us; we have found ourselves suffering many of the same exact battles we’d endured in Israel. Funny, huh.

We understand you now...

After a respectable start to our new life in America, we bought a house. Not 6 months later, devastating financial setbacks threw themselves at us, making our troubles in Israel seem positively pedestrian by comparison – job insecurity and job losses, serious financial dishonesty and cheating from bosses and customers resulting in debt we simply could not repay without going on a zero calorie diet, a plummeting credit rating — which then created more unemployment issues (I have come to call this connection between one’s credit rating and job prospects a modern day debtor’s prison, and it makes about as much sense). Even worse than all the financial woes that stuck to us like Brer Rabbit’s’ tar baby was the overwhelming lack of purposefulness, and always a longing, an aching for the Land.

But do you get me?

During our entire time back in America, even before the financial troubles set in and metastasized, our conversations continually drifted back to our time in Israel, the fun times and the hard times. After some silence, something would jog my memory or Elya’s and then we’d be off on Reminiscing Lane, “Remember when…?”. We’d travel that lane so often, our family must have had to internalize an awful lot of eye rolling. Our hilarious goats came up a lot.

We slowly realized that we had not only been in the Land. The Land was now in us as well. Now we knew with certainty, exile from Eretz Israel is not a vacation. It’s not a chance to gather a little nest egg. It is punishment. We felt that punishment as a sharp spiritual pain, so sharp it became physical. Perhaps it takes being in E”Y for a Jew to know what is missing?

Not Dvorah Chanah or Elya Yenkel

Besides the finances which refused to right themselves no matter what we tried, I seemed unable to make myself fit into the American suburban scene. Our nice, friendly American neighbors, dwelling next to us in simulated peace, failed to appreciate my weird and varied composting projects and late night building adventures. One exception was my other homeschooling neighbor. She got a total kick out of my zany ideas.

One sympathetic, even deeply interested neighbor does not make a consensus. And a consensus actually matters — I discovered.

My honeybees in the back yard didn’t endear me to the nice folks adjacent to our back fence, ehm, the ones with the pool. It seems the mere smell of a large body of water (relative to a bee) drew the little fuzzballs to the delicious cool water which promised them refreshment, yet only delivered them to the pools’ filtration system, clogging it. One tiny lap of water, caused by the smallest breeze is like a tidal wave to an itty bitty bee. Those cute little bees also found the neighbor’s hummingbird feeder. Fistfulls of buzzing bees dispossessed the hummingbirds. 

What my neighbors thought they saw....

The same distressed — and sometimes amused – neighbors could not fathom the logic behind my organic, dandelion appreciating, clover planting suburban yard care (honeybee food). I imagine they silently (or not) worried about their plummeting property values since the homeschooling ”mother earth lady” had moved in with her bevy of six, then seven…then eight (will they never stop?!?) children who were at home all day long, thirteen months a year. Nor did they appreciate the chicken coop aroma wafting up to offend their poolside guest’s olfactories, as they unsuccessfully endeavored to relax while keeping one cautious eye on the honeybees trying to quench their thirst without drowning. The quiet hypocrisy of my polite yet anxious neighbors unnerved me.  I longed for the open confrontations I’d had with my Israeli neighbors over — no, not the goats, ducks, chickens and geese in our yard, those were fine — the 120 pound, hairy sheepdog. It seems North African Jews don’t really like dogs.

Neighbors struggling to be polite despite descending property values notwithstanding, the worst part of suburban paradise for me was the fact that there were no goats anywhere in sight. I considered, then rejected the idea of dwarf goats. Urban Israel might put up with it…never suburban America.

America's tragic awakening

Besides these various agricultural adventures and misadventures, nipping at my conscience lurked the foreboding sense of having cast my dear husband adrift by insisting we leave Israel. He just didn’t have the same sparkle in his eyes or bounce to his step. Was life just about working, shopping, paying bills, mowing the lawn, ignoring the glare of neighbors, and then going back to work again? Then a call from a cousin one morning brought us all running to the kitchen television. We gasped as the second plane hit the South Tower, and then watched both Twin Towers collapse before our eyes in horrified awe. All airplanes were grounded in the whole country for a week. It reminded me of the strange quietness which overcame Israel during what Israelis call “The Gulf War” and what Americans call “Desert Storm”. During the Gulf War, almost all foreigners left Israel and we were alone…just us Israelis and a few hardcore visitors who would not be intimidated. One doesn’t realize how strange it is to not have planes flying overhead until there are no planes flying overhead. One doesn’t realize how odd life is without tourists until there are none.

In the months that followed, as we all learned the true nature of America’s enemies, I understood what Israel had been facing all these years, really since the beginning of Israel’s regathering, when political Zionism took hold of much of the collective Jewish soul (dissenters were many, yes this I know) thus increasing aliyah back to the land, an effort we had never stopped throughout this long, dark exile, despite almost insurmountable obstacles place before us by various occupying regimes.

Modern day aliyah, overcoming the obstacles

I understood, finally, what exactly had repelled me, made me want to leave my own Land, promised to me by my Abba in Shamaim – my Eretz Israel. Radical Islam. But Israel was not the only nation which had to re-gather up her communal courage and face down this formidable foe; courage that had been slipping somewhat in the face of pressure from the world beginning with the Madrid Conference and then the Olso Accords. America had been running from this battle for at least 30 years, and could no longer run. Now it was visiting American soil. I learned why it followed me relentlessly to America. It follows us all. It won’t go away because we ignore it or pretend it is benign.

Tali Hatuel, her unborn baby & her daughters; all murdered at point blank range

Then I got personal…I had to face myself. I couldn’t run either. As Jews we aren’t allowed and aren’t even able to run from our destiny. As Yishai Fleisher*** says, quoting his father, being afraid is sometimes our heritage too. Facing Islam down, in spite of our love for life, and our very understandable fear, is also part of being “ohr l’goyim” (a light unto the nations). Radical Islam had imposed itself and it’s bloody ways on Israel for over a century.

We each have to be where HaShem wants us, and I knew where He wanted me. As wonderful as America was and is, I knew I belonged in Israel for this last stand between civilization and barbarism. My family belongs in Israel, and forgive me for being so black and white about this, but so do all Jews.

Five years after landing at the airport in Minneapolis, I decided it was time to go home.

To Israel.

Night time rainbow over Jerusalem

Now I had someone else to convince, someone who’s confidence in his dreams had been shaken to their core by the one person who should never have done that to him — by me. I had some serious teshuvah (repentance) to do, and didn’t quite know it yet. Ahhh, but HaShem knew exactly what next lessons we both needed to learn before our homecoming would finally ”stick”. He had only just begun to show me.

To be continued….

Another note: Apologies for this blog being only from my perspective thus far. Elya Yenkel works long hours and so, hasn’t been able to find the time to write any posts, though he is a loyal reader. He’ll get to it and it will be worth the wait for all of us.

Disclaimer: Any negative views of Israel, the Zionist project or Israeli culture I describe in my stories are purely evidence of my own limited understanding at the time I held them, and in no way reflect the complexity and beauty one finds once the heart is open and willing to learn a few new things about Israel, Zionist history or Israeli culture. — Dvorah Chanah Cohen

Image Attributes:

Brer Rabbit’s tar baby – www.luvzbluez.com/easterbunnies.html

Goat nostrils – drinky clown

Bee beard – Max xx’s photostream

“Yours, Mine & Ours” photo – Lucyfan dot com

Second Tower collapsing – wstera2

Modern Aliyah Poster – WeJew dot com

Tali Hatuel & her 4 little girls – WeJew dot com

Night time rainbow over Jerusalem – forwarded to WeJew dot come by Tamar Yonah, radio host at Israel National Radio. Tamar is an activist, daily encouraging her fellow Jews to jump in…the water’s fine! Come home already.

***Yishai Fleisher, radio host and program director of Israel National Radio, and founder of Kumah dot org a neo-Zionist organization who’s mission is to inspire us all to be passionate about our aliyah, whether it be from the exile to Eretz Israel, or if already in Eretz Israel, elevating the spirit of the Jewish nation and rectifying the vessel that is the State of Israel. Copy taken almost word for word from the Kumah website. I’m inspired.

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Daniel Pereg, Courageous Israeli Activist — Returns to Israel

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This is so inspiring to me. They did it…exactly what we want to do. Bringing 4 kids of various ages is a bit more complicated, but the fact that Daniel Pereg and his mother returned home, and apparently it was somewhat of a last minute decision — really encourages us that we can make this happen too.

Hat tip: Israel Matsav

From the Jerusalem Post Online

LA activist from flotilla protest carries flag to Israel

by MELANIE LIDMAN
09/08/2010 07:02

Elad Daniel Pereg starts the New Year in J’lem and hopes to become an MK; All he needs is a school and somewhere to live.

One of the more moving images to come out of the Gaza Strip flotilla backlash in June was the video of a lone 16- year-old boy, wearing an IDF T-shirt and raising a flag above his head, facing off with a mob of angry, anti-Israel protesters in front of the Israeli Consulate in Los Angeles.

The interaction was captured on video and went viral on YouTube, catapulting Elad Daniel Pereg into the limelight of the Jewish world.

Suddenly he was in demand as a speaker to youth groups, at synagogues and at an Israeli Consulate event, a modern Daniel who entered a lion’s den of hate and anger.

“If no one else was going to stand up for Israel, I was going to be there,” he told The Jerusalem Post this week.

The YouTube video shows Pereg standing behind a line of policemen, waving an Israeli flag as protesters hurl insults at him: “Put your flag down! You are killing my people!” and “Shame on Israel!” “I knew what I was doing,” said Pereg, who on May 31, outside the consulate, was surrounded by hundreds of protesters as soon as he showed up. He immediately obeyed police requests to stand off to the side in an alleyway after they told him they could no longer protect him if he was in the crowd.

“I could feel the tension, but I was calm. I didn’t yell – there was no point,” he said.

After a summer of soulsearching, Pereg decided to start the new Jewish year, and his new life, in Jerusalem. He didn’t care that many people recommended he wait two years to finish high school in the States, or that the lastminute decision meant that he and his mother had no apartment lined up and no plans for the new school year when they arrived earlier this month.

Click here to continue reading…

Here’s the video that inspired the world –

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Who is Dvorah Chanah? Part II

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Goats are your calling....

Seven years passed with my husband and I at a stalemate with one another. Which was HaShem’s plan for us? The wholesome simplicity of central Missouri and a lot of dairy goats, or a crowded apartment block somewhere in Israel? Elya was unhappy and all out of sorts in America. Since I loved him, seeing this pained me. Nearly every week he wanted to discuss when I thought I’d be ready to make good and move with him to Israel. Finally after seven years, I ran out of excuses and called the local Aliyah Center. Once our paperwork was in motion, we spent six months of planning, contacting, packing, paying, and not least, explaining. Our family did not get it.

Aliyah on our anniversary....

At last we did it. We flew to Israel on our eighth wedding anniversary. We’d been so busy with all the final details involved in an international move, that and and caring for our then three little children, we didn’t realize it was our eighth anniversary until we settled down in our seats on the plane. We smiled, quietly wished each other a happy anniversary, agreeing it was a sign from Heaven, a kiss from HaShem. Eight symbolizes new beginnings in Jewish thinking. I was so pleased with myself. I had actually fulfilled my obligations to my husband, kept my promise in spite of all my reservations about what life would be like for us in Israel.

Please don't milk us!!

The one concession I insisted on: I was bringing my two beautiful Siamese cats. We had to find an absorption center that accepted pets. There was only one, in the Judean hills. Looking back, I should have left them in America, because they were eventually poisoned, dying a painful death not fit for a rat. But at the time, having my two cats with me seemed essential to my well being.  They were my animal husbandry dream in small, pretty, talkative packages. I could confide in them when I longed to milk a goat.

Do you like your apartment?

Jump ahead seven years later, in Israel, on our little makeshift hobby farm of one acre in the middle of a suburb of Tiberias. Yes you can do that in Israel. Prior to converting our junky rental home with an even more junky “barn” into a hobby farm, for a short time we had lived in an apartment close to downtown Tiberias. Someone built a chicken coop on the apartment property and no one took it down or complained. Across the street was a house with pasture fencing and horses. It all stretched my zoning laws make life better for everyone American brain.  Ahh, but I was grateful for the freedom. I loved our little hobby farm. Zoning laws would have rendered what we did on that property impossible.

Nevertheless, after several years and the rewards of fresh goats milk, an overly abundant supply of eggs and garden grown onions, I decided I wanted to go back to America. To know the ”why” on that, you can read my post “Why did We Leave Anyway?” a series in progress (So far Part I is completed). I had drawn up my organized list of “why” and “how” and a promise to revisit the idea of returning to Israel after two years of what I saw as badly needed rest in America — among family. I knew I needed to do some soul searching in peace and quiet, sans mice, cockroaches and Yasir Arafat, y’mach shmo (may his name be erased). I presented my neatly written list. I lobbied. My husband anguished. Then we agreed. We sold everything and left Israel.

To be continued….

Disclaimer: Any negative views of Israel, the Zionist project or Israeli culture I describe in my stories are purely evidence of my own limited understanding at the time I held them, and in no way reflect the complexity and beauty one finds once the heart is open and willing to learn a few new things about Israel, Zionist history or Israeli culture. — Dvorah Chanah Cohen

Image Attributes:

Cute little goat: Minter Bay Dairy Goats

El Al airplane: Ponte1112′s Photostream

Siamese cats: Steve Gilham

Horse: *Kid*Doc*One*

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