Blake's BlogA window into my life
bhgottlieb
read my profile
sign my guestbook

Visit bhgottlieb's Xanga Site!

Name: Blake
Country: Israel
State: Florida
Birthday: 12/17/1980
Gender: Male


Interests: Travel, Current Events, Religion, Martial Arts, Turtles, Computing
Occupation: Other
Industry: Engineering


Message: message me
Website: visit my website


Member Since: 6/17/2003

SubscriptionsSites I Read

Posting Calendar

|<< oldest | newest >>|
view all weblog archives

Get Involved!

Suggest a link

Recommend to friend

Create a site


Wednesday, February 11, 2004

R'IDAT ADAMAH (EARTHQUAKE)

While I was at the elderly center this morning, we felt an earthquake. It was pretty small, but noticable. It felt kind of like a big truck must have been driving down the street. A really big truck.

 

Here's some articles about it online:

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1076506709378

 

http://web.israelinsider.com/bin/en.jsp?enPage=ArticlePage&enDisplay=view&enDispWhat=object&enDispWho=Article%5El3296&enZone=Politics&enVersion=0&

 


Monday, February 09, 2004

BLOG ENTRIES PUBLISHED

Here is a link to some of my blog entries about my work that got published to the Boston-Haifa website:

<http://www.haifa-boston.org/news-0402-otzma.asp>

 

NEXT TRACKS

My last day in Haifa is Feb 26. Then, I will go to Jerusalem for the rest of the program.

First, I will be participating in a three-week long program relating to Judaism with most of the other OTZMAnikim. It should be fun and progressive-ish.

Then, I will be doing an internship (Sorry, folks, it's also unpaid!) at the Jerusalem Open House where I will help out with resource development and the website.


Tuesday, February 03, 2004

MORE ABOUT MY VOLUNTEER WORK
(For previously written information about my work at the Elderly Day Center, see the blog entry dated December 17, 2003.)


JAPAN MUSEUM
I work at the Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art <http://www.haifamuseums.org.il/japeng.htm> two mornings a week where my main role is to transcribe (perhaps transtype) all the information from the museum's index-card-based catalogue into the standard electronic catalogue that has been developed for all of the Haifa Museums. It's pretty basic work, but it gives me a chance to have exposure to the works the museum has. I also get a sense of how a museum works by being around the director, Ilana Singer, and the staff. Sometimes I proofread English translations of explanatory texts and captions to accompany the art in the museum hall. I've even once helped rearrange the kimono exhibit and proofread a letter of thanks to a Japanese donor.

Actually, last night, with my friend Amit Cohen, I attended a special event held at the museum consisting of exhibits of Japanese swords and drawings followed by performance in Indian Music. It was a part of some conference on Asian culture taking place at Haifa University or something.
 In any case, it was cool to see that descriptions that I had proofread accomanied the displays.

 

MOADONIT YODFAT (Yodfat Youth Center)
Two afternoons a week, I go to an after-school center for youth in a "difficult" neighbourhood of the Hadar section of Haifa. It's a diverse group of Arabs and Jews from mostly immigrant families, and as poorly as the kids behave, its good to see that their quarrels with one another aren't based on religious or racial differences. It gives me some hope.

The kids play basketball, get help with homework, eat a hot meal, and generally make the counselors lives a living hell as they try to run activities for them! My role is to hang out with the kids and be friendly, and I teach a karate class for the kids aged 10-13. Besides that, one day a week, the kids have a drumming chug (activity) and on Tuesdays, we recently started taking the kids to the science museum <http://www.mustsee.co.il/#> in the old Technion building. But going to the museum left no time for me to run the karate chug, so I switched days so I could keep teaching it twice a week.

I remember when I taught the Ethiopian kids karate alongside Jeremy at the absorption center in Ashqelon, and it didn't turn out as orderly as we expected. I figured if I tried it with another group of kids in Haifa it would be much more smooth. I was wrong! The kids at the moadonit here are the most unruly, undisciplined kids I've ever met in my entire life. But the other counselors said they appreciate the work that I do and that even though only about 6 kids last more than 15 minutes in the class each time, they think the discipline of the class is important for them and worthwhile.

One of the counselors and I have talked a little more about the kids themselves, and it seems every one of them "has a story."


MERKAZ ILAN (Ilan Center) FOR THE HANDICAPPED
Merkaz Ilan is a sports center for handicapped people including a swimming pool, basketball court, ping-pong tables, and a lounge. I work in the swimming pool once a week, assisting patients who want to spend an extra half-hour after their physical therapy session just doing independent stuff in the pool. Most of the patients have cerebral palsy, though one of the people I've become friendly with was in a car accident when she was about twenty. She communicates in English pretty well, and we spoke a lot in the beginning and she eventually invited me to see her place in the assisted-living facility right by the center. When I visited, I saw that there was a logistically decent place to be for someone with a severe disability, but a social atmosphere is non-existent for someone used to a normal life like Alona. As we talked, Alona told me about her accident from 10 years ago. She originally was in a coma for 3 and a half months and couldn't speak or eat or move much at all when she woke up. It seems she has had to put in effort into relearning everything she does. Her speech is strained and she is mostly wheelchair-bound. On the walls in her room which she shares with a roommate, she has pictures of herself riding horses near Eilat and jigsaw puzzles which she has put together in more recent times. Alona's experience is so interesting to me, though it is saddening. I suppose there were worse possible alternatives to her situation now, but only she knows what it's like to deal with it. I told her that she should consider connecting to the internet to meet other people throughout the world with similar experiences.

I suppose I was a good guest. Next week, I've been invited back to eat dinner with her in the facility after working at the pool.


LEV CHASH <http://www.levchash.co.il/>
Both "lev" and "chash" have two consonants when written in Hebrew (which usually excludes vowels in written form). Lev means heart. Chash, means caring and is actually the abbreviation of the last names of the two founders of the organization, which supplies household items, furniture, clothing, and other things to the needy at heavily discounted prices. Leah, Kim, Rachel, and I work there at the warehouse-like store in Hadar (the same area as the youth center I work in) every Wednesday afternoon to clean up and reorganize the goods before patrons come and ask me if I speak Russian. Then we tell them I don't speak Russian and communicate in broken Hebrew and sign language till they have found what they want at the right price. The clientele is actually very diverse and resembles the mix that I know at the youth center. In fact, I seen three of the kids from Yodfat in the toys section of the store in the past few weeks.

Honestly, I think the work there is soooo boring, but I have the company of my other OTZMAnikim and I know that the place needs help and serves a purpose in the community. So I go.

 


Saturday, January 10, 2004

INTERESTING LINK TO THE WAR ON TERROR

 

I just saw an article in a that remided me of an important conversation I had with someone a year and a half ago:

I remember going to the AEPi Northeast Regional Conclave in the Spring of 2002 in Toronto, and I had a conversation with one of the alumni who was involved in the fraternity leadership with whom I was friendly and somehow I think I ended up mentioning that I had been in the Air Force ROTC program when I started at MIT, and I said one of the reasons I left the program was because I was against the military and didn't believe in war and such. The alum probably asked me if I didn't think it was necessary for the military to be in Afghanistan, and I said I thought there must be a better way to deal with the problems there, and so he asked me a simple question for which I had no answer: "Well, what's the alternative then?"

I'm grateful the alum was unfraid to put me on the spot when I probably didn't have a good answer, because it forced me to think seriously about such an important thing. As time passed, I sought possible answers and realized that there probably are none, and that there's a time for laying down your arms and a time for picking them up, and that the US didn't deserve what it got on September 11th and that the nation had to respond with force, albeit a painful decision to make for a lot of people.

Today, that alumnus, Elon Carr, is serving in the US military in Baghdad and he has published an interesting article about his experiences there.

<http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/opinion/7634637.htm>


Wednesday, December 17, 2003

VOLUNTEER WORK AT THE ELDERLY CENTER

 

I'm taking a break from work at the Carmel Elderly Day Center (Merkaz Yom L-K'shish Carmel) and decided to jump on the computer for a second. (They have a computer room where the people come and sit and play solitaire games or check their email and look at pictures sent from their kids and such.) Anyway, I found a link that has a description of the center and Hebrew and a couple of pictures, so I figured I'd add it to my blog.

 

Here is is: <http://www.shilo.co.il/asg/Item_24.html>

 

I work here three days a week. When I arrive at 8:45, breakfast is already being served in the dining room. (God knows when everyone actually gets here! I'm probably still in bed then.) I jump right in and help clear up and push the tables around so the people can come back in and use the room for a seated exercise session. Then I eat. (That's the best part.) Then I set up the tables for lunch and have an hour or so to do whatever I feel like. (That's what I'm doing right now.) Sometimes I just sit down in the lounge/lobby area with a Hebrew text book and someone undoubtedly comes over and talks with me, be it one of the elderly folks (telling me I should meet their granddaughter and stay in Israel), the social worker who's 24 years old (who loves to practice English), or one of the Filipino m'taplim (caretakers) who live with some of the people who come here and speak English as a second language (the first being Tagalog). After my free time, I return to the kitchen, grab some lunch and then help serve lunch and clean it up. I usually make it out of the center by 1:45. Then I usually have other work elsewhere in Haifa.

 

That's about all I have time for now. Look forward to future blog entries about my other volunteer options.



Next 5 >>