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Category: News

מונטריאול לתל אביב

מונטריאול לתל אביב

אייר–טראנסאט תפעיל לראשונה טיסה ישירה ממונטריאול לתל אביב בחודשי הקיץ. (צילום: Patrick Cardinal via Wikimedia Commons)

לראשונה תופעל טיסה ישירה ממונטריאול לתל אביב, באמצעות חברת הצ’רטרים הקנדית אייר-טראנסאט. זאת במלאת 150 שנה להיווסדותה של קנדה ו-375 שנה להיווסדותה של מונטריאול.

עד היום הופעלו טיסות ישירות בין קנדה לישראל רק מטורנטו, באמצעות חברת התעופה הקנדית אייר קנדה וחברת התעופה הישראלית אל על. זו הפעם הראשונה שאייר-טראנסאט (שהיא חברת התעופה השלישית בגדולה בקנדה) טסה ליעד במזרח התיכון.

אייר-טראנסאט נותנת אפוא מענה לביקוש הגדל לטיסות בין שתי המדינות. היא תפעיל את הקו החדש משדה התעופה טרודו במונטריאול לשדה התעופה נתב”ג בתל אביב, בחודשי הקיץ, בין ה-18 ביוני ועד סוף אוקטובר. הטיסות יבוצעו באמצעות מטוס איירבוס (מסוג אי330-300) שמכיל 345 מקומות ישיבה.

יש אפשרות לטוס עם אייר-טראנסאט מטורונטו למונטריאול ומשם לטוס ישירות לישראל. בסך הכל יתקיימו שתי טיסות שבועיות בין מונטריאול לתל אביב, בימים רביעי וראשון (הטיסה צפויה להימשך כתשע וחצי שעות), וכן שתי טיסות מתל אביב למונטריאול בימים שני וחמישי (הטיסה צפויה להימשך כעשר וחצי שעות). לפי ימי הטיסה שאינם כוללים את שבת, ניתן להבין שהחברה מאותתת שהיא תפנה בין היתר לקהל היעד בקרב יהודים דתיים והחרדים, שגרים במונטריאול ויש להם בני משפחה בישראל והפוך.

בחודשי הקיץ אייר-טראנסאט טסה בעיקר לעשרים ושמונה יעדים טרנסאטלנטים מרכזיים באירופה (בהם: צרפת, אנגליה, סקוטלנד, איטליה, יוון, ספרד, פורטוגל, הולנד, שוויצריה בלגיה, צ’כיה, אירלנד וקרואטיה). ואילו בחודשי החורף החברה טסה בעיקר ליעדים חמים במדינות הלטיניות ודרום אמריקה (בהם: מקסיקו, קולומביה, קוסטה ריקה, הרפובליקה הדומניקנית, אל סלוודור, האיטי, הונדורס, ג’מייקה, ניקרגואה, מרטיניק, פנמה, גוואדלופ, סנט לושה וסנט מרטין).

אייר-טראנסאט שמשווקת בתוספת לכרטיסי טיסה גם חבילות נופש ותיור רבות, תציע שירותים אלה גם לאלה שטסים לישראל. חבילות הנופש יכללו בתי מלון בתל אביב וכן בירושלים, ובנוסף סיורים מודרכים לאתרים תירותיים רבים באזור.

בסיסה של אייר-טראנסאט נמצא במונטריאול והחברה מפעילה שישים ושלושה קווים (מהם כארבעים ברחבי הקיץ) לעשרים ושש מדינות במהלך כל השנה, ממונטריאול וכן משדה התעופה פירסון בטורונטו. כמות הנוסעים של חברת התעופה עומדת על כשלושה מיליון איש בשנה. בהנהלת אייר-טראנסאט מאמינים כי השנה תפוסת המטוסים שלה תגדל בכעשרים אחוז לעומת אשתקד. החברה שמעסיקה כאלפיים וחמש מאות עובדים תחגוג השנה שלושים שנה להיווסדה.

השם טראמפ יוסר ממלון הדירות טראמפ אינטרנשיונל בטורונטו

מלון הדירות טראמפ אינטרנשיונל בטורונטו הוצע למכירה תמורת 298 מיליון דולר. הבניין בגובה 65 קומות שנפתח ב-2012 כולל 211 חדרי מלון, 74 דירות ושטחים מסחריים (כולל מסעדה בקומה ה-31). הליך המכירה מתנהל בפיקוח בית המשפט ויש כבר מתעניינים ברכישת הבניין, שנמצא ברחוב ביי בדאון טאון. הפרוייקט נושא את שם הנשיא החדש של ארה”ב דונלד טראמפ, ועם המכירה השם טראמפ יוסר ממנו לרווחת רבים מהתושבים. הבניין נפתח באיחור לאור בעיות שנתגלו בבנייתו. בנוסף זכוכית נפלה מהקומה ה-34, לאחר מכן התברר שהאנטנה שעל הגג אינה יציבה, ונתגלע סדק באחד החלונות.

בעלת הבניין חברת טאלון אינטרנשיונל בשליטת המיליארדר היהודי-רוסי, אלכס שניידר, צברה חוב של כ-300 מיליון דולר. טאלון וחברת הניהול של המלון בבעלות טראמפ, הגישו תביעות הדדיות על הפרת הסכמים. ואילו 23 תביעות הוגשו לבית המשפט על ידי בעלי דירות נגד החברות טאלון וטראמפ בטענות לניהול כושל, ואי עמידה בהבטחות להשכרת נכסיהם. עד היום מרבית הסוויטות לא נמכרו ותפוסת המלון עומדת על 55%-75% בלבד.

Format ImagePosted on January 18, 2017January 17, 2017Author Roni RachmaniCategories עניין בחדשותTags Air Transat, Montreal, real estate, Tel Aviv, Toronto, Trump, אייר-טראנסאט, טורונטו, טראמפ, ממונטריאול, נדל"ן, תל אביב
New start for Café Forty One

New start for Café Forty One

Chef Menajem Peretz (above) has partnered with Yamila Chikiar and chocolatier Daniel Presman. Peretz and the couple met through a mutual friend, and the three now co-own FortyOne Catering, Neshama and Café Forty One. (photo by Lauren Kramer)

It’s a new year and a new beginning for the restaurant at Oak and 41st. Café Forty One is under new ownership and has reopened at its former location, following the closing of Shuk Eat + Play several months ago. The three entrepreneurs at its helm are energized, excited and ready to feed Jewish Vancouver with soul food that’s kosher, delicious and caters to both the sweet-toothed and those who prefer savoury.

About 50 people showed up for the grand opening of Café Forty One last Thursday. Menajem Peretz, by now a well-known face in Vancouver’s kosher catering scene with a well-deserved reputation for culinary excellence, was in the kitchen. The trays that emerged carried crispy avocado spring rolls, bruschetta, and latke sandwiches filled with smoked salmon and sour cream.

photo - Yamila Chikiar and Daniel Presman
Yamila Chikiar and Daniel Presman (photo by Lauren Kramer)

Peretz’s co-partners, Daniel Presman and Yamila Chikiar, managed the reception, displaying their talent behind the glass display case, which featured an assortment of pastries, mini-cakes, bonbons (Presman’s exquisitely decorated chocolate squares with liquid fillings), cupcakes, strudel, muffins, cake pops and blintzes.

“In the two months before we opened, we put up new lighting, re-did the décor and renovated the tables,” said Chikiar, who moved to Vancouver from Buenos Aires 16 months ago with her spouse, Presman, mother-in-law and two children. Presman, a chocolatier who sold his bonbons to five-star hotels in Argentina, went back to work making kosher chocolates under the brand name Neshama, and the artistic, rich treats were quickly picked up by Superstore.

photo - Neshama chocolates
Neshama chocolates (photo by Lauren Kramer)

The couple met Peretz, who is also from Buenos Aires, through a mutual friend and hit it off immediately. Peretz was impressed with the bonbons and asked Presman to supply Neshama chocolates to his catering company. The relationship evolved and Group 41 was the result, a parent company that encompasses FortyOne Catering, Neshama and Café Forty One, and is owned and operated by all three partners.

“It was like a blessing when we met Menajem,” Chikiar said. “It’s difficult immigrating to another country and we had a hard year at first. But then opportunities started presenting themselves and it was like G-d was guiding us on a path.”

Café Forty One is a dairy establishment following Chalav Yisrael protocols, while FortyOne Catering offers meat, dairy and pareve meals. Chikiar is heading up marketing and communications and managing the front of house for the restaurant, while Presman heads up the sweet department and Peretz masterminds the savoury.

“The idea is to offer big portions and to give Café Forty One diners something extra,” Presman explained. “For example, all our sandwiches come with a shot of the hot soup of the day and, with any hot drink, we’re giving diners two free bonbons.”

The menu includes soups, salads, falafel and hummus plates, shakshuka, blintzes, omelettes, pizzas and sandwiches, as well as a wide assortment of sweet treats. The restaurant is open 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday through Friday and underground parking is free for diners.

Lauren Kramer, an award-winning writer and editor, lives in Richmond. To read her work online, visit laurenkramer.net.

Format ImagePosted on January 13, 2017January 11, 2017Author Lauren KramerCategories LocalTags chocolates, Israeli food, kosher, restaurants
BBC’s advocate in the West

BBC’s advocate in the West

Ryan Bellerose, left, in Jerusalem with Michael Dickson of Stand With Us. (photo from Ryan Bellerose)

Ryan Bellerose is not the first Métis to stand with Israel, though he might end being one of the most influential, as he works to increase B’nai Brith Canada’s presence and advocacy voice in Alberta and British Columbia.

Based in Calgary, Bellerose became BBC’s advocacy coordinator for Western Canada just over four months ago. Like many Métis of his generation, he was raised Roman Catholic but, later in life, found his way back to indigenous spirituality and decided that Catholicism was not for him.

“I try to worship the creator the way Cree people do, rather than the way white people do,” he told the Independent.

Growing up, Bellerose read about Israel and felt a kinship with Israelis insofar as the struggles they have endured concerning their ancestral land and rights. The Métis here in Canada have had less success with similar struggles, he said.

That’s how his connection to Israel started, said Bellerose. “On top of that, on my mother’s side, my great-grandmother was really pro-Israel. She grew up in Norway during WWII. She was very pro-Israel, because she was very anti-Nazi Germany.

“She would drink Manischewitz wine everyday at 4 p.m. As a kid, I asked her one time why she drinks it, because she’d always make a face when drinking it. She told me, ‘I drink this because it shows the world that the Jews didn’t die and that the Nazis lost.’”

It would not be until Bellerose was in university that it became clear in his mind why he, himself, was pro-Israel. A Jewish friend at the University of Alberta helped him see just how similar the Métis and Jewish narratives are.

“I didn’t realize she was Jewish and I used to hang out with her a lot,” recalled Bellerose. “She’d always invite me over for dinner at her house on Friday. They weren’t super-observant Jews, but they still lit candles and had Shabbat dinner. They didn’t eat meat on Friday … all things that my family did, too. So, I just thought that they were super-Catholics, and I told my grandma that my friend is totally super-Catholic and that she’d love this girl.”

What Bellerose did not yet realize at the time was that his friend was being bullied at the U of A to a degree he had never seen before. Growing up in northern Alberta, Bellerose had experienced a lot of racism and prejudice, but nothing, he said, like these verbal attacks on his friend.

“What was a shock to me was this girl – blond-haired, blue-eyed, who played on sports teams and was super-smart academically – was being bullied to the point that she was considering suicide,” said Bellerose. “We’d be walking across the quad at the U of A and someone would yell, ‘Baby killer!’ I just always assumed they must be yelling at someone else or maybe even yelling at me, because there’s no way they would be yelling at her.”

This occurred a few times before Bellerose learned that his friend had participated in several pro-Israel events and that it was some very anti-Israel U of A students who were shouting such slurs at her.

“It’s one of those things that … it’s very difficult for a rational, moral human being to even wrap their heads around…. I think that’s why a lot of Canadians don’t understand the depth of this,” said Bellerose.

“It’s simply because she used to wear an IDF T-shirt and she was Jewish. So, I mean, the excuse would be anti-Zionism, but the truth is that it is antisemitism.

“I’m supposed to be one of her close friends and, yet, I had absolutely no idea what she was going through. I should be more sensitive than that as a Métis person who has experienced that kind of thing. It really bothered me that I didn’t see it. That was when I decided that I’m not going to stand there and be quiet when this kind of stuff happens.”

Soon after, in 2002, Bellerose was on his way to his football locker when he encountered an “apartheid wall” in his way. It was made out of papier-mâché and cardboard, and had bloody handprints on it. As the wall was blocking his way, Bellerose asked politely if they could move it. A female student responded to him, “Now, you understand the persecution the Palestinians deal with on a daily basis.”

Bellerose said, “I looked at her and said that my [Métis] people were still allowed to be killed in 1939 in Canada … that nobody will do anything about that … so don’t lecture me about oppression. I lost my cool with her and said that they should either move the wall or I would. They didn’t, so I walked over and ripped it down. I was angry, so I flipped their table over. They had a bucket of propaganda and I kicked that over.”

Fast-forward about 10 years, and Bellerose has joined Calgary United with Israel. He began his involvement helping organize events on a volunteer basis, while working full-time. During his spare time, he would argue with antisemites in comment sections of published articles, but eventually realized that he would be able to get his message out a lot more quickly if he educated influential people instead, on both sides of the conflict.

Bellerose said many people in the world, out of ignorance, believe that the Palestinians are on the side of complete right in the conflict, painting Jews as occupiers as opposed to people returning to their homeland.

“That’s literally how this whole idea that the Palestinians are the native people and the Jews are the white European colonizers came about…. That’s how it was spread so easily,” said Bellerose. “Arabs flipped that narrative…. If I allowed the argument that the Arabs are indigenous to the land of Israel, then I might as well turn around and say that white people are now indigenous to Canada. A lot of native people don’t understand that until you literally put it into those terms.”

Bellerose has a fairly significant following on social media, partly because he used to play football and partly because he is a sometimes controversial personality who makes people uncomfortable. B’nai Brith Canada began following Bellerose, too, and was especially impressed with his imploring Jews to be proactive in their advocacy and unapologetic.

“I firmly believe that the biggest part of this problem is that, a lot of times, until recently, Jewish advocates were kind of taught not to talk about the settlements,” said Bellerose. “I’m here to talk about the good things about Israel. Of course, the truth is there’s a lot to criticize – but there’s so much more to be proud of.”

When BBC hired Bellerose, he could hardly believe he would be paid to do what he loves doing and would do anyway.

“I tell people that I’m going to be more professional, swear a little less,” he quipped regarding his role with BBC. But, he added, B’nai Brith itself has become “less apologetic, more proactive … a little more in your face.”

Bellerose especially likes working with young adults, as he strongly believes there are many young people who are not connected with their identity because they don’t really understand it.

Bellerose is also working hard to build bridges between aboriginals and Jews. “I think that, by building these bridges, eventually we can help you and you can help us, and it will make the world a better place,” he said. “This is best done through what I call ‘relationship advocacy.’ Instead of going out and telling everyone how wonderful Israel is and how wonderful Jews are, I think it works much better when Jewish people invite somebody for Shabbat. The moment they see you as a human being and not an abstract concept, you build a relationship with that person. And, when that person has a relationship with you, they are way more likely to stand up for you, way more likely to actually get involved.”

Rebeca Kuropatwa is a Winnipeg freelance writer.

Format ImagePosted on January 13, 2017January 11, 2017Author Rebeca KuropatwaCategories NationalTags advocacy, B'nai B'rith, First Nations, Israel, Western Canada

A new youth award

Temple Sholom is inviting applications for the inaugural Tikkun Olam Youth Award. The award will be presented at the Dreamers & Builders Gala on March 5 to a deserving Jewish teen in the community who has demonstrated a vision to heal the world through an act of tikkun olam.

A prize of $1,800 will be awarded, of which $600 must be used toward the recipient’s tikkun olam project and $1,200 goes directly to the recipient as an award for being an example to the community.

The submission deadline for applications is, Friday, Jan. 13, 4 p.m. The winner will be notified on Jan. 31.

To qualify, an applicant must be a Jewish teen between the ages of 13 and 19; have identified something in the community, in the country or globally, that is in need of repair; and must have commenced the project.

Potential areas of award might include, but are in no way limited to animals in need of rescue and special treatment; antisemitism; art and/or music therapy; discrimination; global warming; Holocaust remembrance; LGBTQ; poverty; seniors; sustainable living; Syrian refugees; world peace and anything in between.

Applications may be submitted via online form or a video or multi-media presentation no longer than five minutes. Applicants should answer the following questions:

  1. What problem did you observe that needed fixing or healing?
  2. What steps have you taken toward your goal?
  3. What is your vision for the next steps to be taken?
  4. How will the community it is intended for benefit?
  5. Why are you passionate about this?
  6. How does the initiative connect to Jewish values?
  7. Who might the applicant try to involve to see the dream to fruition?

To apply, visit templesholom.ca/tikkun-olam-youth-award.

Posted on January 13, 2017January 11, 2017Author Temple SholomCategories LocalTags tikkun olam, youth

Share light of Shabbat

“We want to share Shabbat with those who are alone, or those who might have difficulty cooking for themselves. Plus, we want to help every Jew feel connected and part of the community,” said Rabbi Yechiel Baitelman of Chabad of Richmond, who started the Light of Shabbat program in 2011. “This is not tzedakah; it’s about making a connection with other Jews and helping them celebrate the mitzvah of Shabbos.”

With help from devoted community volunteers, full kosher Shabbat meals are cooked and delivered to those who are elderly, alone, recovering from illness, or homebound. Currently, deliveries are done every other week to about 10 people in Richmond. Each Shabbat box contains challah, grape juice and Shabbat candles, plus a meal of soup, salad, chicken, vegetables and dessert – all homemade. They even include a little card with the blessing for lighting candles, the Torah portion for the week and information about why Jews celebrate Shabbat.

“The boxes are personalized, depending on the needs of the recipient, so some boxes contain more than one meal,” said Grace Jampolsky, coordinator of the Light of Shabbat program. Chabad of Richmond has delivered 495 boxes to date.

“I like to bake the challah myself, but other volunteers make the soup, cook the chicken and vegetables, and bake the desserts,” added Jampolsky.

Richmond resident Courtenay Cohen and her friends, some of whom aren’t even Jewish, bake cookies, cakes and brownies for the Shabbat boxes. Cohen started volunteering a year or two ago. Asked why she recruited non-Jewish friends to help bake, Cohen said: “They’re very involved in their own religious community, but when I told them what I was doing, they wanted to help. It’s a great way to teach them about Judaism.”

Taking on a bigger role this year, Cohen now oversees the baking part of the Shabbat boxes. Not only does she bake, but she also helps pack the boxes and deliver some of them. “Delivering the boxes gives me a chance to visit elderly Jews and others in our community and make a person-to-person connection with them. It’s also a way to check in on them and make sure they’re living in safe and suitable conditions,” added Cohen. “Plus, they really love talking to young people.”

Pam, one of the Shabbat box recipients, said: “It’s fantastic! It’s very generous of Chabad to do this.” Pam said she especially likes when the kids decorate the boxes, and she enjoys the short visit with them. She said that, with the recent snow and an elevator that wasn’t working, she couldn’t leave her apartment for a week, so the Shabbat box was very helpful to have.

Rabbi Yeshurun Blumenfeld, along with his 6-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter, make volunteer deliveries of a Shabbat box to a couple in their 90s every other week. “Not only do I create an ongoing relationship with this couple, but it’s a way to teach my kids about the importance of doing mitzvahs,” said Blumenfeld, who added that promoting a mitzvah is a sanctification of G-d’s name.

Blumenfeld also shared a story of how, one day, when he was at a Richmond bakery buying challah for his family, he happened to bump into the wife of this elderly couple to whom he delivers a Shabbat box. She was shlepping a bunch of groceries, and he asked her how she was getting home. She told him she had called a taxi. He immediately said they should cancel the taxi, and he would drive her home himself. He said it was a very special moment for him, to make that connection with another Jew.

The Light of Shabbat program began in memory of Gavriel and Rivka Holtzberg, shluchim who started the Chabad House in Mumbai, India – the couple was murdered by terrorists in 2008.

Supporting the Light of Shabbat program is a huge mitzvah on many levels. And, as there are a lot of seniors and others in Richmond who would appreciate a good Shabbat meal, Chabad of Richmond desperately wants to expand the program, but needs more donors, sponsors and volunteers to sustain it. Their goal is to substantially increase the number of meals they deliver every week. Each filled Shabbat box costs approximately $25 to $28. To donate to the program on an ongoing or one-time basis, contact Baitelman at 604-277-6427 or [email protected].

 

Posted on January 13, 2017January 11, 2017Author Chabad of RichmondCategories LocalTags Chabad, Judaism, Shabbat, tikkun olam
Chimp facilitates charitable giving

Chimp facilitates charitable giving

Left to right: Ariel Lewinski, Judy Boxer and John Bromley. (photo from Chimp)

When it comes to charitable giving, there’s a widespread feeling of donor fatigue, says Judy Boxer, community engagement manager with Chimp Technology in Vancouver. Chimp is an online giving platform that helps people give to and fundraise for charities that match their values and interest. Focused on charitable impact, the company is determined to counter donor fatigue by making philanthropy a positive, rewarding experience. And it’s set its sights on the Jewish community of Vancouver with a Tzedakah Project targeting Jewish giving.

A Vancouver donor who prefers to remain anonymous gave Chimp $270,000 to jumpstart the Tzedakah Project in mid-November. Boxer and her colleague Ariel Lewinski are tasked with creating the community, helping select a board to run it and then handing it over to the board.

“Ultimately, this initiative is something the Jewish community will take on and run on their own terms,” she said. To add incentive to membership, the Tzedakah Project is starting out by offering an $18 charitable gift to new members “so they can experience the gift of giving to a Jewish charity of their choice,” Boxer explained.

The core of Chimp is the Chimp account, which gives a donor the same benefits as having their own private foundation, but free of charge, said Lewinski, Chimp’s vice-president of partnerships and growth. “It’s like an online bank account for charitable giving. You put any amount of money into the Chimp account and you get your tax receipt at the moment you want it. You can allocate the charitable giving at a later date.”

Chimp membership encourages donors to rethink how they give charitably. Boxer and her team have found that people’s donations are more reactive when they receive calls requesting donations. They don’t necessarily plan their giving to make the biggest impact.

“We’ve found people connect really well to causes,” she reflected. “At Chimp, we’ll help them figure out what causes are important to them and then offer a matching charitable organization so they can allocate their charitable giving. With a Chimp account, you have an opportunity to engage in a conversation about what you care about, what you want to achieve and where you want to make an impact, as opposed to reacting towards people asking for money.”

Chimp Technology is the brainchild of John Bromley, a 38-year-old Vancouverite who started out in corporate finance and then co-founded a law consulting company focused on charity. His clients were high-net-worth donors who needed help structuring their giving and, in the process of working with them, Bromley felt he could help ordinary people structure their charitable giving, too.

“I saw that the only people getting their giving problems resolved were people who had so much money they could create their own private foundation,” he said. “I started Chimp Technology in 2012 to focus on a donor-centred giving experience for everyone else.”

Bromley observed that the main place people learned to give was in religiously oriented families or theologically tied communities. “As there’s been more secularization in North America, we’ve seen a reduction in the number of people that learn how to give,” he noted. “Chimp isn’t religiously motivated, but we understand the theological backgrounds and the very important role those theologies and communities play in the giving economy in Canada.”

While Chimp is theologically neutral, it aims to represent donors and effectively facilitate their philanthropy. “That’s important, because, when you take away all the noise that exists around how to give to charity, you create more time for people to think about how they’ll spend their charitable dollars,” Bromley said. “Chimp is about enabling or empowering donors large and small to give on their own terms to the things that matter to them.”

Boxer said the Tzedakah Project is also trying to empower the younger generation and has partnered with Vancouver Hebrew Academy, Vancouver Talmud Torah, King David High School and Torah High in Vancouver. “We want to start a philanthropic conversation with kids of a certain age about the kind of impact they want to have, to have them think about charity in a new way, and possibly start conversations between them and their families,” she said.

“We’re trying to enable and empower people from different communities by giving them the tools they need to create a giving program around a cause or community,” Bromley added. “We’re not the founders of the idea for the Tzedakah Project – that’s coming out of the Jewish community. But it’s a real pleasure to be doing this with the Jewish community. I’ve learned a heck of a lot about the wealth of engagement with tzedakah and how serious giving values are in the community, and it’s quite inspiring.”

To join, visit go.chimp.net/tzedakahproject.

Lauren Kramer, an award-winning writer and editor, lives in Richmond. To read her work online, visit laurenkramer.net. This article was originally published in the CJN.

Format ImagePosted on January 13, 2017January 11, 2017Author Lauren KramerCategories LocalTags charity, fundraising, tikkun olam
Hoping to revive Dead Sea

Hoping to revive Dead Sea

Twenty-five swimmers from around the world crossed the Dead Sea on Nov. 15. (photo from EcoPeace)

On Nov. 15, some two dozen swimmers made the seven-hour trek across the Dead Sea, starting from the Jordanian side and swimming to the Israeli.

The demise of the Dead Sea is not news. According to the group EcoPeace Middle East – a Jordanian, Palestinian, Israeli environmental peace-building organization – the sea has receded by 25 metres in the last three decades and has lost a third of its surface area. Yet, hope remains.

The recent event’s initiator and a participant swimmer, Oded Rahav, stated in an EcoPeace press release, “If it’s possible to do the impossible, like swimming across the Dead Sea, then it’s possible to save the Dead Sea. We are not just interested in raising awareness, but creating real action to benefit the Dead Sea.”

Co-sponsoring the event with EcoPeace was Tamar Regional Council in Israel.

“A group of Israeli swimmers approached EcoPeace last spring with an idea to do a first-ever event – to swim across it [the Dead Sea]!” said Mira Edelstein, project coordinator of EcoPeace’s Jordan River Rehabilitation and Save the Dead Sea projects. “Not only were they looking for an idea to follow their previous success in topping a Guinness record – swimming from Cyprus to Israel – they also sought a way to raise awareness about the need to save the Dead Sea.

“They, naturally, turned to EcoPeace, as we’re the only regional environmental organization in the Middle East working on the issue of the rehabilitation of the River Jordan, which is in direct correlation with saving the Dead Sea. We gladly took on co-organizing the event and worked hard to make it happen, especially in getting permission from the Jordanian army to ‘sail’ across the border in the middle of the sea, starting from the Jordanian side.”

photo - The Dead Sea swim team
The Dead Sea swim team. (photo from EcoPeace)

There were 25 swimmers from all over the world who participated, including from Israel, Palestine, South Africa, New Zealand, Greece, Spain and Denmark. They had to swim with a full-face snorkeling mask because of the water’s extreme salinity and they also had to adapt their swimming style because of the water’s high density. It was a life-risking venture and the swimmers were accompanied by a medical team, as EcoPeace notes in the press release: “A drop in the eye causes severe irritation, and chance swallowing of its water can be fatal if not treated immediately.”

The event generated an unprecedented amount of media attention and EcoPeace hopes this will help its ongoing efforts to get local decision-makers to take action on the issue.

“We’re also being approached by several other organizations to do other cross-border events – bicycle event, music event, art event, etc. – and we’ll review all of them to see which is more feasible and which will give us the best results,” said Edelstein, who was born and raised in New York and made aliyah in 1993. She now lives in Gan Yavne, which is near Ashdod. She joined EcoPeace in 2004.

“Personally, as an environmentalist but also a general nature lover, the Dead Sea is such a pearl of nature with so many unique qualities found nowhere else on this earth, that it would be a tragedy to lose it,” she told the Independent. “This is a man-made catastrophe and we must work as hard as possible to reverse it.”

Edelstein explained that the threats to the Dead Sea are coming from two directions.

“First is from the north,” she said. “Historically, the main inflow to the Dead Sea has been the Lower Jordan River. And, with the diversion of more than 95% of the Jordan River’s water by Israel, Jordan and Syria, leaving a meagre five percent to reach the Dead Sea … no wonder the Dead Sea is shrinking – by more than a metre a year.

“EcoPeace is working extremely hard to rehabilitate the Lower Jordan River back to at least a third of its historic flow, not only for the river’s own integrity – this is the holy Jordan River! – but we’re doing this for the Dead Sea as well.

“Second is from the south – from both Israeli and Jordanian mineral industries. These industries are using the most simple, antiquated, water-intensive technology to harvest minerals from the Dead Sea: evaporation. Unfortunately, both industries have no incentive to change their extraction technology, because they do not pay a penny for the amount of water they use.”

EcoPeace is working to change this; however, discussions about extracting minerals using systems based on desalination technologies (reverse osmosis) have come to a standstill, as they cost money, while evaporation is free.

“They claim they are studying them (these technologies), but have concluded that they’re very expensive,” said Edelstein. “Our point is exactly that – that until they will be forced to pay for the amount of water they use, any kind of change will be expensive.”

With the Israeli mineral industry’s contract with the state on its last leg, Edelstein is hopeful that a new contract will include putting a price on the Dead Sea’s water.

“EcoPeace is working very hard to get a bill passed through the Israeli parliament wherein the Dead Sea Works [part of the company ICL Fertilizers] will need to pay for the amount of water they use,” she added.

“Both of these actions together, that EcoPeace is working on, will help stabilize the Dead Sea. The Dead Sea will not yet be completely saved or restored, but we understand we first need to halt its destruction and [then] to work on stabilizing it.”

While there was a plan to draw water from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea, the original mega-project, which the World Bank was studying for more than a decade, has been deemed unfeasible. The present-day Red Sea-Dead Sea canal project “is different than the original one,” said Edelstein. “This project is based on a water swap between Israel and Jordan, which also includes a component for Palestinians to get more water from Israel.”

With both the Jordanian and Israeli governments working closely, mainly on furthering the canal project, EcoPeace applauds the joint efforts, but does not see the project as the solution.

“I do believe that the Dead Sea is high on the public agenda,” said Edelstein. “It’s not difficult to find information on the issue. Our website is being upgraded and we’ll soon have updated information to share, but recent news articles are a good place to begin.”

For more information about EcoPeace, which was formerly called Friends of the Earth Middle East, its Dead Sea and other projects, visit foeme.org.

Rebeca Kuropatwa is a Winnipeg freelance writer.

Format ImagePosted on January 13, 2017January 11, 2017Author Rebeca KuropatwaCategories IsraelTags Dead Sea, environment, Israel
Enhancing nature activities

Enhancing nature activities

Inbal Len Nenner holds the attention of campers on Cypress Mountain during JCC Camp Shalom’s winter session last month. (photo from JCC Camp Shalom)

When Inbal Len Nenner arrived in Vancouver last year from Israel, she fell in love with the natural environment, as well as its people. “I met the nicest people in the world,” she said.

When JCC Camp Shalom met Nenner by chance at the Jewish Community Centre of Greater Vancouver, she spoke about her work with Israeli children, where she created a special program called Children’s Tribe. Inspired by ancient tribal traditions, it focuses on group-building activities for children and youth and connects them to nature.

photo - Arts and crafts are a big part of JCC Camp Shalom, no matter what the season
Arts and crafts are a big part of JCC Camp Shalom, no matter what the season. (photo from JCC Camp Shalom)

This type of programming was of interest to Camp Shalom, as it has always focused on nature education and teaching values that foster appreciation and respect for the environment. So, during the two weeks of JCC Camp Shalom’s 2016 winter session, Nenner volunteered to work with all age groups.

During the winter camp, Nenner created many activities, including a quest for Big Foot at Cypress Mountain, where campers learned to follow tracks in the snow, and a “tribe day,” where the youth campers (grades 4-7) became the Spirit Eagle Tribe – each child had a role to fulfil, learned a job and shared with others. Meanwhile, with the younger campers (preschoolers), Nenner ran a Chanukah storytelling session, during which the children had the chance to dress up and play some of the roles in the story. The highlight of the week was a camp-wide celebration of Chanukah as in biblical times, which included booths and activities such as ceramics, dance and Olympic games.

Nenner’s goal in her work is to develop creative thinking in children and to show them the positive effect of making social connections in a group. This aligns exactly with JCC Camp Shalom’s values, so the camp could not have been more excited to give Nenner a chance to demonstrate her craft. During her time as a volunteer, the campers laughed and played, and created an environment that fostered positive self-image and growth.

“Inbal quickly became part of our Camp Shalom team and was loved by the campers and staff alike,” said Ben Horev, JCC Camp Shalom director.

Nenner has since returned to Israel, but JCC Camp Shalom is taking the necessary steps to ensure that she will return to the JCC in the spring. Not only did she enjoy her experience with the camp, but she was an amazing asset to the camp program, translating the camp’s values into meaningful activities from which the children grew and learned in an experiential way.

For more information about JCC Camp Shalom and its programming, contact Horev at [email protected].

Format ImagePosted on January 13, 2017January 11, 2017Author JCC Camp ShalomCategories LocalTags camp, children, environment, JCC
סדר עדיפויות שונה

סדר עדיפויות שונה

ג’סטין טרודו יחמיץ את טקס השבעתו של דונלד טראמפ. (צילום: Alex Guibord)

לראש ממשלת קנדה, ג’סטין טרודו, יש סדר עדיפויות משלו והוא בחר שלא יגיע לטקס השבעתו של הנשיא החדש של ארה”ב, דונלד טראמפ, שיערך ב-20 בחודש בוושינגטון הבירה. זאת כיוון שהוא יהיה עסוק בסיור ברחבי קנדה בעותה עת. טרודו ישלח משלחת קנדית רמת דרג לטקס במקומו אך עדיין לא פורסם מי הם חבריה.

טרודו יבקר בחמש פרובינציות בין ה-17 ל-20 בחודש ויפגש עם תושבים מקומיים כדי לשמוע את דעתם בנושאים שונים, לקראת השנה שנייה של הליברלים בשלטון. לאחר מכן הוא יתארגן לנהל את ישיבות הקבינט שיערכו באלבטרה (23-24) ויעסקו בתקציב הפדרלי. וכן בסוגיה: כיצד להיערך למדיניות של השלטון החדש בארה”ב בראשות טראמפ, שמבקש בין היתר לבטל את הסכם הסחר החופשי בין ארה”ב, קנדה ומקסיקו.

מחקר קנדי ממליץ שלא לגור ליד כבישים סואנים שמזיקים לבריאות

מחקר קנדי חדש ממליץ לתושבים שלא לגור באזורים רועשים ובעלי רמת זיהום גבוהה כמו כבישים סואנים, כיוון שזה עלול לגרום לנזקים בריאותיים קשים. המחקר המקיף נערך במחוז אונטריו במשך אחד עשר שנים. הוא עקב אחר 4.4 מיליון צעירים בגילאים שבין 20-55, וכן אחר 2.2 מיליון מבוגרים בגילאים שבין 55-85. המחקר פורסם ב-4 בחודש בכתב העת הרפואי היוקרתי הבריטי “לנסט”.

לפי תוצאות המחקר מגורים בסביבה רועשת מעלים את הסיכון לחלות במחלת הדמנציה. אלו שגרים במרחק של כחמישים מטר מכביש סואן מעלים את רמת הסיכון שלהם לחלות במחלה בשיעור של שבעה אחוזים. אלו שגרים במרחק של מעל חמישים מטר ועד מאה מטר מכביש סואן מעלים את רמת הסיכון שלהם לחלות בארבעה אחוזים, ואילו שחיים במרחק של מעל מאה מטר ועד מאתיים מטר מגדילים את רמת הסיכון שלהם בשני אחוזים בלבד.

עורכי המחקר מציינים כי החשיפה ההולכת וגדלה לתנועת רכבים שמגבירה את זיהום האוויר והרעש, תוך גידול באחוז האוכלוסייה שגרה ליד כבישים, יכולים להפוך לנטל בריאותי ציבורי גדול. מדי שנה מתים בעולם כשלושה מיליון איש רק מתוצאה של זיהום אוויר (שמגביר את הסיכון לחלות במחלות שונות בהן: מחלת לב, מחלת ריאות, מחלות נשימה וסרטן). להערכת מומחים בריטים מדובר במחקר מעניין וחשוב מאוד, וזה בהחלט הגיוני שהמגורים ליד כבישים סואנים מגבירים את הסיכוי לחלות בדמנציה. וזאת כיוון שזיהומים ורעשים מרכבים עשוים להשפיע על פעילות המוח לאורך זמן. ולכן ברור שלא מומלץ לאוכלוסייה לגור ליד כבישים סואנים.

דמנציה (בעברית שיטיון או קהיון) היא מחלה שגורמת לפגיעה רחבת היקף בתפקודו הקוגנטיבי של האדם. התפקוד הקוגנטיבי כולל את כל היכולות המוחיות הגבוהות של בני האדם, בהם: שפה, זיכרון, תפיסה, יכולת למידה, יכולת לבצע אנליזה וסינתזה (ובכך להבין את המציאות היום יומית). הגורם השכיח ביותר לדמנציה הוא מחלת אלצהיימר, שבה מתנוונים ומתים תאים מייצרי אצטילכולין באזורים שונים של המוח, ויוצרים פגיעה משמעותית ומתקדמת בתפקוד הקוגנטיבי. גורמים נוספים למחלה הם: פרקינסון, הנטינגטון, איידס, שימוש בסמים, השמנה, טרשת עורקים, רמות גבוהות של חומצת אמינו, לחץ דם גבוה או נמוך, חולשה, עישון, סכרת, פגיעות ראש, דום נשימה בשינה, עששת, מחסור בוויטמין די ומחסור בוויטמין בי-12. בדרך כלל מחלת הדמנציה פורצת בגילאים מבוגרים. כאחוז וחצי מכלל האוכלוסייה יחלו בדמנציה עד גיל 65, ועשרים אחוז מהאוכלוסייה יחלו במחלה מעל גיל 85. לפי נתוני הסטטיסיקה בעולם יש כיום כחמישים מיליון חולי דמנציה ומדי שנה מתווספים כשמונה מיליון חולים נוספים.

Format ImagePosted on January 11, 2017January 11, 2017Author Roni RachmaniCategories עניין בחדשותTags dementia, health, noise, pollution, Trudeau, Trump, בריאות, דמנציה, זיהום, טראמפ, טרודו, רעש
לאור נאום ג’ון קרי

לאור נאום ג’ון קרי

ג’ון קרי בישראל בשנת 2013. (צילום: U.S. Embassy Tel Aviv via Wikimedia)

דוברת משרד החוץ של קנדה חוזרת על עמדתה הרשמית של ממשלת ג’סטין טרודו, שתומכת בהקמת מדינה פלסטינית לצד ישראל שתביא לסיומו של הסכסוך במזרח התיכון. דבריה נאמרו לאור נאומו של שר החוץ של ארה”ב, ג’ון קרי, שתקף בשבוע שעבר בנאום פרידה את ישראל, שלדבריו ממשיכה לבנות בשטחים ובכך מסכנת את אופציית הקמת המדינה הפלסטינית. לדברי מפלגת הירוקים הקנדית מדיניות נתניהו מהווה איום על השלום.

הדוברת של שר החוץ סטפן דיון, שנטל גניון, ציינה “שכתוצאה מהנחישות לבניית שלום קבוע בין ישראל והמדינה הפלסטינית, קנדה תתמוך במאמצים לקיים את פתרון שתי המדינות, וליצור את התנאים ששני הצדדים יחזרו לנהל משא ומתן ישיר למציאת שלום כולל, צודק ובר קיימא”.

חבר הפרלמנט מטעם המפלגה הקונסרבטיבית, פיטר קנט, תקף את ממשלת טרודו הליברלית לאור השתיקה שלה (אותה הגדיר “כמבישה אך לא מפתיעה”), על ההחלטה האנטי ישראלית שהתקבלה במועצת הביטחון של האו”ם. הוא הביע גם אכזבה מהממשל היוצא של אובמה בנושא. קנט ציין עוד כי עתה יותר מתמיד ישראל זקוקה לידידיה ולבני בריתה. לדבריו הדבר היחיד שמעניין את ממשלת טרודו הוא להיות שוב חברה במועצת הביטחון של האו”ם.

לעומתו חברת המפלגה הדמוקרטית החדשה, הלן לורדייר, וראש המפגלת הירוקים, אליזבט מאי, ציינו כי הן תומכות בדברי קרי לגבי ישראל והמזרח התיכון. לורדייר: “להתנחלויות הישראליות יש השפעה שלילית על הסיכויים לשלום. ומה שאנו רוצים באזור זה שלום לכולם”. ואילו מאי אמרה: “הייתי רוצה לראות שקנדה תנקוט עמדה תקיפה יותר. כמו שג’ון קרי אמר חברים הם שם גם כדי להגיד לך שמשהו אינו מתאים או אינו מקובל. המדיניות של נתניהו היא איום על תהליך השלום. אנשים צריכים להיות מסוגלים לומר את זה בכל רם מבלי שטון של לבנים ירדו עליהם”. מאי הוסיפה עוד כי חבל שארה”ב התמתינה כל כך הרבה זמן להפסיק עם החלטות הווטו שלה באו”ם.

יצויין כי מפלגת הירוקים הורידה מסדר היום את התמיכה בתנועת הבי.די.אס להחרמת ישראל, לאור איומיה של מאי לפרוש מההנהגה. המפלגה החליטה בראשית דצמבר לתמוך בהחרמת מוצרים ישראלים המיוצרים בשטחים.

כפי שפורסם בשבוע שעבר ראש ממשלת קנדה לשעבר, סטיבן הרפר, יצא נגד החלטת מועצת הביטחון של האומות המאוחדות שהכריזה לפני כשבועיים, כי ההתנחלויות של ישראל בשטחים אינן חוקיות ויש לפנותן. הרפר הגיב לתגובה של הנשיא הנבחר של ארה”ב, דונאלד טראמפ, שאמר: “בנוגע לאו”ם הדברים יראו אחרת אחרי העשרים בינואר”. הרפר בוודאי היה מסתדר עם טראמפ בכל הנוגע לסוגיית המזרח התיכון בכלל ולישראל בפרט. אך מעניין כיצד שני האישים היו מתנהלים אחד כלפי השני, בזמן שהרפר יצא נחרצות נגד פעילותה של רוסיה והעומד בראשה, הנשיא ולדימיר פוטין, והפעיל חרמות וסנקציות שונות, בעוד שטראמפ מסתדר עם רוסיה, מנהל מערכת יחסים די חברית עם פוטין והוא אף מינה לתפקיד שר החוץ אישיות מקורבת למנהיג הרוסי? הכל פוליטיקה.

ועוד בנושא ישראל: חברת הפרלמנט מטעם המפלגה הקונסרבטיבית שמנסה להתמודד על ראשות המפלגה, קלי ליץ’, והמכונה טראמפ של קנדה לאור ההתבטאיות החמורות שלה, ציינה כי אם תעמוד בראש המפלגה שגם תנצח בבחירות הכלליות ולכן תכהן כראש ממשלה, היא תעביר את שגרירות קנדה לירושלים. נוכח החלטת מועצת הביטחון ודברי קרי “על קנדה להפגין את תמיכתה בישראל” אמרה ליץ’.

Format ImagePosted on January 4, 2017January 4, 2017Author Roni RachmaniCategories עניין בחדשותTags Canada, Israel, Kerry, settlements, Trudeau, two-state solution, United States, ארה"ב, טרודו, ישראל, להתנחלויות, פתרון שתי המדינות, קנדה, קרי

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