It is the second to last day of our Taglit/Birthright
journey in Israel and it is another day of contrast. Our students began the day with a visit to
Yad Vashem, the Jerusalem institute dedicated to preserving the memories of the
Holocaust and teaching us all of its enduring and painful lessons. It will be a somber morning for our students;
some have grandparents who are Holocaust survivors, for others this will be
their first face-to-face encounter with this profound sadness. We will follow up with a discussion on
individual and collective Jewish memories.
Can we have shared memories with Jewish people around the world; now, in
the past and in the future? How do these
memories frame and shape our lives and actions?
These are wonderful young men and women and they will embrace these
complex and painful discussions.
Upon leaving Yad Vashem, our students will travel to Machane
Yehuda, the vibrant, bustling outdoor market where the Jews of Jerusalem will
be buying fruits, vegetables, cakes, challah and wine for the Sabbath. Those who have been to this market on the day
before Shabbat understand how fully it represents the vibrancy and energy of Jerusalem,
Israel, Judaism and the Jewish people.
The market almost assaults our senses with sights, sounds and smells;
vendors hawking their wares; the aromas of sweet spices; Orthodox Jews rushing
to get home as the afternoon turns toward evening.
It is this sense of contrasts that perhaps best describes
our journey thus far in Israel: Our 24
hours of rushed travel, followed by the wonderful tranquility and peacefulness
of Shabbat on Kibbutz Degana Bet. The
pain of visiting the site of the assassination of Israel Prime Minister Yizhak
Rabin, followed by a visit to the bustling streets of Jaffa, alive with
Israel/Oriental fusion restaurants, coffee shops and antique dealers. A visit to the magnificent ancient mosaics of
Tzippori, followed by a delightful guided tour of the artist village of Ein
Hod. It is perhaps through these days of
contrasts that our students are coming to see and understand the richness and
diversity of Israel, Israelis and the Jewish people.
The journey has been both a collective experience but also an
intensely personal one for each of us. Each
student, in their own way, has made a personal connection to the land and
people of Israel. A student and I shared
a taxi ride through the streets of Jerusalem. The driver, who wore a kippah,
began asking about our lives in America.
Soon, he and I were singing Z’mirot, Sabbath songs together. When the ride ended the student enquired: “Are
all taxi drivers in Israel like this?” We talked about what it meant to be in a
Jewish country. Last night, with great
trepidation, another student phoned his 103 year old great aunt who he had
never met and never spoken to before.
“What should I say? Will she
understand me?” “Tell her about yourself,”
I counseled. Later that evening he came
to me with a wonderful smile on his face.
He had spoken to his great aunt; she was raised in England – even at age
103 she was lucid and thoughtful. A
Jewish connection was made between nations and generations.
Our ‘mifgash’, the
encounter with the Israeli soldiers who joined us for half of the trip, was
perhaps most emblematic of the bonding that took place between our students and
the land and people of Israel. Before the
Israelis arrived, Hillary, our tour educator, asked our students to draw
pictures representing their image of the Israeli soldiers we were about to
meet. The aggregate images of guns,
falafel, kippot and payis displayed their notion of these peers from Israel as
somewhat alien beings. Over the days the
American and Israelis were together they learned about each other, laughed and
shared music. At the end of our time
together Americans and Israelis hugged and cried. The collective sentiments of these wonderful
young adults were shared by an Israeli soldier and then by one of our students:
“We didn’t know what to expect, but you are just like us.”
“I’m so proud to be Jewish and to call these people our
people.”
Our second and last
Sabbath in Israel will soon be upon us.
Tomorrow night we will board the British Airways jet back to the
States. We have traveled the length and breadth
of this nation. Each student has
embarked upon and, hopefully, just begun, his or her own Jewish adventure.