Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Fourth Week in Israel
Saturday, July 17, 2010
Shabbat shalom!
Monday, July 12, 2010
Typical Day at Camp
Sunday, July 11, 2010
first week of camp comes to a close
Monday, July 5, 2010
everything since the last post
It has been a great few days in Israel since I last wrote! Our internet hasn’t been working recently, but hopefully it will be working soon. Right now I am able to borrow our neighbors. In the last few days, we have spent a lot of time getting ready for camp to start. We have been having a ton of meetings with Lior to plan everything out and make the empty school look nicer. I have also been working with my co-counselor, Paz, to plan out activities we are going to do with our kids. My kids are in “kitah daled,” so they are in 4th grade. We will have 16 kids. I am excited – it should be fun, but I know the kids are going to be a lot wilder than American kids.
We have become great friends with the Israeli counselors already and they are all very welcoming of us. Most of them know English really well and are totally on top of all the latest things. They all love the TV shows that we like – Glee, How I Met your mother, the OC, MTV shows, etc. For the last two nights, they took us with them to the local pub called Muza – which everyone seems to tell us will be our second home while we are in Arad. Also, randomly, right next door to Muza is this store/factory that sells lotions and soaps with dead sea minerals, that I realized that I went to when I was in Israel last time! Actually, the face wash that I brought with me is from that place, and it says it was made in Arad, so this is how I figured it out. It has been a lot of fun to meet everyone. On Thursday night, our friend Liat’s brother came home from the army for the weekend, so she brought him and his friends (all in the army also) out with us, so we were able to talk to the Israeli soldiers which was interesting.
The other night I got to go to the supermarket. The Jewish Agency lets us go with Lior to the supermarket every week to buy whatever food we want for us. I enjoy food shopping a lot, so it was fun for me to be able to go here. Pretty much every place in Israel is kosher, so the supermarket was also. There was a big wall in between the deli meat and cheese section – along with everything else being split.
Lately, we have been spending a lot of our free time at the pool. There is a big pool in the center of the city where everyone goes. We have free passes from the Jewish agency, which is great for us. Thursday night, we went to a big sport banquet/bbq for all the sports teams in Arad at the pool. There was a ton of people there, and the mayor and many different people spoke. My co-counselor, Paz, is on the Israeli national team for handball (a huge sport here) and won a trophy!
Friday night was our first Shabbat in Arad. We all got assigned to different host families throughout the city to spend Friday night with. They are families of the counselors that we work with in camp. So, my host family was a girl Tal, who is 18. She is half-American (mom is American), and her mom grew up in Stony Brook on Long Island. For Friday night dinners here, almost every family makes a really nice meal even if they are not religious (which most people are not religious here). The meals usually start later – Ofra drove us to our houses around 8:30-9pm. Their house was in a really nice neighborhood! It was big for houses we have seen and was very nice. Everyone in the family was very nice and welcoming. I watched “How I met your mother” and “Desperate Housewives” with Tal’s 14 year old sister before dinner started. The food was all really good – Israeli salads to start, salmon, chicken (schnitzel), rice, casserole and stuffed peppers. We all enjoyed our dinners a lot, and all of our host families were very welcoming and friendly towards us.
Friday night is the big night to go out in Israel, because of the 6 day work week. People work Sunday to Friday and take Saturday as a complete rest day. So, after our dinners, we invited everyone to our little house to hang out and then went to Muza-which was much more crowded than previous nights. We had decided earlier in the night that we were going to stay up to watch the sun rise and sure enough, we did. A whole group of us (Americans and Israelis) went to an open area and watched the sunrise around 5:30-6am. Luckily, we had Saturday to sleep in, which everyone does here. Most people actually sleep and relax all day – nothing is open so there really isn’t much to do anyway.
It has been a great few day! We are all having a great time, and Israel is such a great place! People are just very friendly and just have such a different lifestyle than Americans. Tomorrow (Sunday) is our first day of camp, and also the 4th of July. We have a 4th of July activity planned for all of the 130 kids for the first day – should be interesting!
Shabbat-
Shabbat was very much needed! After watching the sunrise, we took the day to sleep and relax. Later in the afternoon, the girls and I went over to one of our Israeli friend’s houses to watch the Germany vs. Argentina world cup game with a bunch of other people. His dad is an artist and makes these large metal sculptures which were really cool. Then they took us to this amazing look out point in Arad, where you can see everything – all the surrounding desert and even Jordan. We watched the sun set from there, which was funny, because we also had watched the sun rise the day same. We spent time just talking to our a few of the people we were with (who are all in the army), because they were leaving Arad to go back to their bases on Sunday. They all have different jobs – one is a paratrooper, one is in the air force, etc.
Sunday – First day of camp!
Sunday-also July 4th – was the first day of camp! We had to be there at 7 am, and kids started coming around 7:30-8am. The theme for the day was 4th of July (and the theme for the week is USA). It was a little chaotic because it was the first day, but I think it went well. I have 12 girls and 3 boys in my group, and they are all 9 and in 4th grade. They are all nice – I just feel bad because they speak to me in Hebrew and then I don’t know what to say sometimes to respond. There are a couple who speak some English and they kept saying words they knew in English to help me though! One girl said that she thinks we are nice counselors and is going to bring us a present tomorrow! They were cute, and I think it will be a good few weeks! At night, we had a bbq in a park here with the Israeli counselors...it was a fun way to spend the 4th! More to come sooon!