The Culture Mom» Israel http://www.theculturemom.com For moms who aren't ready to trade sushi for hot dogs. Tue, 13 Nov 2012 18:08:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.4.2 Copyright © The Culture Mom 2010 info@theculturemom.com (The Culture Mom) info@theculturemom.com (The Culture Mom) For moms who aren't ready to trade sushi for hot dogs. The Culture Mom The Culture Mom info@theculturemom.com no no Review: Strangers No More, an Oscar Winning Documentary /review-strangers-more-oscar-winning-documentary/ /review-strangers-more-oscar-winning-documentary/#comments Tue, 14 Jun 2011 20:15:36 +0000 CultureMom /?p=2239 Strangers No More

 

I saw the most amazing documentary last night called Strangers No More.  My neighbor across the street told me about the film yesterday and I thought I would never make it.  It was to start at 7pm. When my husband walked in at 6:55, I ran out the door.  This was a film that I knew I had to see. I remember when it won the Oscar for documentary short last year, and it got my attention then.  I also love when there are documentaries and quality films playing locally, and the JCC in Scarsdale is a hop, skip and a jump away.

The film is about a school in Tel Aviv where children from forty-eight different countries and diverse backgrounds come together to learn. Many of the students arrive at Bialik-Rogozin School from the Ukraine, Egypt, Nigeria, Darfur, Ethiopia, to name a few places, fleeing poverty, political adversity and even genocide.   Strangers No More follows several students’ struggle to acclimate to life in a new land while slowly opening up to share their stories of hardship and tragedy.  With tremendous effort and dedication, the school provides the support these children need to recover from their past. Together, the bond between teacher and student, and amongst the students themselves, enables them to create new lives in this exceptional community.

The school is so dedicated to these children.  It starts at the beginning of the school year and follows the children until the end of the school year.   The principals and teachers find out the history of the family when the children arrive so they know how to approach the child, and what resources to put into place for them.  They are so invested in each child’s future and want to make it better for them, better from where they come from.  They also want them to learn to love Israel, but it’s a challenge at first.  Not only are they taken away from the land they come from, they have to learn a new language.  But it’s language what brings the kids together.

The film revolves around 3 children in particular.  Each has come from very difficult circumstances.  Esther saw her mother shot right before her eyes. She and her family needed a safe place to turn, and Israel took them in.  There are many children who who have recently come from Sudan; 60 alone last year.  Mohammed, age 16, saw his father die right before his eyes.  His eyes are full of sadness, yet have hope in them.  Yohannes is from Ethiopia.  For a while, no one is sure why he has learning disabilities, but eventually the school realizes that he needs glasses.  One teacher buys him a bike.  All these children needed was a chance.  To live.  Freedom.

According to the film’s official site, “Together, the bond between teacher and student, and amongst the students themselves, enables them to create new lives in this exceptional community.”  It really is a lovely love letter to Israel, a country that originated out of dire circumstances, when after the Holocaust millions of Jews had no place to go.  The school has opened its arms to children who have nowhere to go.  In the end, they give them life.

The film was directed and produced by Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon, whose Simon and Goodman Picture Company is based in NYC. Goodman was in attendance after the film and told about us about how she came to make the movie and about the process itself. She said that the film is airing on HBO in the fall. She is now working with the Israeli government to encourage filmmakers to come to make films in Israel. Next week she is taking her Oscar to the school to show the children and to keep the story alive in the minds of Israeli citizens.

Next week at the JCC Jewish Film Series in Scarsdale, NY, they are showing Barney’s Vision (Wednesday, June 22nd, 7pm). The film starts Dustin Hoffman and Paul Giametti. The film spans three decades of one man’s life. On June 27th, at 7pm, they are featuring the New Yiddish Cinema, a screening of clips and a lecture. You’ll find me at both.

Disclosure: I was not compensated to write this review.

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Review: Compulsion at the Public Theater /review-compulsion-public-theater/ /review-compulsion-public-theater/#comments Mon, 14 Mar 2011 14:13:23 +0000 CultureMom /?p=1746  

Compulsion

Photo Source: New York Times

A long time fan of Mandy Patinkin, I was very excited to hear about his latest play, “Compulsion”, which is part of my membership at the Public Theater.  I knew very little about it other than that it involved Anne Frank, the Holocaust, Israel and puppets, so naturally I was very curious.

Upon entrance to the theater, we came face to face with a group of puppets soaring over the set. At first glace, they would appear to be central characters of this play as they are the cast of the Anne Frank story – all the families that were in hiding with her during World War II.   However, they rise to the ceiling at the play’s start and the only puppets to reappear during the show are Anne Frank, a major character in the play, and Peter Van Daan, her companion while in hiding.  The puppets are masterfully orchestrated (by puppeteers Emily DeCola, Daniel Fay and Eric Wright) and add an important contribution to the play’s story.

Our first question after seeing this play was: is this a true story?  There is so much history intertwined into the story that one would think the events were real.  However, it says in the program that it is a “work of fiction based on one chapter in the life of a fantastic writer named Meyer Levin.”  Playwright Rinne Groff took a true story of a man with an obsession and created a story about another man’s obsession.  She did get the idea from a real non-fiction book called An Obsession with Anne Frank, as well the diary.  I, for one, was mesmerized by this play for as my husband rightly stated, it combined everything in the world I, myself, care about.  Using a combination of actors, puppets, film, voice-over narration, Groff really sent the message of the play home with me.  However crazed the main character gets, we are continuously being told by himself and Anne Frank that famous last line of the book: Despite everything, I believe that people are really good at heart.

Patinkin plays Sid Silver, an American Jewish writer, who was handed the manuscript of Anne Frank’s diary by his French wife not long after World War II.  He then worked with Simon and Schuster to get it published.  Silver makes immediate plans to adapt it into a powerful play and is determined to make sure that the Jewish voice of Frank and her wartime diary is not lost in the transition from page to stage.  But somewhere along the line, he clashes with the agents and producers, and his version is not brought to Broadway.

He proceeds to spend the next thirty years fighting to have his version brought to the stage.  He spends the next 30 years suing publishers, producers and rival playwrights accusing them of everything from theft to conspiracy to Antisemitism.  He even accuses Anne’s father of betraying his own daughter’s voice.   After struggling and fighting for 30 years to control the rights of the play, it causes problems in every area of his life.  He is obsessed and has visions of Anne Frank and speaks to Anne as a marionette.  Hearing her voice, as well as reading her words on the screen behind the actors adds to the play’s depth.

There are only three characters in the play: Patinkin plays Mr. Sid Silver; Hannah Cabell plays Miss Mermin (his editor) and Mrs. Silver (his wife); and Matte Osian plays Mr. Thomas (his publisher), Mr. Harris, Mr. Ferris and Mr. Matzliach (his artistic director in Israel).  They are all three exceptionally good and the two actors with multiple parts are very convincing.  My husband did even realize that Cabell was playing two parts.  Patinkin, as always, is masterful in the role as Sid Silver, who takes his character through a lifetime of angst.  Leave it to him to nail this part and play it so well, as I have always felt he a Jewish actor who cares about teaching the world about Jewish history.  This play, even though a work of fiction, teaches one, not only about the Holocaust, but about the current state of affairs in Israel and about the dispute over the land.

The play has completed its run, but you can get more information about the Public Theater’s current season here.

 

 

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JNF Operation Carmel Renewal: From Black to Green /jnf-operation-carmel-renewal-black-green/ /jnf-operation-carmel-renewal-black-green/#comments Tue, 07 Dec 2010 02:34:25 +0000 CultureMom /?p=1239

Some of my greatest memories are of planting trees in the beautiful forests of Northern Israel.  I was 16 the first I went on a high school program in Israel.  I remember planting trees in memorial to my loved ones in the soil of the Holy Land and how much it meant to me.  I have been back many times and repeated the same experience.  There is no place as beautiful.

That is why I am writing about what happened there last week.  On December 2nd, 2010, the worst fire in Israel’s history broke out in the Carmel Mountains near Haifa in Israel.

Losses have been devastating. At least 42 people have died, 25,000 were evacuated, homes were lost and more than 12,500 acres of forests destroyed. JNF foresters estimate that over 5 million trees were burned. After four days of continuous fighting, the Israeli firefighters succeeded in dousing the flames, but the road to recovery has only begun.The Carmel Forest fire that burned out of control for more than three days was brought under control Sunday in Israel. At least 42 people have died, homes were lost and more than 12,500 acres of forests destroyed. JNF foresters estimate over 5 million trees were burned.

Unfortunately, the road to recovery has just begun. Staying true to its mandate of caring for the needs of the land and people of Israel, JNF Operation Carmel Renewal: From Black to Green will help rebuild and renew the Carmel Forest.

Forest restoration efforts will include erosion prevention, clearing of debris, creation of firebreaks and care of the naturally regenerating woodlands. 

Israel’s firefighters are desperately short on supplies. JNF is the U.S. fundraising arm of Friends of Israel Firefighters. Your dollars will help purchase helmets, hoses, fire extinguishing chemicals and thermal cameras, among other emergency equipment.

Here is how you can help:

- Get your schools and synagogues involved. Download a flyer outlining the urgent needs of Israel’s firefighters.

- Get an update on JNF foresters who worked side by side with Israel’s firefighters to contain the damage.

- Make a donation to JNF to help cultivate and rejuvenate the forests until they are restored to their original beauty.

2) Provide firefighters with much-needed equipment and replace supplies that were depleted during the fight.

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Can You Tell Me How to Get to the Land of Israel? /land-israel/ /land-israel/#comments Sat, 09 Oct 2010 18:39:34 +0000 CultureMom /?p=910

I was so excited to receive both a copy of Shalom Sesame’s Welcome to Israel and Chaunkah: The Missing Menorah.  My 5 and 7 year-old’s quickly ran into the living room to watch them both.  Having just returned from a trip to Israel and also anticipating the upcoming holiday of Chanukah in our home, there was much excitement over these about to be released DVD’s.  Both come from the creators of Sesame Street and feature well-known American and Israeli celebrities like Debra Messing, Achinoam Nini, Mira Awad, Jake Gyllenhaal, Christina Applegate, Greg Kinnear, Debi Mazar and other recognizable talent.  Both DVD’s were just released by SISU Home Entertainment.

In Welcome to Israel, Grover and host Anneliese Van Der Pol (from That’s So Raven and Broadway’s Beauty and the Beast) travel to Israel to meet people and learn new things in this 12-part series.  It actually reminded me of our own recent trip – the plane ride, the fallaffel stands, walking through the streets of Tel Aviv.  Designed to help bring the vitality of Jewish culture and tradition, as well as the diversity of Israeli life to American children and their families, each 30-minute live-action and animated DVD will focus on storylines drawn from Jewish cultural traditions, highlighting lessons on Hebrew letters and words, unique sites in Israel and Jewish values.

In Chanukah: The Missing Menorah, Grover is bringing the latkes to celebrate Chanukah, and all is well until Anneliese gets caught in a game of tag with a chicken and loses her special menorah.  My friends were glued to the television during this special show, waiting to discover if her friends could help find the missing menorah in time for Chanukah.

There hasn’t been a lot of Jewish-themed videos for my kids with main-stream television characters that they’ve grown up with like the ones from Sesame Street.  Even though they grew out of that program long ago, they both gravitated toward these videos with no hesitation.  They knew that there would be a common thread, linking them to their religion and heritage that was quite special for me, as their mom, to see.  I know I’ve done a good job on that front after seeing them rush to watch these programs.

There is also a new web content on ShalomSesame.org (free, too) that goes along with these shows in the forms of activities, games, videos, caregiver tips and activity suggestions for parents and educators.

These DVDs are available for $14.95 SRP and can be ordered at 1-800-223-7478 or at Sisuent.com.

Disclosure: These DVDs were provided to me for my review but no opinion was asked of me.  Everything expressed is my own opinion.

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Home Away from Home /traveling-mom-home-away-from-home/ /traveling-mom-home-away-from-home/#comments Wed, 30 Jun 2010 05:20:00 +0000 CultureMom http://wordpress.theculturemom.com/traveling-mom-home-away-from-home/
When we started planning our recent trip to Israel, we thought about all of our accommodation requirements and needs.  Since we were visiting family and friends in Israel, we wanted a different experience.  We wanted to live like locals and really immerse ourselves in the culture, rather than be outsiders looking in.

Often, that’s how I feel when I stay at a hotel.  You are truly a visitor in a city.  As you pass though the lobby with bell hops and desk attendants at your beck and call, you are constantly reminded.

We had a town in mind.  My brother-in-law lives in Raanana.  It’s known as the city in Israel where all the Anglos settle, and the majority of its residents are English-speaking, deriving primarily from South Africa, England, Canada, and America.  It’s a lovely town, just 20 minutes from Tel Aviv.  It also has a great downtown high street, gorgeous parks, gardens and cultural programs.  It’s full of good restaurants.

To read the rest of this post, please go here.

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A Day Out in Israel’s Caesarea National Park /a-day-out-in-israels-caesarea-national-park/ /a-day-out-in-israels-caesarea-national-park/#comments Thu, 24 Jun 2010 18:35:00 +0000 CultureMom http://wordpress.theculturemom.com/traveling-mom-a-day-out-in-israels-caesarea-national-park/

One of my most vivid memories of being in Israel for the first time at age 16 was being a very special place called Caesarea (pronounced Kaysarya).  Standing amongst the ruins from hundreds of years of ruling empires certainly left its mark on my memory.

So, when a very good friend suggested we meet there during my recent trip to Israel, I jumped at the opportunity.  My two kids and one niece drove the 45 minutes from where we were staying down the coastal highway and were there by lunchtime.

We met at the marina, the old harbor.  Since it is now part of a national park in Israel, you have to pay a fee to enter the ruins.  I hadn’t expected that, but once we entered the area, I completely understood.  The ruins are so maintained, yet you feel like you are entering a time machine.  The place is captivating – ruins on the Mediterranean.  It was about 100 shekels for the four of us, about $25, which was not a lot for what we were able to see.  Entrance into Caesarea  for an adult costs 36 shekels (approx $10). Children enter for a reduced rate of 22 shekels ( approx $6).    My kids wanted to read every sign in order to understand what they were seeing for the first time in their lives.

Built during the time of Herod the Great, Caesarea was one of the most prominent cities of the Roman Empire’s eastern area.  It flourished during the Roman and Byzantine periods, but lost its standing in the seventh century A.D. when the Arabs took over the area.  Israel regained the area in 1948.  Herod’s Castle was built on the reef, which sticks out into the sea, and you can see a special mosaic floor, reserved from the period.  There are columns and mooring stones still anchored in the ground to give you a vision of what once was.  The views of the sea from the ruins are dazzling.

Once you’re inside the marina, you have access to beautiful restaurants with views of the ocean.  We chose to dine at Hatsalbanim which offers lovely kid’s meals of chicken schnitzel and fries, while we dined on salads, fish and glasses of wine.  I hadn’t seen this friend in 15 years and it was the perfect place for a reunion.  Lunch cost around $75 for the five of us.

After lunch, we walked over to the shops.  There are artist’s galleries and souvenir shops all over the grounds.  I bought some Judaica items and miscellaneous memorabilia for the kids.  There is also a fabulous ice cream shop near the crusader gate entrance, which sells a wide variety of delicious ice cream.  We didn’t have time for the free visual presentation that tells the park’s story.

Caesarea is also home to a renowned Amphitheater that was partially destroyed by the sea and has been preserved to host programming of all kinds, from concerts to horseracing during the summer and is a great place for the kids to run around.  The Caesarea Aquaduct Beach is beautiful, clustered around ruins on the sands, and we managed to spend some quality time on them on a different afternoon.  There are also a few museums in the area: the world’s only underwater museum and the Ralli Museum, with a focus on Latin American and Sephardic Jewish artwork.  If you are in the park and have time to explore, you will also see old bathhouses and Temples from the Byzantine era,

The park is open all year round, although in the summer season between April and September the park opens between 8am and 6pm. It closes at 4pm the remainder of the year, and an hour earlier on Fridays.

Even if you are not interested in the Roman excavations, the beautiful Mediterranean sea front location of Caesarea alone should dazzlefr you. It really is a great place to visit, but make sure you leave plenty of time.  It’s a terrific day out for adults and kids of all ages.

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Exploring Tel Aviv with Kids /exploring-tel-aviv-with-kids/ /exploring-tel-aviv-with-kids/#comments Tue, 22 Jun 2010 11:20:00 +0000 CultureMom http://wordpress.theculturemom.com/traveling-mom-exploring-tel-aviv-with-kids/ If you haven’t visited Tel Aviv, you must put it on your list.  It is such a happening city, offering so much variety: great beaches, good shopping, restaurants of all kinds, easy access to all of Israel including Jerusalem in one direction and the north in another.  It’s bustling, absolutely thriving.

Tourism is definitely up, as witnessed by the various accents throughout the city and a decent exchange rate.  The city has changed a lot since my last visit seven years ago, only for the better.  There’s also a lot to do with children, everything from beaches to museums to playgrounds to historical landmarks.

When we first drove in after spending a few days in Jerusalem on this past trip, I immediately noticed how much construction has taken place over the years.  The city is booming, it’s truly a metropolis.  You can’t help but first notice all the motorcycles buzzing through the city.  It’ must be the latest craze and an economical way to get around.  There are coffee shops popping up all over the city.  The Tel Aviv Port has been renovated.  The markets are buzzing.  Whenever you tire of city life, you can just head over to the beaches that line the city on one side and are heaven on earth.

In Jerusalem, we felt a heavy army presence, as well as more of a split between the religious and non-religious sectors.  You don’t feel this in Tel Aviv.  However, just as I felt safe in Jerusalem, I felt equally safe in Tel Aviv.  On our last visit in 2003 right before my daughter was born; there were guards outside every restaurant.  Buses were dangerous.  This is no longer.  We felt incredibly safe.  What a difference 7 years makes, including the fact that I now have a child.  Last time I was in Israel, I was 32 weeks pregnant with my first child.  She went around telling our family and friends that this is her second trip there, even though the first trip was in vitro. 

To read the entire post, please go here.

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Exploring Jerusalem with Kids /exploring-jerusalem-with-kids/ /exploring-jerusalem-with-kids/#comments Tue, 22 Jun 2010 11:15:00 +0000 CultureMom http://wordpress.theculturemom.com/traveling-mom-exploring-jerusalem-with-kids/
I have spent a lot of time in Israel in my lifetime, and I have traveled to a lot of places.  Yet no matter where I go or how exotic the destination is, Jerusalem holds a special place in my heart.  When I started booking our recent trip to Israel, I knew we had to start in Jerusalem and spend a few days there.  

The city also holds many special memories for me as I attended part of high school and college in the city. I know Jerusalem as intimately as I know my own hometown, perhaps even more so.

Jerusalem is the capital of Israel and is one of the most inspiring cities in the world.  When you are there, you feel its sanctity, history and multiculturalism and it runs through your pores.

The city was established 5,000 years ago and literally means “The City of Gold”.   The entire city is built with a special stone, the Jerusalem limestone, which makes its architecture incredibly unique and beautiful.  Jews, Christians and Muslims live here and there are many religious shrines and monuments for everyone.  The city truly shines, in more ways than one.

Jerusalem is a divided city.  It was divided until 1967 between the Jews and Arabs, when Israel took the city during the Six Day War.  Today it is reunited under Israeli government but is still in debate.  You don’t feel the tension when you are walking around, but it’s definitely important to know where you’re going so you don’t end up anywhere you are not supposed to be.
To read the rest of this post, visit TravelingMom.
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25 Reasons I Love Israel /25-reasons-i-love-israel/ /25-reasons-i-love-israel/#comments Mon, 21 Jun 2010 19:55:00 +0000 CultureMom http://wordpress.theculturemom.com/culture-mom-travel-25-reasons-i-love-israel/ I won’t lie – every time I visit Israel, I come back pining to move there. This past trip was no exception. I have an attachment to the country.

Here’s a short list of 25 reasons why I love Israel. I can already think of 25 more.

1. With my curly locks and dark skin, I fit right in.

2. I love it when hummus and tahini are acceptable foods to eat at all times of the day.

3. I love the way everything closes on Shabbat and a sense of tranquility covers the streets.

4. The mix of cultures.

5. You don’t have to travel long distances to see everything. It’s a small country, and it’s gotit all – seasides, mountains, deserts, cities, and, of course, Jerusalem

6. Floating in the Dead Sea.

7. Feeling safer than anywhere else in the world.

8. The awesome sense of community you feel as soon your plane lands on the ground.

9. Getting off the plane and picking up your bags with groups of people praying at the wall on the way behind you as you exit out to customs.

10. The shuks, or markets, where you can buy amazing produce and crafts by artists who’ve come from all over the world.

11. Meeting people everywhere you go who are open and want to tell you their stories of how they got to Israel from their native land, and their thoughts on their new home.

12. The beaches which are the most dazzling on the planet.

13. Climbing to the top of Masada at sunset.

14. The fruit, the cottage cheese and bread that are made on kibbutzim. Other Israeli foods include melawach, jachnun, kubaneh, shwarma, fallafel and all the eggplant salads, olives and fatouch.

15. Haifa, a gorgeous coastal city with the Bahai Gardens which are oh, so beautiful.

16. Experiencing the mystic cities of Sfat and Tiberius.

17. Experiencing any major Jewish holiday and having the whole country celebrate with you.

18. Wireless Internet everywhere, even in Ben Gurion Airport.

19. How proud everyone is to serve their country and how parents do not think twice of having their children serve in the army.

20. Speaking my minimal Hebrew and hearing from Israelis how impressive it is (well, the kids and I communicated, anyway).

21. Hanging out in Eilat, the southern most tip of Israel, with beaches that are out of this world.

22. Letting my kids run and play freely in the parks around my flat in Raanana.

23. Feeling flustered and lost on the highway and while stopped in traffic, the guy next to me rolled down his window and offered his assistance.

24. Feeling the history of not only the land, but the people, who have come from far and near escaping persecution to settle here.

25. Having a sense of pride for how far the country has come in the mere 62 years it has existed in this world.

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Stand Up for Israel/Comedy for Koby /stand-up-for-israelcomedy-for-koby/ /stand-up-for-israelcomedy-for-koby/#comments Sun, 13 Jun 2010 14:48:00 +0000 CultureMom http://wordpress.theculturemom.com/culture-mom-night-out-stand-up-for-israelcomedy-for-koby/

I spent my freshman year of university in Jerusalem with a guy named Avi Liberman (pictured above).  I always remembered him as a genuinely nice, funny guy and was happy when we reconnected on Facebook a few years ago.  The program we went on either convinced you to move to Israel or turned you in a real Zionist, doing what you can for Israel from wherever you are.

For the last few years, I’ve been keeping up with Avi’s life as a comedian, whilst he’s been living in Los Angeles.  I knew that he has great success in his field.  However, I didn’t really know how he has taken his Zionism to awesome heights…until my recent trip to Israel when I was able to experience it myself.
Avi is the guy behind this incredibly unique tour called “Stand Up for Israel/Comedy for Koby” that he brings to Israel twice a year in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, Raanana, Beit Shemesh Haifa, Modiin and, for the first time this year, Gush Etzion.  When I realized the show was coming to Raanana, where we were staying, I rushed my kids to my sister-in-law’s house for the evening and ran to the theater with an American friend to nab a ticket from the already sold-out show.  I was desperate to see what the show was all about.  Every American friend I mentioned it to while in Israel was aware of the show.  Word is out.   This is obviously a show with meaning and a purpose.

It all started on May 8th, 2001, when Arab terrorists murdered Koby Mandell, a 13-year-old boy and his friend, Yosef Ish Ran, near their home in Israel.  Their parents set up the Koby Mandell Foundation to aid victims of terror.  The money they raise provides individuals and families with the tools to translate the pain and suffering of tragedy into personal growth, deeper interpersonal relationships and active community leadership.  The money helps send victims of terror to summer camp and other events that they might otherwise miss out on. Proceeds from Comedy for Koby’s ticket sales support the Koby Mandell Foundation working on behalf of these families.

Avi came up with the idea seven years ago while visiting Israel during the height of the Intifada.  Since then, he has seen the shows develop into something that Israelis rush out to buy tickets for as soon as  they go on sale.  He brings different comedians from North America’s comedy scene every year, twice a year.  His goal is to make people laugh and forget the news going on around them.  This was certainly what Israelis needed during my visit, after the flotilla incident caused such a negative international reaction.

This time Avi invited renowned and established comedians Wayne Cotter, Johnny Sanchez and Bob Zany to join him on stage to crack jokes about Americans living in Israel, their visit to the country (the first-time for all of them), their lives back in the U.S. and other news-worthy topics.  They were all hilarious and much of the audience was in tears during the performance.  The audience mainly consisted of Americans and other Anglos who have migrated to Israel.  Quite often, the comedians turned to the audience for participation and there was an open Q&A; at the end of the show.

Avi opened up the show saying they had added another performance on a cruise ship to Turkey (which got a lot of laughs) and included a list of the top ten things you won’t hear in Mea Shearim  (“I forgot my gym clothes!”); Zany, a regular on Leno, said his next stop would be the Tel Aviv Kentucky Fried Chicken; Sanchez, the first Latino to ever join the tour, talked about his impressions of the country and included an accurate statement about how the country’s beauty is never included in media images of what’s happening; and Cotter talked his own experience of visiting Israel for the first time and having a child late in life, amongst many other topics which cracked the audience up.

They were all so funny, just what the doctor ordered for this group of English speakers living in Israel.  Sometimes, you just gotta laugh, and Avi’s team delivered the laughs.

Seeing the show made me so proud to know Avi.  It also gave me an opportunity to get away from the kids for a night!  As much as I love them, being away for 3 weeks with not one night out did make me crave some time alone, and I got it that night.  I got my dose of culture, while contributing to a cause I care so much about.

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