Taglit Group experience May 2010


Ezra USA has started its summer early this year with 3 groups heading out to Israel in May. Dima Krasny from May 6a group says that that alone might well have made the trip special! Everyone in the group has found something that resonated profoundly with them. For some, it was the visits (two!) to the old city, culminating with the Western Wall; for some it was the remote and pristine Dead Sea; some fell in love with the beach in Netanya; others still were moved by Tzfat, Tiberias and the spiritual and physical beauty of the north. For every spot visited, at least three people would approach the madrichim and ask, "Can we just stay here the rest of the time?" And this was not a trivial question coming from an impatient child - it came from people who had just found a long-missing piece of themselves in our ancestral homeland... May 6b group, called “Alejanjews” , like all the Ezra groups, were met in the Ben Gurion airport with the famous words: "Welcome to Israel, welcome home!" First stop, Jerusalem! They toured the beautiful city and finally got to the Western Wall. For many, this was an unforgettable experience and they were moved to tears as they came closer and closer to the wall. Right before the eyes of 50 people, a couple from the group got engaged. That made the experience even more special for all. With the first day in Israel behind and with so much that has already happened they were looking forward to the rest of the trip and for more new and exciting things to come. Throughout this experience they boarded the plane as 40 strangers,

and they left Israel as 40 friends :) Ezra group of May 24

or “Stoned Turtles” was the most spiritual one. Their path towards discovering their Jewish identity started on the plane, where a bunch of the Chabbad Lubavich movement representatives offered to the guys to put on a tfillin. For most of the Ezra participants it was first experience of that kind. The conversations were deep and inspiring, and the questions were challenging, and flew weigh beyond the aircraft. When the group visited the Western wall, the place where the Jewish people have been praying and crying for thousands of years, some of the guys asked to hold a ceremony of Bar Mitzvah, which they never had. Dancing and singing at the Kotel, the holiest place for the Jewish people, could be heard across the ocean. The celebration was powerful and meaningful, and ended with a few Le’Chaims, gratuitously offered by the local Chabbad people.