Category Archives: event Jerusalem

Post 217: Teachings of Rav Nachman: Kurdish Jews; Story of Boys and their Sukah by Chaim Werdyger Fabulous Video Israeli Kurdish Jews Seherane Festival at the Lake in Ma’ale Adumim – Castel Museum

October 7,2015. This post’s themes are many forms of torah sparks. This spans the words of Rebbi Nachman and sparks of the Kurdish Jewish community-this past week Kurdish Jews celebrated during the intermediate week of Sukkoth, Sharanna. The vector then points to a story on the Sukkah, and the last topic is a visit to the Kastel museum.

You may be familiar with Yehudis Golshevsky’s teaching. She distributes words of torah. (BTW, I’m her proud mom).

With permission:

F.E.A.R 

It is customary to say Psalm 27, twice daily, from the beginning of Elul until Simchat Torah.

Towards the end of the psalm, we say, “False witnesses have risen against me, seeking to wreak havoc.” In the second to last verse of this psalm it says, “Lulei—had I not—believed in the goodness of G-d…”The word “lulei,” when reversed, spells “Elul.”

Reb Nosson explains that the false witnesses include our thoughts of self-doubt and despair. In the world of twelve-step recovery, they say that the word “fear” is an acronym for, “false evidence appearing real.”

When I feel that I have failed, it can seem at least as clear as having heard it from many witnesses. It’s true, I have a lot to improve and many errors to correct. Nevertheless, my feelings of self-doubt and despair are merely false witnesses, seeking to destroy my life. Elul is the time to throw the false witnesses out of the court of my mind. No matter what, it is never too late. We all hear the shofar throughout Elul to shake these thoughts away, freeing us from clouds of anxiety. Instead we work to fix what we can, and believe that G-d does what we cannot. As Rebbe Nachman declared, “If you believe you can destroy, believe you can heal!”

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“A Sacred Time” emails are sent twice-weekly and focus on finding inspiration and meaning throughout the Jewish calendar. (with permission)

Our mailing address is: Breslov Research Institute 44 Saint Nicholas Ave.Lakewood, NJ 08701

 

Saharane is the annual Kurdish Jewish holiday, now celebrated during Sukkot, when the ancient community gathers to sing, dance, eat, and trade stories from the old country in their traditional Aramaic tongue.

Last Sunday, Israel’s Kurds marked Saharane in Israel’s capital. Yehuda ben Yosef is their leader. Smaller Saharane events were also subsequently held in Yokneam, Mevasseret Zion, and Yardena.

Jews in Kurdistan historically marked the beginning of spring with the Saharane festival, while at the same time their Muslim neighbors celebrated the Newroz holiday. They would head to the river banks and host mass picnics, complete with traditional garb and music competitions.

When the community emigrated to Israel in the early 1950s, they continued to celebrate Saharane during the intermediate days of Passover. However, the relatively small community felt their holiday was in danger of being swallowed up by Mimouna, the post-Passover holiday of the much larger Moroccan community.

Ben Yosef’s uncle, Aviv Shimoni, the leader of the community at the time, decided to move the celebration to Sukkot in 1975. Unfortunately, this disconnected Saharane from its roots as a celebration of the blossoming of nature after a cold winter.

‘We feel we are part of Israel’

As ties deepen between Kurds in Israel and those in the Kurdish heartland, more Muslim Kurds are making their way to Israel to visit their former neighbors.

Darwish, whose extended family is still in war-torn Syria, came to Israel from the Netherlands especially for the festival. She found Ben-Yosef online, and contacted him before her trip.

“Yehuda is a special person,” she said. “I don’t feel that I was a guest. I feel directly that I was home. This feeling is not easy to get from everywhere. Because I know he’s a Kurd, I’m a Kurd — I cannot explain it.”

It was Darwish’s second visit to Israel. She also came in July with three Kurdish friends living in Sweden, but seeing the Israeli community gather left a powerful impression on her.

“I was walking from the parking garage to the park, I heard the music and I said, ‘Wow, it is so beautiful to hear the Kurdish music,’” she recalled.

“The Kurdish people you know are in four lands, and you go to Israel, a country like Israel — a powerful country, a big country — and you see Kurdish people there, and they are powerful, it makes you very very happy. I thought I will go and see old people, but I saw young people dancing, singing, it was really great.”

Seeing an immigrant Kurdish community thrive was especially exciting for Darwish.

“Before I came to Israel, I thought, no, nobody helps us, no one gives us anything. But now that I was there, and I saw the people, I say why not, these people are Kurdish, and they are strong, and they get help from Israel. And I think that between Kurdistan and Israel the relation is very good.

“We Kurds, we love each other, we want to help each other…If I see somebody needs help, then we help,” she added.

Several Iraqi Kurdish families were also in the crowd, tentatively pushing baby strollers as they looked for Israelis who could still speak Kurdish. They were in Israel for their young children, who are receiving life-saving heart surgery at Israeli hospitals. Two Israeli women noticed their Muslim headdress, and walked right up to strike up a conversation in Kurdish.

Jewish Kurdish women from Israel and Muslim Kurdish women from Iraq converse in Sorani Kurdish after meeting each other at the 2013 Saharane festival in Jerusalem (photo credit: Times of Israel/ Lazar Berman)
In my ignorance, I have mistaken these Kurdish Israeli women for Arab Israelis!
Bakhteyar Ibrahim, an Iraqi Kurd living in Germany, was in Israel for the first time. But Israel and the Jewish people have been on his mind for years.

Ibrahim is the president of the Kurdistan Israel Friendship Association, which he founded in Germany three years ago. Since then, KIFA chapters have emerged in Australia, German, England, and Benelux. There are even chapters in Syria, Iraq, and Iran, according to Ibrahim. Surprisingly, he has not been able to get one going in Israel itself.

Israel began as an academic interest for Ibrahim, but he soon found an emotional attachment. “My heart was bitten for Israel,” was his colorful description. “Judaism was a focus of my dissertation. I decided to learn the language. After that I feel that I am very relative to this people and this religion.”

“I knew there were a lot of Kurdish people living here,” Ibrahim continued. “A part of Kurdistan. They long for Kurdistan. I thought we had to found this organization to be a bridge between Kurdistan and Israel. At first I thought, let our focus only be on the Kurdish Jews, but after that we thought that there are Jews in every country we should work with.”

KIFA is working with Israeli NGOs on a variety of projects. Ibrahim’s dream is to open a school in Israel for Jewish Kurds, complete with Kurdish language courses. He also hopes his organization will serve as a bridge between Israel and the autonomous Kurdistan region of northern Iraq, helping the two sides open trade bureaus and even embassies if Kurdistan gains independence from Baghdad.

“Kurds think Israel are friends… even cousins, even blood,” Ibrahim stressed. “We feel we are part of Israel, and they are part of our nation. These people,” he said, pointing at the crowd, “represent the Kurdish people in Kurdistan.”

Prophets, false messiahs and a female Talmud scholar

Today, there are almost 200,000 Kurdish Jews in Israel, about half of whom live in Jerusalem. There are also over 30 agricultural villages throughout the country that were founded by Kurds.

At the festival’s temporary exhibit displaying the history of Kurdistan’s Jews, Mordechai Yona directed volunteers as they hung pictures from his research trip to Iraqi Kurdistan more than a decade ago. Yona, who grew up in the city of Zakho on the Iraq-Turkey border until the age of 11, is regarded as a leading expert on his community. He authored a three-volume encyclopedia on Kurdish Jews, as well as a Hebrew- Aramaic-Kurdish dictionary.

According to Yona, his hometown had a community of 1,800 Jews, 10 percent of all of Kurdistan’s Jews.

The Jews of Kurdistan have a long and storied past. According to tradition, Jews first arrived in the region, in the heart of the Assyrian Empire, after the Assyrians defeated the northern kingdom of Israel and carried the 10 “lost” tribes into captivity. In the first century BCE, the royal family of the kingdom of Adiabene, whose capital is in the current Iraqi Kurdish capital of Erbil, converted to Judaism. Queen Helene of Adiabene moved to Jerusalem and donated significant funds to the Second Temple, built palaces near the City of David, and became famous in Jewish lore as Heleni HaMalka.

The Jewish traveler Benjamin of Tudela found a sizable and vibrant community in Kurdistan in the 12th century, with communities in over 100 villages and cities. In the same century, the self-proclaimed messiah David Alroy of Amadiya led an uprising of Kurdistan’s Jews against their Seljuk rulers, telling his followers that he would take them to Jerusalem.

Kurdistan’s conservative Jewish community even had a renowned female religious leader. After her husband passed away, Asenath Barzani headed the Amadiya yeshiva in the 17th century, and was widely recognized as Kurdistan’s premier Torah scholar.

“Every big city had two to four synagogues,” Yona explained. “Most were made of bricks, but Zakho’s great synagogue was made of hewn stone. That synagogue was mostly destroyed, but when I visited in 2000, one of the walls still had the menorah hanging from it.”

Kurdish Jews regularly visited and cared for the graves of biblical prophets believed to have been buried in the region. Ezekiel’s tomb is situated in al-Kifl in southern Iraq; Daniel is said to be buried in Kirkuk; and Nahum, whom Kurdish Jews see as their patron prophet, lived and was buried in the Assyrian town of Alqosh, according to local tradition.

Jews used to visit Nahum’s grave on the Shavuot holiday, renting rooms from the Aramaic-speaking Christians and staying for up to a month, K., an Assyrian shopkeeper in Alqosh, told The Times of Israel. A Jewish family lived next to the grave and took care of the site. Extensive Hebrew writing can still be seen in the crumbling building around the grave, and traces of mezuzot are visible on the doorposts of homes in the courtyard facing the grave.

Kurds began moving to Israel, primarily settling in the northern town of Safed, in the late 1500s. The vast majority, however, left shortly after the establishment of the State of Israel. With the exception of a few families who stayed behind in Iran, the entire community flew to Israel during Operation Ezra and Nehemiah between 1950 and 1952. Their arrival was anything but smooth, with families walking off the planes only to be sprayed by the Israeli government with pesticides then sent to squalid tent camps.

Hebrew writing at the grave of the prophet Nahum, Kurdistan Region, Iraq (photo credit: Times of Israel/Lazar Berman)

Yona visited Kurdistan in 2000, entering Saddam Hussein-ruled Iraq through Turkey. “The Kurds knew I was from Israel, and they gave me great honor,” he said.

Yona regularly receives Kurdish visitors in Israel. In August, a group of Syrian Kurds from Qamishli visited Israel. He believes that such  interactions are indicative of the potential political relationship between Kurds and Israel. “We will be the first to recognize an independent Kurdistan,” he said.

‘I want to see my father’s store’

The Saharane festival, in addition to keeping a tradition alive, is an opportunity for the community to take pride in members who have risen to prominence in Israeli society, which initially saw them as illiterate peasants. Itzik Kala, a popular Israeli singer of Kurdish descent, sang songs in both Hebrew and Kurdish after the sun set.

Former defense minister Yitzhak Mordechai, born in Zakho, and Deputy Finance Minister Mickey Levy joined Yehuda Ben-Yosef on the stage to recognize Israeli hero Mordechai Rachamim as a community notable. Rachamim, an undercover air marshal, foiled a 1969 attack on an El Al plane in Switzerland by killing the leader of the Palestinian terrorist squad that was trying to take over the craft.

The Kurdish Jews sitting with their extended families at the event, drinking and eating barbecued meat, were eager to share their stories as well. Naim Eliyahu, from Moshav Agur, was born in Koysinjaq in northern Iraq. He learned in the local Jewish study hall as a boy at the feet of a well-known teacher called Muallem Ezra; and Naim claims he had learned all of the Talmud by the age of 6.

His family came to Israel in 1951 and lived in military tents upon arrival. Naim served in the air force and formed a Kurdish band, “Naim and Naima,” with his wife.

Taking me by the arm, Naim regaled me with a Kurdish folk song. He was also visibly excited by the opportunity to speak Kurdish with the families from Iraqi Kurdistan, and handed them meat off his family’s barbecue.

Naim Eliyahu singing a Kurdish song with Bakhteyar Ibrahim (photo credit: Times of Israel/ Lazar Berman)

Nahum Moshe, from Zakho, and his wife Tzipora, born in the city of Duhok, moved to the heavily Kurdish town of Mevaseret Zion just outside Jerusalem. They remembered good relations between Kurdish Jews and Muslims, but recalled stories of Jewish merchants being murdered by highwaymen as they moved their wares between cities. The couple maintain connection with Kurds still living in Iraq, and host Kurdish visitors to Israel every year.

The city of Halabja, infamous for Saddam Hussein’s mass murder of Kurds with chemical weapons, still has a neighborhood called the Jewlakan, or Jewish quarter, to this day. Though the Jews all moved to Israel, tailors from the nearby bazaar are happy to point out old Jewish homes, hotels, and the brick synagogue.

Rachel Shalom, sitting with her husband on a small rise overlooking the main stage, fondly remembered her childhood in the city, playing in the streams running down from the mountains on the Iranian border.

“That was my uncle’s house,” she exclaimed as she scrolled through photographs of my recent trip to Halabja’s Jewish quarter. “And that… that was a flour factory. And this one was the mayor’s house, I remember those two doors. Why didn’t you take pictures of the springs?”

“Wow, I remember it all! ” Shalom said, tears coming to her eyes. “I want to see my father’s store.”

And:

This got a laugh from my grandson Binyamin:

Paying for the Sukkah

The rabbi ruled in favor of the one that refused to pay. A group of young guys got together and made up amongst themselves to partner up in building a Sukkah. Everyone will chip in his part of the cost. It happens that one of them refused to pay and his friends took him to the rabbi to try to force him to pay.

The group were astonished at the rabbi’s finding and were wondering how that can be. How is that possible?

The rabbi, noticing their despair, says to them. “ Let me explain to you how I came to this decision. The verse states in Leviticus 23:42 “Ye shall dwell in booths seven days” The gemara in tractate Sukkah learns from this verse that one shall dwell in the Sukkah just as he does in his own home. This young man was already here last week with his landlord because he didn’t pay the rent. So, you see, he is following the gemara that states that you should do in the Sukkah as you do at home. Just like at home he is not paying the rent, so too here he is doing the same thing………Story of Boys and their Sukah by Chaim Werdyger <conversationalyiddish@gmail.com>

לשלם לסוכה
קבוצת אברכים התאספו והחליטו ביניהם לבנות סוכה משותפתכל אחד ישתתף בנטלבסוף אחד מהם החליט לא לשלם ותבעו אותו לדין.
הרב פסק שלא צריך לשלם.
האברכים התפלאו על הפסק דין שלוהם התפלאואיך זה יתכן
הרב שם לב למבוכה שלהם,אמר להם:
אני רוצה להסביר לכם מה פה קורההפסוק אומר,  ‘בסוכות תשבו שבעת ימים‘ הגמרא דורש מן הפסוקתשבו כעין תדורו‘ זאת אומרת שצריך להתנהג בסוכה כמו שמתנהגים בביתהיהודי הזה כבר היה פה לפני שבוע עם הבעל הבית שלו שתבע ממנו לשלם שכר דירה שהוא חייב כבר הרבה זמןאז אתם מבינים רבותיהוא מתנהג בסוכה כמו שמתנהג בביתכמו שהוא לא משלם בבית כך לא תראו ממנו כסף גם לסוכה…..
*The four species also called “arba minim” are four plants mentioned in the Torah (Leviticus 23:40) as being relevant to Sukkos. Jews take three types of branches and one type of fruit which are held together and waved in a special ceremony during the Jewish Holiday of Sukkot. The waving of the four plants is a mitzvah prescribed by the Torah, and contains symbolic allusions to a Jew’s service of G-d.

List of the four plants

The mitzvah of waving the Four Species derives from the Torah in Leviticus. it states:

(Leviticus 23:40) And you shall take on the first day the fruit of splendid trees, branches of palm trees and boughs of leafy trees and willows of the brook, and you shall rejoice before the Lord your G-d for seven days.

In Leviticus 23:40 the Hebrew terms for the four plants are:
  • ets hadar(עֵץ הָדָר) magnificent trees
  • tamar(תְּמָרִים) palm trees
  • ets avoth(עֵץ־עָבֹת) boughs of thick trees
  • aravah(עַרְבֵי) willows of the brook
In Talmudic tradition, the four plants are identified as:
  • Etrog(אתרוג) – the fruit of acitrontree
  • lulav(לולב) – a ripe, green, closed frond from a date palm tree
  • hadass(הדס) – boughs with leaves from the myrtle tree
  • aravah(ערבה) – branches with leaves from the willow tree

Practice

During the time of the Temple In Jerusalem, the waving ceremony (called na’anu’im) was performed in the Holy Temple on all seven days of Sukkos, and elsewhere only on the first day. Following the destruction of the Temple, Rabbi Yochanan Ben Zakai ordered that the Four Species be waved everywhere on every day of Sukkot (except on Shabbos), as a memorial to the Temple.

To prepare the species for the mitzvah, the lulav is first bound together with the hadass and aravah(this bundle is also referred to as “the lulav”) in the following manner: One lulav is placed in the center, two aravah branches are placed to the left, and three hadass boughs are placed to the right. (This order is the same for both right-handed and left-handed people. The bundle may be bound with strips from another palm frond, or be placed in a special holder which is also woven from palm fronds.
In all cases, all of the species must be placed in the direction in which they grew. (For the etrog, this means that the stem end should be on the bottom and the blossom end on top; this is the direction in which the etrog begins to grow, though as it matures on the tree it usually hangs in the opposite direction.)

This video is absolutely heavenly: a tribute to our scattered people.

Today, the Kurdish Jewish population in Israel is over 150,000, with the largest concentration in and around Jerusalem. The immigrants in the early days of the state were largely traditional, as there had been no process of secularization in Kurdistan. Today, the majority of young Kurdish Jews are educated and secular, define themselves as “Israeli” rather than Kurdish, and have abandoned many traditional Kurdish customs. Only the elderly still speak Aramaic and/or Arabic, while the younger generations have adopted Hebrew as their principal language. Fifty years ago most of the Kurdish Jews in Israel married within their community; today most young Kurds marry members of other ethnic Jewish communities. In recent years, many Kurdish Jews have achieved high positions in the army and civil service, among them the former Minister of Defense, Yitzhak Mordechai.

One tradition that many Kurds, including many young people, still maintain is the celebration of the Saharana. Although the central focus of this uniquely Kurdish festival is the transition from winter to spring, only the Iranian Kurds hold their Sharana celebrations in the spring during the intermediate week of Passover. All the others celebrate in the intermediate week of Sukkoth, which is in the fall. Kurds from all over the country gather in one village and spend an entire day in nature, dancing, singing, drinking and consuming great quantities of traditional Kurdish dishes, including kubah, chicken stuffed with minced meat, grape leaves and lentils.

Enjoy:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U54rP3eWMRc

INFO: Castel Museum

shelley and david brinn brinn@netvision.net.il
September 30, 2015, 9:18 am

just wanted everyone to know that the Moshe castel Museum
now has their newsletter of upcoming events translated
into English.
E-mail the museum and ask to be on their mailing list
if you are interested…there are some really unique events!
info@castelmuseum.co.il

Post 127: Start your day with Sugar free Granola adapted for diabetics a la Vered our dietician: International Festival of Puppet Theater and Film Holon, July 26-31- highlight events in Israel through October 2015

 My location shows Misgav Ladach Street, which is in the Old City and not the present location of the clinic. However, it originated there. The granola is first today as a good starter.

Homemade Healthy Granola

Recipe: Snack

Author: Victoria – Green Plate Rule

adjusted  with Vered, our dietician’s suggestions.

Serves: weigh out your portion

Ingredients

  • Kilo oats
  • 1 cup dried fruit (the girls picked raisins and cherries)/ dried coconut
  • 1/4 cup chia seeds
  • 1/4 cup sunflower seeds
  • 1/4 cup pumpkin seeds
  • 1 cup chopped walnuts/almonds/pecans
  • 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/3 cup pure maple syrup
  • 1/2 cup coconut oil=I used 14/cup canola oil
  • 1/4 cup coconut crystals in 2/3 cup water microwaved 1 minute. The crystal will melt completely after the liquid  cools.
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 325/180C
  2. In a large bowl add all the dry ingredients and mix.
  3. In a small pot over medium heat, warm the coconut oil, and maple syrup/ or the coconut crystals in water in a microwave.  Once it’s warmed pour over the dry ingredients. If you don’t want the additional sugar, just omit and pour them out over the dry ingredients
  4. Add the vanilla extract to the bowl and mix well. I mixed all the dry ingredients in a plastic bag.IMG_20150624_080346
  5. Add to a cookie sheet with raised sides, or a 9×13 cake pan.
  6. Bake for 15 minutes, mix and toast slightly longer, then remove and mix
  7. Add it back to oven for another 15 minutes
  8. Let it cool completely before packaging. Then can add additional dried or fresh fruit fruit

The following are up-coming attractions in Israel through October. The Open House Jerusalem, October 22-24 is a must attend. As I learn about others, I’ll add them to the list.

I plan to attend most of them, except the LGBT ones or find a “correspondent” to provide playback.

1.International Festival of Puppet Theater and Film, Holon, July 26-31

“The Princess Not Laughing” at the 2010 puppet festival in Holon. Photo by Ornan Breyer

Featuring puppet makers and artists from Israel and around the world, this festival has been held annually since 1995 at the Puppet Theater Center in Holon. On the schedule are plays, shows and story-telling from Israel and abroad; evening screenings of feature films with puppets, documentaries about puppeteers, TV shows and commercials featuring puppets; exhibitions about theater puppets and puppet artists; In workshops and master classes for adults and children. In the plaza outside there will be free street performances.

2. Karmiel Dance Festival, July 28-30

About 5,000 dancers from Israel and abroad annually take part in more than 100 events and performances at this huge annual festival in Karmiel, a central Galilee town between Acre (Akko) and Safed (Tzfat). For folk-dance teachers and enthusiasts from abroad, there’ll be an Israeli folk dance course given in English from July 20-31, including sightseeing and admission to the festival. Information:dbenshalom@013.net.il

3. Jaffa Nights, four Saturday nights in August

The streets of Old Jaffa are closed to traffic and become the scene of Israel’s largest street festival for this four-week extravaganza. Stages and performance areas take over the squares and lanes, and some of Israel’s leading performers put on free street theater, concerts and arts-and-crafts exhibitions. The party often lasts until dawn.

4. 40th annual Jerusalem International Arts & Crafts Fair (Hutzot Hayotzer), August 10-22

This photo from last year’s Hutzot Hayotzer was taken by Yonatan Sindel/FLASH90

Look and buy: The handiworks of artists from Israel and 30 countries around the world will be displayed in the artists’ colony near Sultan’s Pool just outside the Old City walls. Every night is capped by a live concert by one of Israel’s most celebrated performers. It runs every evening from 6-11pm except Friday (and after sundown Saturday). Entrance fee; special children’s activities.

5. 28th annual Klezmer Festival, Safed, Aug. 18-20

Held in the mystical Galilee city of Safed, this musical event showcases dozens of artists performing “Jewish soul music” on eight stages and in the ancient cobbled alleyways of the city. Also: an outdoor arts-and-crafts sale, tours and children’s events.

6. Jerusalem Sacred Music Festival, Sept. 1-4

This annual event brings together international and Israeli artists in performances under the stars, opposite Jerusalem’s ancient walls and in houses of prayer. Audiences may take part in “A Night Stroll” at the Tower of David, comprising performances, ceremonies and a series of “Testimony Encounters” — guided tours that trace the sacred sounds that play year-round in Jerusalem.

7. Speedo Sea of Galilee Swim, Sept. 19

About 12,000 swimmers of all ages and nationalities are expected at this largest Israeli amateur sports event, now in its 62nd year. Choose between routes of 1.5 and 3.5 kilometers.

8. Haifa International Film Festival, late September

Founded in 1983, this is Israel’s oldest annual international film festival. Held on Mount Carmel overlooking the Mediterranean Sea, the festival offers close to 300 screenings, many of which are world premieres. Outdoor events, workshops and film competitions are part of the festivities.

Other 2015 film festival Spirit Film Festival at the Tel Aviv Cinemateque, Oct. 22-24.

9. Tel Aviv Furniture Exhibition, October 11-17

If you love interior design, you need to be at the annual Furniture Exhibition at the Tel Aviv Exhibition Center to see the latest collections of more than 120 Israeli and international companies including Beitili, Hollandia, Ziv Kitchens, Natuzzi, Nicoletti, Dr. Gav, Aeroflex, Ultima, Simmons, Night Sleep, Etzmaleh, House Inn and Zaga. For the first time, the show will provide a stage for companies specializing in home styling, accessories and styling various spaces in the home. Free admission.

10. Tel Aviv Water Games, Oct. 15-19

This inaugural international LGBT sporting event and cultural festival will welcome teams from around the world competing in swimming, diving, rowing, beach volleyball and other water and waterside sports. Also planned are sunset yoga and acrobatics, bicycle tours of the city and late-night celebrations.

11. Open House Jerusalem, Oct. 22-24

Cool architecture comes alive at Open House Jerusalem. This is the Monastery of St. Charles Borromeo. Photo by Vardit Zimmerman

Post 124:The Meeting Point: Under the Bridge

The Meeting Point: Under the Bridge: I saw a Hebrew sign for these events.

 June 4June 13

| Free

Click to see the program

The Meeting Point is a unique opportunity to celebrate the diversity and cultural richness in of Jerusalem with ten days of performances, art, sweet watermelons, and personal meetings.

The event was created with the inspiration of the watermelon shacks that popped every summer in the Jerusalem Seam Line in the 1970s, temporarily transforming the no man’s land into a space of flickering lights where everybody, regardless of religion, race or sex was invited and welcome. Those watermelon shacks are no longer with us, but their memory is cherished by many.

This will be the third appearance for The Meeting Point, for the first time as part of the Israel Festival, this time on the Railroad Park under the bridge between the neighborhoods of Katamonim, Pat, and Beit Safafa. The structure that will be built especially for the event will be central to the project and will serve as a performance stage, watermelon shack, and a piece of architecture . Its construction will be undertaken by students from the Technical University of Berlin under the supervision of Christopher Barlieb, Arch. The building of the structure isn’t just a process, but also a public art performance in which everybody can take part – you’re welcome to come and help!

The Meeting Point project is led by the Muslala group together with the Israel Festival, in cooperation with the community councils of Katamonim and Pat, the Hand in Hand school, and numerous groups and people who wholeheartedly believe that at the end of the day the similarities amongst us are greater than the differences, that simple pleasures are the most exquisite, and that all of us every hot Jerusalem summer share a common desire for a chilled watermelon while an Oud player plucks a chord nearby.

Program

Monday, June 8, 2015
5pm Katamona – a publishing house in the heart of Katamonim
6pm Bands from Volume Music – local, original compositions
7:30pm Crowdfunding – a panel
9pm Enlisted poetry – poetry reading

Tuesday, June 9, 2015
5pm Arts and crafts workshops with the Hand in Hand community
6:30pm The Arab-Jewish Orchestra, conducted by Prof. Taiseer Elias
7:30pm A performance of the magician Kevin Spencer
8:30pm Safi Sweid and the Sajan Band play with friends

Wednesday, June 10, 2015
5pm Daydreaming – the “Shakespeare for a Shekel” version of a Midsummer Night’s Dream
7pm Years of Exile – Theater performance by Yassir Abdalla (Sudan)
8:30pm Language in Colors: the white in the book – performance by Shlomo Vazana

Thursday, June 11, 2015
5pm Chalk painging on the railroad park
6pm Youth in Gonenim – a festive performance of the children’s choir
8:30pm Hafla Basta – the Secular Yeshiva in a neo-geo evening with A-WA – the traditional party of the secular yeshiva brings together music, reading excerpts and conversation

Friday, June 12, 2015
12 noon Art, protest theater and colored stones – tour of Katamonim with Shlomo Vazana (Hebrew, must register in advance at tours@muslala.org, costs 40NIS)
3pm Movement and improvisation workshop
4pm Jam session before the weekend

Saturday, June 13 2015
5pm The story of Beit Safafa – tour with Tawfiq Othman (Hebrew, must register in advance at tours@muslala.org, costs 40NIS, begins at Rami Levi supermarket by the Train Track Park)
9pm Traditional closing party with Nino Bitton and the Maghreb Orchestra

The Hybrid Meeting Point

This is a special WiFi network open only to those in the area of the meeting point under the bridge. On this network you can create content and interact with others in the vicinity.

WiFi network name: “HybridMeetingPoint”

Details

The program

Sunday-Thursday 5-11pm
Friday 12-7pm
Saturday 8:30pm-midnight

How to get there

map of meeting point under the bridge june 2015

By bus

Bus #22. From 18:41 until 20:21 buses run every 20 minutes, from 20:46 until 23:46, buses run every 30 minutes;

Disembark at Berl Locker street and from there proceed to the parking lot of the “Yad B’Yad” (bilingual) school on Arieh Beham Street, then cut through the parking lot until its end. From there go down the path to the “Park Hamesilah”, (old train tracks park), where the watermelon stalls are (a 2 minute walk, handicap accessible).

By foot

You should follow the “Park Hamesilah” (old train tracks park) path toward Beit Zafafa (also recommended, ride by bicycle and lock it up as you approach the watermelon stalls) until the bridge near the bilingual school.

By motorized vehicle

Search for Arieh Beham street on a GPS or a map and from there follow the path from the bilingual school to “Park Hamesila (old train tracks park) as above.

*You can also reach the site by going through the painted boulders by the Ort Spanian School and from there descend to the dirt path leading to “Park Hamesilah” (old train tracks park), and take a left toward the watermelon stalls!

Photos from under the bridge

2015-06-05 17.12.592015-06-05 17.13.332015-06-05 17.13.562015-06-05 17.14.112015-06-05 17.15.272015-06-05 17.18.122015-06-05 17.18.572015-06-05 17.19.36

Details

Start:
June 4
End:
June 13
Cost:
Free
Event Categories:
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Website:
https://www.facebook.com/events/941420192577315/

Venue

פארק המסילה
Jerusalem, Israel

Organizer

מוסללה Muslala
Website:
https://www.facebook.com/muslala.artrax