Dispatches from the network and updates from the Foundation.
Jul 2014
(Pictured) The Solidarity Rally in Boston Courtesy of Joel Rich. This past Thursday night, the seven new members of the Wexner Israel Fellowship, Class 26, attended a 1,000 person-strong rally in a Boston area synagogue, where the community and various dignitaries expressed support and solidarity for Israel. Here are some of the fellow’s reactions to that evening: “For me, as a senior officer in the IDF, this kind of warm,
Jul 2014
I was a young department director at ALYN Hospital Pediatric Rehabilitation Center a decade ago when I first learned of the concept of “cultural sensitivity in health.” We can take better care of our patients, I learned, if we understood better their cultural concepts of sickness and healing, their faith and their folklore. Together with the Jerusalem Inter-Cultural Center we developed a curriculum which helped us make ALYN more geared
Jul 2014
Translated from Yotam’s article that appeared July 21 in Maariv. These are tough days. As the fighting lingers on, after weeks in which we have experienced mostly substantial operational success and very impressive resilience among the Israeli population, we are now entering a new hard and painful phase in which vague information and rumors turn into actual bad news: “our soldiers are fighting in a determined and heroic way”… ”there
“The blurriness of joy and the precision of pain — I want to describe with a sharp pain’s precision happiness and blurry joy.” – Yehuda Amicha i “The blurriness of joy and the precision of pain — I want to describe with a sharp pain’s precision happiness and blurry joy.” – Yehuda Amichai “The blurriness of joy and the precision of pain — I want to describe with a sharp pain’s precision happiness
Jul 2014
Tuli, my driver, greeted me with his handwritten sign and immediately launched into what I can only assume is his typical comedy routine. We walked to the van and he asked me if I spoke Hebrew. “I used to, but it’s been quite a long time,” I told him. “But this year, I am committed to learning again.” We exchanged elementary Hebrew phrases, he complimented my accent, and then I
Aleh is Israel’s largest network of residential facilities for children with severe physical and cognitive disabilities. We provide 650 children in Israel with high-level medical and rehabilitative care in four residential facilities. Aleh is their home and their family – 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Aleh Negev-Nahalat Eran is our southern branch, located just 15 miles from Gaza, near the town of Ofakim. It provides a high
It is my pleasure to share this photo from our latest alumni learning session with Rabbi David Ingber, the founder and Rabbi of Romemu, in New York City. Since our graduation from the Wexner Heritage Program in 2011, our Westchester 2009 class has continued to learn together, meeting around 5 times a year at various people’s homes. I took the lead in organizing these sessions the past two years. Last
I took a class Monday with Maya Bernstein, who was wonderful. The theme of the day was Bein adam l’atzmo (an internal day of reflection, focusing on ourselves as leaders). The session was about immunity to change. She walked us through a process to help us understand what holds us back and why we’d want the change. What’s our goal? What are the values behind the goal? What are conflicting
Jul 2014
Silicon Valley specializes in creating new things. Silicon wafers with brains. Eyeglasses with cameras. Cars without drivers. To that list, I’d like to add one more innovation: a model of religious life for Israelis that gets beyond pointless divisions between religious and secular Jews. For the last three years, I have served as headmaster of the South Peninsula Hebrew Day School, Silicon Valley’s one Orthodox day school for grades PK-8.
Jul 2014
On Wednesday afternoon, our Wexner Israel Fellowship Alumni Institute began at a resort hotel in Nazareth. I began my remarks with a prayer for Gilad, Naftali and Eyal, for their families and for those seeking to find them. It was a prayer for calm and, as always, a prayer for wise leaders who might somehow find a way to bring peace to the region. All nodded heads in agreement. And