A Long Way Home

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the status quo

12 February, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I realized I haven’t really written much here in a while. I guess life and my absorption into Israeli society has reached a standstill in the last half year and I haven’t had much of a desire to write about news events, as I find that I have nothing insightful or unique to say about the news here. As Alan wrote on my birthday card, “I’m getting used to not having our first anything in Israel anymore.” It’s not a bad thing. In fact, in many ways it’s a really good thing – it means life is becoming more comfortable and routine here. 

Right now, life is just continuing on as it has – sprinting after the 19 bus, cursing and simultaneously lavishing my silly cat with love, taking care of my cells, shul, lab meetings, bike riding, etc. I’ve collected some pretty good stories in between and occasionally even during the aforementioned activities. But I tend to not write them here, for fear of violating people’s anonymity. 

Like older people worry about Alzheimer’s and dementia, I worry about the loss of my English language abilities. I phrase thinks strangely. I notice useful and simple words slipping from my grasp. I still spend a lot of time on the confocal (or rather, in the confocal room…in addition to imaging, it is a quiet and private place for phone calls, napping, illicit snacking, etc).

I also lock myself in the bathroom a lot. At work it seems to be my new thing. I’ve done it three or four times in two weeks alone. I’ve developed this problem where I sort of over-shoot the lock, and the door gets jammed. I then struggle in earnest for a few minutes, which of course feels like nine hours when you’re locked in a bathroom with no obvious way out. If I am really lucky, there will be someone laughing hysterically outside when I finally extricate myself from the stronghold.  You can see how uneventful my life is because this is basically the only semi-eventful thing I have to write about. 

Hopefully something interesting will happen to me soon. In the meantime, I’ll just be falling asleep while imaging and locking myself in the bathroom for increasingly long periods of time:-)

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In Memoriam: Judah Folkman (1933-2008)

18 January, 2008 · Leave a Comment


On Monday evening, renowned cancer researcher Judah Folkman, Harvard professor and director of the vascular biology program at Children’s Hospital Boston, died unexpectedly of a heart attack at the age of 74.

When I was in my junior year of high school, I saw “Cancer Warrior”, a Nova documentary on public television narrated by Alan Alda. The documentary was about Judah Folkman and his theory of angiogenesis, the process through which a tumor is able to generate its own blood vessel network. In order to grow beyond a certain size, tumors rely on their surrounding vasculature in order to obtain nutrients and excrete wastes. Folkman reasoned that if it is possible to cut off a tumor’s blood supply, a tumor could essentially be starved and maintained in a dormant state.

There was something magical about the way Folkman spoke. His electric energy, his grandiose ideas, and his enthusiasm for the way in which basic research can change the world was completely contagious.Listening to him tell his story about angiogenesis, I felt a passion and excitement for ideas that I had never known before. I remember at one point actually getting up from the couch and moving closer to the television in anticipation of the next turn of the unfolding story, as if I were watching an adventure thriller. Two aspects of the angiogenesis story captured my imagination: Folkman wasn’t ashamed to dream big and to share those big dreams – sometimes prematurely. Also, Folkman had a great, romantic story.

The major focus of cancer research in the 1970s was harnessing the new tools of molecular biology to study cancer cells themselves. No one was thinking about the tumor’s seemingly irrelevant normal environment. For decades Folkman’s ideas about the importance of a tumor’s environment were scorned and ridiculed. After all, he was a surgeon dappling in research in his free time. And he had the whole problem of his big ideas that he talked so freely about before he had any proof to substantiate them.

The work to prove angiogenesis was painstaking and slow because Folkman and groupies had to invent most of the tools and systems used to study angiogenesis themselves. Eventually, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a major stimulator of new blood vessel growth, was identified and in the years that followed a host of other stimulators and inhibitors of angiogenesis were isolated. With proof of such stimulators and inhibitors, tumor angiogenesis became a credible, accepted phenomenon. Overnight Folkman went from the quack with irrelevant, unprovable ideas to super science celebrity. The list of other diseases in which pathological angiogenesis is implicated keeps growing.

In 1998, two endogenous angiogenesis inhibitors, angiostatin and endostatin, were shown to cure cancer in mice, a study that made the front page of the New York Times and prompted co-discoverer of the DNA double helix, James Watson, to prophesize that “Judah will cure cancer in two years.” By the time I sat in my father’s downstairs study watching “Cancer Warrior” at the beginning of 2001, a whole new field of cancer research had exploded and a biography of Folkman, Dr. Folkman’s War by Robert Cooke, had just been published.

The next day I went to my high school biology teacher and I asked her if I could do an independent study reading about angiogenesis under her supervision in lieu of a regular course. She thought it was a great idea. I didn’t have Powerpoint, so for my end of semester presentation, I drew pictures of tumors in magic marker and color-copied them onto overhead transparencies. I loved every second of my independent study and by the end of my junior year, I decided that I definitely wanted to be like my hero Judah Folkman and become a scientist.

During my first year at Wellesley, I met a Harvard scientist who trained in Folkman’s lab and now had her own angiogenesis lab. I ended up working in her lab every summer during my time at Wellesley and also did independent studies in her lab during the school year. It was very lucky and special to actually become part of the research I first learned about in high school, especially since it was what inspired me to want to do science in the first place.

Every summer, Folkman would lead the annual surgical research department (later renamed vascular biology department) meeting at the Academy of Sciences in Cambridge. The meeting would consist of his own lab and the other collaborating labs in the department. Folkman was a pretty quirky guy (for instance, he drove a silver VW bug right into his 70s) and had very particular ideas about how this meeting should be run. For one thing, jacket and tie were required. The other rather interesting twist was that no Powerpoint or slides of any sort were allowed – “chalk talks” only. So you had everyone dressed in his or her finest garb in the middle of the day giving these very informal short talks with magic marker and chalk.

Every year Folkman would give a talk at the meeting that would more or less dictate the major themes of angiogenesis research for the next year. He’d get up there and be teeming with his electric energy and excitement and you’d know there was something special going on. It was just like watching the Nova documentary in high school all over again except it would be so much cooler, because I’d actually be in the room. It would set the standard for me of how I think all scientists should love their science and talk about their science.

The last time I saw Judah Folkman, he joked about his own death. Avastin (the first angiogenesis inhibitor to make it big which interestingly works more by normalizing the tumor’s convoluted vasculature to enhance deliverability of chemotherapy than by choking off the tumor’s blood supply) had just finished the last stages of clinical trials and had been put on the market. He said he was at a big press conference marking its release and one of the speakers commented, “If only Judah Folkman were still alive to see the results of his research.” Folkman then went up to the microphone during the question and answer session to say “This is the ghost of Judah Folkman!” (I think he really liked to tell this story).

I know that Dr. Folkman’s life and work affected thousands of other people very much like me and also very different from me and changed their lives forever – young people who were inspired to study science because of his story, scientists and physicians at all stages of their careers whose career paths and choices were impacted, patients in the death throes of cancer, some who lived and some who died, but all healed in some way whether by words or by drugs.

Now the patriarch of a whole new field, the man holding the light out front, is no longer with us. I am very, very sad. But I am pretty sure his boundless enthusiasm for ideas, his imagination, his creativity, and his unshakeable and stubborn pursuit of truth in the face of skepticism and adversity could reach from here to infinity. The stubborn rabbi’s son from the midwest turned surgeon “quack” scientist turned science superstar – you changed the world, Dr. Folkman.

Judah Folkman, cancer’s innovative enemy, dies at 74 Boston Globe

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The Great Sufganiyot Search: 2007 – 5768

23 October, 2007 · 3 Comments

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Every year around Chanukah, the Jerusalem Post puts out a sufganiyot guide. The authors of the guide sample sufganiyot at a bunch of bakeries around town and then write a compiled review of their findings. I had a few concerns about this process last year: Did the authors have an appreciation for the scientific method? What was their methodology? For instance, if they sampled a bunch of sufganiyot in one trip, they would clearly be biased against their samplings by the end of the day, by which time they would surely be ready to vomit.

I felt it was important that each sufganiyot be allowed its own day; its own moment of glory; its own sacred time for contemplation, enlightenment, and introspection. Also, what if the testers just sampled a piece of a sufganiya? You can’t compare the center of one sufganiya with the edge piece of another.

I wanted to level the playing field for all the sufganiyot out there and I wanted to introduce a little objectivity into the study. Most of all, I wanted to sample every sufganiya in Jerusalem. And, okay, as anyone who ever attended the Scooperbowl with me will attest, I am a very competitive eater. I feel strong loyalties towards my favorite foods.

Despite a few well-intentioned concerns about my cholesterol fielded during last year’s study, I am up for the challenge once again. My yearly sufganiyot experiment may still not be a double-blind controlled study, but I have goals in place and I’m working towards them. Ultimately, I aim for my study to be worthy of Nature publication by Chanukah 2009 or at least an Ig Nobel Prize. I still have two more sufganiyot seasons to perfect things. How can you help, dear reader?

There are a couple things you can do. You can recommend locations around Jerusalem for me to try – good and bad, but mostly good, please:-) You can add to the comments section of this post your own reviews of sufganiyot you have consumed in the Jerusalem area. And finally, dear reader, you can work on your own major scientific breakthroughs. I am sure the sufganiyot connection won’t be very difficult to establish. Not a very sophisticated system for now, I know, but as time allows maybe I will start a sufganiyot blog that will take on a life of its own.

Ready…set…go!!!

And Happy Sufganiyot Season 2007 – 5768.

P.S. Definitely last week’s news, but for those following the saga, Harriet was successfully spayed.

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moshe, of beer sheva st.

3 August, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Rabbi Eliezer said: Let the honor of your fellow person be as dear to you as your own. -Pirkei Avot 2:15 

Moshe is a wanderer. This is partially why we become quick friends, because I like to wander, too. Moshe sits at the Y Café on Nissim Behar the whole day and reads newspapers and talks to the customers. I sit at the Y Café with my laptop to work on my editing, so Moshe and I spend many hours a week in each other’s company. Moshe spends the rest of the day either wandering or learning at Kol Rina, the shul on Beer Sheva St.

He walks me to the framing store to pick up a newly framed print to drop off at his apartment. His hands and fingernails are dirty from newsprint. He struggles a bit to get around at his age, but there is a jolliness in his stride and he walks with a sense of purpose in his wanderings. He is happy to be going wherever it is that he is going.

When I am at the laundromat Moshe sits in a white plastic chair beside the television and tells me about the news and about his shul and his classes or he watches me play anagrams, cross-legged on the hard floor with Elka and Jess. For weeks he tells Jess and I that he wants to take us out for a nice lunch. This is his big plan. We hesitate because we don’t want him to spend his money on us. We have no idea how much or how little he has and we don’t want to chance him spending too much of it. But he keeps persisting; he really wants this date.

Finally we schedule a day and a time. We meet him after his class at the shul. He announces we’re not going to go to the café on Nissim Behar. He has big plans for us. He wants to take us to a nice place on Bezalel, a change of scenery for all three of us he says. It takes forever for our entourage to reach the restaurant, all the while Jess and I thinking he’s going to fall and break a hip any second.

To him, everything we say, everything we do is wonderful. I love him for his unconditional acceptance and his unconditional approval. To him we are young and smart and happening. We can do no wrong. We sit for hours talking. I am thirsty for his stories but really, he is more interested in hearing about our plans and telling us how wonderful we are. That is the treat for him. He insists on getting us extra brownies to go.

In a few weeks, Jess will return to America and I will move to Beit Hakerem with Elka. As we part ways at the corner of Nissim Behar and Beer Sheva he scribbles down his mailing address. “You tell your roommate Elka, I want to bring her some ice cream. Once you leave here I don’t think I’ll ever see you again. I don’t think you’ll come here to visit me anymore. But, please, come back sometimes and visit me,” he pleads.

Weeks pass by and I never go back to Nachlaot to visit. A few months later, I walk through the neighborhood to see a friend. It is nighttime. Through the window of Y Café, I see Moshe at his usual spot. He is drinking tea, his grubby fingers smudged with newsprint, clasped loosely around the cup. I can’t tell for sure, but I think he is arguing with the waitstaff. Probably about something he saw on the news. I hesitate for a moment and keep on walking; I do not see Moshe again.

I still don’t understand why I don’t go back to visit him. My only explanation is that, sometimes, I am not a very good person. For this I have no answer: how I can make a person so happy just by being there and yet instead I seek the approval and praise of those who cannot or do not want to love me.

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the boy in the sack and other heroes

20 July, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Say this city has ten million souls,
Some are living in mansions, some are living in holes:
Yet there’s no place for us, my dear, yet there’s no place for us.
Once we had a country and we thought it fair,
Look in the atlas and you’ll find it there:
We cannot go there now, my dear, 
we cannot go there now…

Went down the harbour and stood upon the quay,
Saw the fish swimming as if they were free:
Only ten feet away, my dear, only ten feet away.
Walked through a wood, saw the birds in the trees;
They had no politicians and sang at their ease:
They weren’t the human race, my dear, 
they weren’t the human race.
Dreamed I saw a building with a thousand floors,
A thousand windows and a thousand doors;
Not one of them was ours, my dear, 
not one of them was ours.
Stood on a great plain in the falling snow;
Ten thousand soldiers marched to and fro:
Looking for you and me, my dear, looking for you and me.
-from Refugee Blues, W. H. Auden

I was at the Singer’s for Shabbat lunch last week. I am not sure how it started, but we went around the table sharing aliyah stories. It went like this: Mr. Kaplan is a Holocaust orphan who left Germany on the Kindertransport in 1940. After a brief internment in Britian, he was sent to Australia on the H.M.T. Dunera with a large group of other boys. As a young teenager, he was then given the option of staying in Australia or making an illegal voyage to Palestine. 

Palestine sounded exciting and he felt an ideological connection to the Land of Israel, so he decided to sign up for the adventure and join the voyage to Palestine. I asked him why he would choose to do something so risky having just escaped grave danger in Nazi Germany and made it to somewhere safe. He said he was so young and so alone, he had nothing to lose and that being so young he felt invincible. 

After a risky and indirect journey in which his ship was attacked several times, he made it to Palestine where he became a war reporter, a job that would develop into his full-time career as an adult.

Orna’s father hid his brother in a sack in Auschwitz to prevent his selection (the little brother was too young to be helpful for labor). Both made it to Palestine, and Orna’s uncle, the boy in the sack, would go on to become a very famous rabbi here in Israel. 

I made aliyah on a Boeing 747 with a personal television screen and an iPod. The journey took ten hours. When I arrived, the Israeli government gave me money. When the young Mr. Kaplan arrived several decades earlier, he was given a garden hoe to fight in a war in which one-percent of the population was killed, many of whom were Holocaust survivors who had just escaped the gas chambers and furnaces of Eastern Europe.

I am able to be here today, a new immigrant in Israel, because of people like Mr. Kaplan and Orna’s father. Sometimes, it is important to just stop and remember.

From out of the depths did I call upon G-d; 
G-d answered me with expansiveness. 
Hashem is with me, I have no fear; 
how can man affect me?
You pushed me hard that I might fall, 
but Hashem assisted me…
I shall not die! 
But I shall live and relate the deeds of G-d.
(Hallel)

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Harriet the Spy (Sabra Secret Agent) Edition

26 June, 2007 · 3 Comments

The last month has been a little hectic between work, being sick, and searching for a new apartment but it’s a poor excuse for having not yet devoted a posting to my new family member, trust-worthy confidante, and absorption counselor extraordinaire: Harriet the Spy, licensed sabra kitty secret agent. Harriet and I share many common passions and interests including but not limited to chopped liver, spying, raw salmon, jumping all over the place,  and a general curiosity about people.

Here are some pictures of The Spy in action:

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Here is Harriet in an illicit mid-nap pose on my bed. Illicit since she really isn’t supposed to be all over my bedding because according to allergy tests, I’m allergic. Unfortunately, she’s often at her cutest when she is on my bed. This was only a few days after I got Harriet. Harriet has almost doubled in size since then!

har2.jpg Here’s Meera with Harriet. The Spy loved Meera and especially loved snuggling with her. The Spy requests that Meera come back to Israel soon to see how much she’s grown.

har3.jpg I am lucky that Harriet loves to clean herself. Here she is in licking action. She also likes to lick me as well, especially my face. A sweet gesture Harriet, but I prefer washing it with soap and water to your spit – sorry, pal.

Thanks to Meera who took the pictures below of Harriet when she came to visit:

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Okay, that is all for now from The Spy and from me! We will keep you posted on all of our adventures.

Love,
Harriet the Spy and Alissa the Wannabe

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“You should be ashamed of yourself, you have forgotten us in war. Signed, the children of Sderot.” (graffiti in Sderot)

21 May, 2007 · 1 Comment


A direct hit to a classroom in Sderot a few days ago.

“Because not all of our classrooms are protected, we have to study in shifts. We have no gym class because there is no safe place to practice… During the night we can’t fall asleep because of the drones and helicopters flying overhead, and during the day we can’t concentrate because we are too tired.” -Gon

“We have no normal life. We never know what will happen the next hour when Qassams fall; we are not only afraid for ourselves, but also for our families. It’s traumatic to think that someone close to us will get hurt. It’s just terrible.” -Bar

“I have a hard time concentrating in school, and the Qassams affect my entire life…Every time I want to do something, I give up because I think that the alarm will go off at any moment. I can’t study and I can’t even play soccer.” -Niv

quotes from Ynet News Sderot kids: Can’t Remember Life Without Kassams by Miri Chason

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gan eden in hell

7 March, 2007 · 2 Comments

On Friday, Alan and I drove south to the bike trails around Kibbutz Be’eri, just outside Gaza, to go biking. We heard of field upon field of kalaniyot in the hills situated between the Mediterranean coast and western Negev, so we decided to go check it out for ourselves. Unfortunately, looks like we missed most of the kalaniyot this year, but there were still open fields full of many other wildflowers to admire.

En route to the bike trails, the familiar road signs for “Kissufim Junction”, “Gush Katif” and “Neve Dekalim” began to appear. How odd that over a year after the disengagement, all of these road signs were still there as if these places still actually existed. As if we could take a turn at Kissufim and end up at the entrance of Neve Dekalim. It felt like a dream. 

I wondered what Alan was thinking. In my head, I could see the red lights in the sky at Kissufim Junction that spelled “Ahuva” in the sky and then the sand dunes would come into view, I thought, and the verdant greenhouse upon greenhouse filled with Israel’s lushest, most exotic flowers and the kids and playgrounds and the shuls full of men and women swaying in prayer, pleading to G-d not to let this awful thing happen, not to let their land and livelihoods and homes be taken away, and the neon electric orange that pierced and screamed through everything that whole summer, that whole year really. But none of this existed anymore. The shuls and homes and playgrounds were burnt to the ground and razed by bulldozers. It was all a lie, like the sign at the bus stop in Ashkelon that still says “Gush Katif.”

It is New Year’s Eve 2004. I am at the Y’s home in Atzmona, 500 yards from the Rafah refugee camp. Like most places always on the news that I have come to visit, I am surprised by its ordinariness. C and A are both American olim who came to Israel as teenagers with their families. They have eight children, C, age 3 and R, age 15, with six boys in between. None of the kids speak English. For ideological reasons, the parents have chosen not to speak English in the home. They are generous and warm and kind and of course want to make Aviva and I, both young Americans in Israel for the year, understand their love of Gush Katif and share it with our friends.

They unfold a map of the area from the early 1980s. A bloc of undeveloped land along the Mediterranean coast, a vast pit of sand, the Labor government offered incentives to young, religious couples to settle the Katif bloc and plant the land, the Y’s among them. Here they would build homes and plant gardens and bring children into the world. They would also construct an elaborate network of greenhouses which would house Israel’s largest and most exotic flower collection. Among their flowers and peppers and cows they sought a peaceful, pastoral life, reaping the miracles of the land and studying Torah.

The Y’s quaint, modest home is surrounded by pink, white, and purple flowers and decorated with prints of paintings of the tehillim by my cousin’s chevruta and close friend, Moshe Tzvi Berger, who started painting tehillim when he saw an article in the New York Times reporting that most Jews surveyed thought that the psalms were a Christian text. As someone who deeply loves psalms, he was very troubled by this, and went to his rav with the article, asking what he could do. The culmination of this conversation is his Museum of Psalms, which houses a painting depicting his interpretation of each of the 150 psalms.

By the time of the First Intifada, when the violence really began, C’s mother came up with a new name for Gush Katif: Gan Eden in Hell. And so it felt like this on the dawn of New Year’s Day 2005, when shells from Rafah started to fall and C pulled everyone in the house out of bed and into the living room, the only room of the house with reinforced walls. Aviva and I asked all the usual, naïve, and undoubtedly painful questions for the family: Do you think the evacuation will really occur? What will you do if the army comes? Where will you go? Their answer to every question was the same, and it was not answered with resentment or anger or any degree of uncertainty: This won’t happen to us, because in the last moment, Hashem won’t let it. Because it’s impossible.

After Shabbat ended, the Y’s took us for a car ride to show us around. At Kissufim Junction, they pointed out the red lights that spelled out “Ahuva” in the sky. “Her aunt lives next door to us. She was shot by terrorists on the way home to her husband and children, a real tragedy,” said A. I realize he is talking about Ahuva Amergi, the name on my bracelet, and that is where my second story begins.

My sophomore year at Wellesley, we ordered a bunch of victims of terror bracelets from One Family Fund. In the end, Hillel decided not to distribute them out of fear that it was biased and politically divisive to only recognize Israeli victims of terror (this was obviously very upsetting to me and a classic illustration of how truly crazy Wellesley Jews can be) and Friends of Israel inherited them instead.

The name on the bracelet I randomly pulled out of the bag was Ahuva Amergi, wife and mother, shot and killed in her car near Kissufim in February 2002. For three years I never took the bracelet off. I had always wondered about her, and as disengagement seemed imminent and the question of what would happen to the bodies of those buried in the Gush Katif Regional Cemetery became relevant, I thought about whether I could somehow visit her grave. Now I had the missing link I needed.

***

The Body Transfer

My mom calls to tell me about an article 
in the Boston Globe:

A young woman, shot dead 
on her way home from work, two small sons;

When Israel withdraws from Gaza 
they will have to dig up the body.

“So sad,” she says, 
“I cut it out to send you in the mail.”

And I know right away 
she is talking about Ahuva Amergi,

wife and mother, 
the name I wear etched 
on a bracelet against my skin.

I can see the red lights at Kissufim Junction 
that spell out her name in the sky.

I can see baby Chana sitting on my lap 
as the car speeds through the dunes

towards the Gush Katif Regional Cemetery.

Ahuva was talking to Sarah 
on her cell phone about the new house

and all the things she wanted to have done inside.

Then Sarah heard shots and 
she didn’t hear her sister’s voice again.

Rafi took the kids to Spain, 
and found a new wife. 
It was just too much.

Kneeling on the floor, 
I open up the envelope with the article.

“We’re not thinking about 
where to transfer the body 

because we don’t believe 
we’ll have to leave this place,”
 
Sarah says to the reporter.
“I thought you might be interested,” 
my mom wrote on a post-it.

In the picture, the grave is surrounded 
by smooth white stones along the edges.

She does not know I put them there.

***

After a couple months of summer research in Boston, I arrive back in Israel on July 31. K, my old roommate from the dorms at Hebrew University, a talented aspiring photojournalist, calls me as soon as I land. She is camping out in the tent city in Kfar Darom. Of course I worry for her, at seventeen she is somewhat of a kid sister, and I wonder how she even charges her cell phone out there. A few days later is the first day of Israel’s disengagement from Gaza.

K’s picture is the front page photo of the New York Times. In the picture, a young boy, bawling and furious, soaked in sweat and tears, pushes against a soldier no older than twenty. The soldier does not resist or look angry. Instead, he slumps in shame, his muscles slack. And he shirks back a little, arms drooping, transformed into a young boy in the millisecond before bursting into tears. No one told him the world would be this unfair. He is very sad and very confused, as much so as the little boy, no older than ten, who shoves him and resists him and bawls with flailing legs and flailing arms.

I am volunteering at the MDA station every day, doing the day shift. In between calls, I spend most of my time watching Channel 2 in the break room. My Hebrew isn’t even good enough to understand what most of the people are screaming, but I spend many hours on one of the hard plastic chairs watching people lose everything they have on TV. 

They show buses driving off full of families, leaving only great clouds of dirt and dust in their wake and then they pan back to more people screaming and hysterical with fire and smoke in the background. Lots of other people come to watch too, and mostly we sit in silence until an announcement goes off over the intercom for an ambulance.

On my way home from the MDA station every night I pass by whole families sitting outside of the central bus station, huddled together with some suitcases, their vacant, alien eyes stunned and confused, as if they’ve just arrived from another planet and have never seen Jerusalem before and they are not quite sure why or how they are here.

**

I am back at Wellesley for my senior year. The army has finished evacuating all the people of Gush Katif. The hype has died down and the evacuation is hardly mentioned in the mainstream news anymore. Then I read a little article, it is no more than a paragraph really, about how the Arabs have begun to enter the area to loot and set everything on fire, including shuls. I imagine the shuls as once living entities with souls, now empty hollow shells, like so many dead bodies burning. 

I sit in my dorm room and cry silently. It seems like everyone, at least Jews in America, has forgotten already. I wonder why I am so sensitive and I feel a sense of guilt in my sadness; I still have a home, I don’t even live in Israel – this awful thing did not happen to me directly. I wonder if maybe I am indulging in sadness, in a loss that is not my own. Later that week I take out my paints and I paint and paint on a huge canvas. I paint Gan Eden in Hell, just like C’s mom said, an image still seared in my head.

Many surreal things happened to me in Gush Katif. Things that I am still not yet able to fully comprehend over a year later. What I do intuitively understand is that these events are part of something larger, and I wonder whether I will ever be able to piece them together to make some sense of what I saw. But, still, even now, I feel only a loss, the loss of something that I was never truly really part of, but something that I was still able to feel very deeply and appreciate both for its beauty and its potential. I may have been an outsider watching from the side, but I was up so close to the front sometimes that I could almost fool myself into thinking that I was a part of it.

I still look back on the summer of 2005, and the events in the months leading up to it, with great shock and confusion, as if just the thought itself revisited each time in my head is a huge surprise, one to which I still do not know or admit to know the outcome; one hot, crazy summer during which the line between the good guys and the bad guys blurred, a time when our protectors became our enemies and our enemies were ourselves.

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פורים סמח

5 March, 2007 · Leave a Comment

I might be the only person in Jerusalem awake this early in the morning on Purim, but Purim Sameach from Yerushalayim! This Beit Hakerem stray may have overdosed on chocolate from mishloach manot (who knew Jerusalem strays got mishloach manot, too?).

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(This is actually a pic Alan took on his phone to show me that I smudged my nose).

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Bad Habits

5 October, 2006 · Leave a Comment

I have a few important confessions I just need to get off my chest.

1) I eat Bamba for breakfast every morning without fail except on fast days.
2) I eat pizza for lunch every day.
3) Sometimes I bike on the sidewalk to circumvent buses or to get ahead of the traffic. 
4) I have coffee at least twice a day, including at night, usually within one hour of going to bed. I still fall asleep before midnight, though. I am quickly spending my life savings on overpriced iced coffee beverages. I am not addicted to the caffeine (yet), I would classify my coffee drinking as primarily social.

Okay, now I feel a lot better having said all that. These habits would appall my parents who would classify them as “unhealthy living habits.” I call them “coping mechanisms” (with the exception of riding my bike on the sidewalk which I call “sort of being a jerk.”)

PS I just ate an entire small pizza (8 slices) while typing this. Do I have some sort of metabolic disease?

Also, yesterday was the

 

1 MONTH ANNIVERSARY OF MY ALIYAH

Just sayin’…and I spent the evening appropriately: at Tmol Shilshom with an old friend

Another milestone: the French roommates finally figured out that I made aliyah and that I’m not here “on holiday.” As you can imagine, our relationship is pretty communicative.

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survival mechanisms

10 September, 2006 · Leave a Comment

“All journeys have secret destinations of which the traveler is unaware.” –Martin Buber

For months, the lists in my purple journal are what keep me together. Each day I focus on what I want to do tomorrow and that is how I make it to the next day without being paralyzed by loneliness and fear over the enormity of this move and the vastness of my aloneness. 

I still sometimes cry at night, something I haven’t done since I was nine and suffering from anxiety attacks. In many ways, what I am experiencing now is not so different from what I experienced then. 

It started at overnight camp. The camp was in a rural area with not much around it. I would wake up in the middle of the night and look at my watch and think to myself “Right now it is 3:47am. I think the whole camp is sleeping. I bet I am the only person awake now for miles and miles,” and I would feel desperately alone. (I think it takes a special kind of person to worry about being all alone in the world at the age of nine.)

The thought of being the only person awake for miles terrified me and continued to preoccupy my thoughts once I got home from camp. I would watch out my window as all the lights went out in the neighborhood one by one and then I would say to myself “I bet I am the only person in my neighborhood awake right now.” 

Subsequently, I convinced myself that I must be the only person on Cape Cod awake at that moment and then, likely, the only person awake in all of Massachusetts. I took comfort only in the thought that in China, it was the middle of the day. 

Now, I lie awake at night and think similar thoughts, but instead of obsessing that no one else is awake for thousands miles, I think about how there isn’t a person who loves me for thousands of miles, and instead of finding solace in China, I find it in Massachusetts. 

I tread lightly, for I know I have a certain vulnerability now, a new weakness that I have never known before. I am soft and weak in places where I used to be strong.

I try to take advantage of this new softness, because it allows me to feel the world around me more acutely and more deeply. Alongside my fear, I find great beauty among simple things that I did not notice before: the strong September sun lighting up the hills at dusk and shining through the gentle pines; succulent cherries, so perfectly round, little globes full of sweet juice that leave my fingers sticky and dribble down my chin. My prayers take on a more honest, fervent quality. I say thank you, thank you, thank you.

In these moments I am able to cling on to the reasons I am here in the first place. I know nothing is more natural to the longing of my hands, more native to the topography of my soul, than living among these sweet, dense Jerusalem hills.

For the first time in many years, I actually want to write. I write furiously and with great urgency, such as how I write now. I find the time because it is a primal desire. And why does one write in the first place? 

Because she feels misunderstood, not necessarily by just the world, but by herself, too; because her feelings are at times so desperate and overwhelming, she needs to make sense of them somehow; because she is changing so fast, writing is the only way she can get to know herself, before she changes again the next day and the day after that.

By the time I finish writing, I feel perfectly empty, and the emptiness is the closest thing I know to peace.

In the evenings, I take many long walks alone through Jerusalem. Writing, making lists, and walking: this is my perscription for surviving the first months of my aliyah. It occurs to me that these are all solitary activities and I worry that I am turning inward too much.

Sometimes, on a clear night, especially in quieter neighborhoods, you can see the Big and Little Dipper. When I was younger, I would sit out on the back deck in summer and daydream about far away countries while looking at the stars. 

Looking into the fiery white haze of the Milky Way, I think about all the people I love I left to come to this strange and lovely place. At least, they always thought I was leaving them, perhaps to trade them in for something better. And for some time, I thought I had left them behind, too. But of this I am now certain: collectively, they form every good reason why I love this land with all my heart, with my whole soul – b’chol l’vavcha uv’chol nafshcha. 

I can hear them even now as I look high into the clear night sky. Wendy is telling me about her favorite Buffy episode for the nine millionth time and Aunt Betsy is imitating her neighbors in frighteningly accurate and elaborate voices on the answering machine. 

I hear Grandma Joan jamming on the clarinet and Mom asking why must I always put my fingers in my mouth, which, according to her, is why I get sick so much. Dad cajoles me to play catch with him after dinner and to fold my clothes properly. 

I hear Papa scold Nana “Less talk, more action!” in their Delray Beach kitchen as they prepare for a dinner party. Jess and I are playing catch-it outside alumnae hall on a warm spring night. You can hear only our giggles and the whoosh of the ball.

I hear them all, and many others, every day. I rely on their voices for strength when I am lonely or sad or confused. And I carry them – their stories, their joys, and their burdens with me all over Israel, wherever I go. 

In Fugitive Pieces, Anne Michaels writes “Now, from thousands of feet in the air, I see something else. My mother stands behind my father and his head leans against hers. As he eats, she strokes his hair. Like a miraculous circuit, each draws strength from the other.
 I see that I must give what I most need.”

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a prelude to the adventure

1 June, 2006 · Leave a Comment

Graduation Day, Wellesley College

In my dream, the
angel shrugged &
said, if we fail
this time, it will be
a failure of imagination
& then she placed the
world gently in the palm
of my hand.

Dearest Alissa,

I am hoping this card will be one you haven’t seen before. I really do think that it describes where we are so well – the world in the palm of our hands, magnificent and giant and scary and hopeful. And you are truly capable of anything you dream of. I feel like I have known you my entire life. Although I will miss you across the hall, I know that our relationship is independent of the distance between us. One thing I have been thinking about and want to share, because we are oh so alike: I set a personal challenge to climb to the very top of one of the masts while at SEA. When I went up for the last time, I got higher than I’ve ever made it before. I was standing right below the uppermost platform, and it was windier than I thought. I was so scared to climb those last few feet, to unclip my harness and climb freely again. I realized that what I lack is not challenge, but patience with myself. And I think you are the same way. I know you will do wonderful things, because you would never allow yourself to do otherwise. Just have patience with yourself (“with everything unresolved in your heart…” my favorite). We’ve had so many wonderful times, and our fair share of bad times, too. I will know you for a long time more, my friend. Take good care.

Love,
Jess

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Shalom

28 May, 2006 · Leave a Comment

I am starting this journal as a place to record my thoughts about making aliyah. Mostly I intend for it to be a place for myself because I really like to write and sometimes it helps me sort out my thoughts. As the time of my aliyah approaches, I might share this journal with others so they can see what I am up to! It will be interesting to watch and see what form it takes, both leading up to my aliyah and after the big day.

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