Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    WHEN IS YOUR NEXT TRIP TO ISRAEL?

    Not everyone can
    travel this summer. For
    some, it is difficult to
    take time off, for others
    the high cost is a barrier,
    and for others, there are
    physical or health
    challenges that make it

    impossible.
    However, there are many people who will
    take advantage of children being off from
    school, of life slowing down, and of
    accumulated vacation days to travel. The
    question is: to where?
    When a person is blessed to have living
    parents, he does not use each vacation to visit
    them at the exclusion of everywhere else.
    When one’s parents are healthy and well, it is
    perfectly appropriate to balance seeing and
    visiting parents with travelling to other places
    and gaining new experiences. But if a person’s
    parent was sick, convalescing and recuperating,
    it would be inappropriate, insensitive, and
    unthinkable to travel elsewhere or go on a
    vacation without having at least visited the sick
    parent at the first available opportunity.
    Israel is our mother. For the last eight months
    she has been recovering from a significant
    trauma and she isn’t out of the woods yet. It is
    incumbent on us to visit her if we haven’t
    already.
    The 5th bracha of the Sheva Berachos we

    recite under a chupa is “Sos tasis v’sageil
    ha’akara b’kibutz baneha l’socha b’simcha.
    Baruch atah Hashem, m’sameach Tzion
    b’vaneha – May the barren one rejoice and be
    glad as her children are joyfully gathered to her.
    Blessed are You, Hashem, Who gladdens Zion
    with her children.”
    What is the connection between the Chosson
    and Kallah and Yerushalayim? Former Chief

    Sefardi Rabbi of Israel Rav Eliyahu Bakshi-
    Doron writes (Binyan Av) that the source of

    this Beracha is the pasuk in Yeshayahu (54),
    “rani akara lo yalada, shout baren one who has
    not born a child.” Yerushalayim in its state of
    destruction is likened to a woman who has not
    given birth but whose happiness will come
    when she welcomes children into her midst.
    At that milestone moment, as two individuals
    enter a covenant binding them together, they
    are to have an awareness not only of their
    biological parents, of their physical origins, but
    of their spiritual mother, Yerushalayim, and
    their metaphysical origins. Just as the bond
    with parents is permanent and can’t be broken,
    so too our connection with our spiritual mother,
    Yerushalayim, is eternal.
    The gemara (Kesubos 75a) teaches:
    ״ּוְלְִצִּיֹון ֵיֵָא ַ ַָמר ִאִיׁש ְו ְִאִיׁש י ּ ּוַּלּד ָּבּה ְו ְהּוא ְי ְכֹוְנְֶנֶָהָ
    ֶעְֶלְיֹון״. ָא ַ ַָמר ַרִַּבּי ְמָיָיָׁשׁא ַּבּר ְֵּבֵּריּה ְּדַּרִַּבּי ְי ְהֹוֻׁשַׁעַ ֶּבּן
    ֵ.לִֵוִי: ֶאֶָחָד ַהַּנֹוָל ּ ָד ָּבּה, ְו ְֶאֶָחָד ַהְַמַצֶַּפּה ִלְִרְאֹוָתָה
    The pasuk states: “And of Zion it shall be said,

    this man and this man were born in her, and the
    Most High shall establish her” (Psalms 87:5).
    Rabbi Meyasha, son of the son of Rabbi
    Yehoshua ben Levi, said: Both the man who
    was actually born in Zion and the one who
    looks forward to seeing her are equally
    considered sons of Zion.
    Rav Bakshi-Doron writes: “It is not the
    geographical place where one is born that
    determines if someone is a ben Yerushalayim,
    but it is the existential spiritual identity.
    Therefore, whoever longs to see her, it is as if
    they were born to her.”
    As families of soldiers tragically continue to
    sit shiva, as hostages remain in enemy hands, as
    thousands remains displaced from their homes
    and as countless soldiers are still recuperating
    in hospitals and rehab facilities, the question
    for those who don’t live in Israel is, are you a
    visit to ,her see to long you do ְ,מַצֶַּפּה ִלְִרְאֹוָתָה
    her, to be with her?
    Some have had the chance to be in Israel since
    October 7th, others have longed to go but
    haven’t been able to pull it off yet, but all of us
    should be thinking about and planning for when
    we can go next. Not “if” we will go but when
    and what it will take to make it happen.
    I received the follow note from someone I
    went to Israel with in March:
    Just wanted to start by saying thank you.
    Thank you for putting this together and getting
    me involved.
    As you know it’s been some time since I’ve
    been to Israel – 25 years. It was a real struggle
    to decide if I would come on this trip. Was
    this how I wanted my first time in Israel in a
    quarter of a century to be? Without my
    family? For such a short visit? Wartime
    tourism? It seemed macabre and voyeuristic.
    It’s not what I imagined it would be for my
    return to the holy land. But thankfully my
    wife pushed me and I relented.
    You asked how some would respond to a
    drasha about telling people to come here, and
    I’ll tell you this: there are many legitimate
    reasons why a person cannot travel to Israel.
    For 20 years I could never take time off from
    work, using every vacation day for Yom Tov.
    Also financially it’s a huge expense for so
    many. But there is another reason that people
    have – I know I did – in the back of their
    minds: I want my Israel trip to be perfect.
    When the weather is good, when the crowds
    are small, when flights are cheap, when the
    kids are off, etc. and with that in mind it took
    an extra 4 years for me to just come home.
    This is what was running through my mind
    on the flight up. I felt like it was a mistake, I
    shouldn’t come to gawk at the soldiers or the
    displaced families like going to a museum or
    sideshow. I should come when I can be with
    my entire family and do all the things that
    people do: Kotel, Masada, tunnel tours, Ein
    Gedi, Eilat, etc.
    But I was wrong. This experience was
    something that I will never forget. Not only
    because of the incredible access, the people
    we met, or the places we went, but because
    we were able to be with Israel instead of just
    going to Israel.

    Being here, with the people, in the land,
    helping and bringing smiles, was all the
    experience I really ever needed. Driving
    through didn’t feel like the endless orange
    groves on the way to Disney because
    everywhere you turn, the land comes alive.
    Efes Damim, Kiryat Yereim, Har Hacarmel.
    These are real places that carry significant
    value to us. Coming here, even now, is truly
    meaningful. Even if I can’t splash around in Ein
    Gedi with my kids.
    But not just for me, the trip was meaningful
    for those we visited and met. We sat in the van
    with our guide, Eli, when everyone had left and
    we talked to him about us visiting and being
    here. How did he view this kind of “tourism”?
    He got a little emotional and told us we had no
    idea what it means to him, his family, and
    everyday Israelis. Forget that it gives him
    parnasah, he said that after spending a few days
    with us, that he now knows that we CARE. And
    not just about soldiers and memorials, and the
    horrors, but about Am Yisrael, be’eretz Yisrael,
    al pi torat yisrael. That it’s not like going to the
    zoo to see, but we are checking in on something
    we love, on our brothers, on our people. He
    talked about our group every night with his
    wife and she said to him that she loves us for
    what we gave him. She pointed out that after 5
    months of being unable to express himself he
    was finally opening up and talking. He felt like
    he was spending the days with family. The
    cynical part of everyone wants to believe this
    trip is selfish, and I did too. But it’s not true. It
    really is a give and take.
    I know you wanted to know through my eyes
    how this would feel. But to be honest, I don’t
    recognize anything. Literally everything is
    different. But I knew it would be. Time and
    change don’t wait for anyone, even me.
    And that’s my takeaway. If you can afford to
    go, don’t put it off. Don’t put your trip to Israel
    on a pedestal that it needs to be perfect or you
    won’t go. Because before you know it, 25 years
    will go by, and you’ll wonder what could have
    been.
    When you mother needs a visit, you don’t
    wait for everything to be perfect, you figure out
    a way to show up. It isn’t easy for everyone.
    Many don’t have family, a place to stay, a way
    to get around, connections to volunteer or the
    finances to go. Those are not small things and
    shouldn’t be minimized. But if there is a will,
    there will be a way, maybe not tomorrow or
    next month but a plan for somewhere down the
    line, hopefully in the not-too-distant future.
    If you can, go because our mother needs us.
    But much more importantly, go because we
    need our mother.