Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Sunday, December 27, 2009

AJJ EuroTrip '09: Warming Up

Now that I'm back in the desert building sand dunes, I will begin to recapitulate and befuddle about our wonderful trip. I don't know if you picked up on the clues, but I will start off with the letter that we sent our parents after sleeping homeless in the Brussels Train Station overnight...


From: AJJ

Date: Sun, Dec 20, 2009 at 8:24 PM
Subject: AJJ EuroTrip Update
To:
The Parents

Dear Parents,

First off, we wanted to let you know that we are alive and well!

As you probably know by now, our flight to Milan this morning was CANCELLED due to inclement weather. So, we write to you from Brussels, where we’ve ended up staying. Although we were offered seats on the flight tonight, after a long and thorough discussion, we decided that it would make sense to stay here in order to optimize our safety and time with each other.

Since there is a snow storm today and another predicted for Tuesday, we did not want to risk missing our return flights. In addition, had we decided to continue to Milan, we would have had a total of one and half days there, with nothing to do and nowhere to recoup today. Thus, we are happy with our decision.

We are currently staying at:

Hotel ETap - ROOM 009

Bessenveldstraat
1831 DIEGEM
BELGIUM

Tel. (+32) 02 709 55 90

We hope to take one or two day trips in the area. But, most importantly, even if we are snowed-in for the next two days, this trip will still have been a success as we will have enjoyed quality time together.

Since we do not have internet in the hotel, we can only correspond when we find free Wi-Fi. Thus, please do not expect a quick response from us if you reply to this e-mail. But, you can rest assured, as usual, that if, god forbid, there is an emergency (don’t worry, this won’t happen), we will be in contact with you immediately.

That’s all for now as we try to stay warm, rested, and fed.

Hope you are enjoying the nor’easter (sorry we’re not home to shovel)!

Love,

Adi, Jason, and Josh

More to come...














Belgium Befuddlements

In Europe, or at least in the Flanders region, they do not believe in heating public facilities. They say, "heat the body, not the building." That's one thing the guide books don't tell you!

Sunday, December 20, 2009

AJJ EuroTrip '09: Where are we?

We're on the road again...

  • GREAT friends

  • Lots of of spontaneous adventures

  • Beer that taste like candy!

  • Waffles for breakfast, lunch, and dinner...
Where are we?

First to guess correctly wins a prize (if you knew before the trip don't say anything).

More to come...

AJJ

P.S. I can't feel my toes...

Friday, December 11, 2009

A HANNUKA GIFT FOR YOU!

WISHING YOU A
HAG URIM SAMEACH!
And, A special gift for you...
If that was not enough, ENJOY this view from Ketura over the Jordanian mountains:


Shabbat Shalom,

Adi

Thursday, December 3, 2009

5 PhDs and Me

Weekly Recap

Where have I been…

  • Last week, our entire class went on a Negev Field trip.
    • We visited a legal one-family-farm, Yeruham (a Development Town), unrecognized Bedouin villages, a massive industrial park, a stream of pollution, the first Bedouin woman entrepreneur, and government environmental efforts.
    • We met with lots of people along the way.
    • I feel that we heard a lot important stories and overall the Institute structured a well-balanced experience.
    • At another time I will write about an occurrence with the group that is still being discussed today.

  • We celebrated Thanksgiving with Palestinians, Jordanians, Israelis, Canadians, Australians, and, of course, Americans. Not to mention Christians, Jews, and Muslims. We had a pot luck feast with lots of tasty food. I made cranberry-pineapple aspic and a large jello shot (see photos in AIES album)!

  • Mike Schwartz came for Shabbat and we had a great time. Best of all, he brought a homemade pecan pie!


5 PhDs & Me (and Bill)

This year I am interning with the Tal Fund and personally working with Alon Tal. After he won the Bronfman Prize in 2006, Alon created this fund with the mission of: "expeditiously supporting effective community activism that seeks to preserve Israel's air, water and land resources and to encourage sustainable development in Israel."

On Tuesday I traveled with the board to do some site visits for potential grantees…

  • I got up at 5am to travel with Bill, whom I’ve mentioned before (my Kibbutz cycling buddy) and is Alon’s best friend and board member, to meet the group.

  • At times during the ride there were seven of us squeezed into a small Mazda van-type vehicle (definitely not an American minivan!). As intimate as we were, I felt very undereducated. When the first guest arrived, Alon was introducing all of us and it went something like this, from front to back of the vehicle: “Meet Dr. Orr Karassin, Dr. David Tal, Dr. Yonina Rosenthal, Mr. Adi Segal, and Mr. Bill Slott.” Remember, Alon and the guest also hold PhDs. Not that either of us (Bill is a Cornell graduate) is stupid, but it was funny to have these introductions and then see these two dummies crammed into the two back seats…what I called the peanut gallery!

  • We saw (photos to the right):
    • Attempts at environmental efforts in Rahat, an underserved Bedouin city. This is a very difficult project, because it will also take a sociological change on the side of the community. The best part here was that we stopped at Ahmad’s home, where we were treated to real Bedouin hospitality in his personal tent…none of this large tent tourist stuff that big groups usually see.

    • Next, we went to Arad where, for the last ten years, they’ve been fighting the building of a chemical factory that will emit large amounts of phosphates. Not good for you.

    • Finally, we saw the very important efforts to ban the construction of a hotel on the beach in Palmahim, one of the only undeveloped areas on the coast. With some funding, there’s a lot of promise for this project.

  • The best part was the picnic lunch Alon packed for us, which we ate in the middle of a JNF forest!

  • As we returned to Ketura, Bill and I were talking about the Fund. He mentioned that as esteemed as the Board of Trustees looks, it’s basically Alon’s birthday party, with his best friends, parents, wife, and kids (and maybe one or two outsiders). But, then Bill realized that this isn’t so strange, because most of the big foundations (which have a lot more money than the Tal Fund – like Ford, Vanderbilt, and Bronfman), began with families sitting around a table giving away money.

Finally, as little attention as she may want, I need to wish my little sister, ORLI, a VERY HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!!

She turned 17 yesterday and now, not only can she drive, but she can run all the errands that I was formerly assigned. MAZAL TOV!

~Adi

Befuddlements

  • Is it a good or bad thing that I have been to every rest stop in Israel so many times that as soon as I get off the bus I know exactly where to go to the bathroom?

  • As I traveled through the country on Tuesday, I realized that the development here is very strange. They literally dropped towns and forests in the middle of the desert, with no surroundings, and hoped for the best…it didn’t always work out!

  • I really don’t think kibbutz, at least in the middle of the desert, is for me…
    When Bill and I stepped off the bus at 9pm, after a full day of travel, he said: “And now you have a real taste of what it’s like to live here. And, that’s when you realize it’s easier to never leave!” He was slightly joking, but there’s definitely a lot of truth there…

Shoutout #40: Evyatar Asher – We met this summer and now we’re GREAT friends. U DA MAN! Thanks for always checking in and taking care of me in your country. And more importantly, THANKS for being the 40th follower!


Shoutout #41: Becca Farber, how come I have not heard from you yet? Welcome aboard! You are a great environmentalist and it was a pleasure working with you last year as our team pioneered JTS EcoReps. I hope you are having a good time in Israel and hopefully we can hangout when I get to J-Town.


P.S. For those of you who have been thinking about eating recently, I urge you to read this piece: The Carnivore’s Dilemma


P.P.S. I love all of Eliav's posts, but there's something about this one that really struck an emotional chord in me. For those of you who are camp/Ramah people, I think you’ll really enjoy this... A Return trip to Ramah in New England, an emotional journey


P.P.P.S. So…Chelsea is engaged to a nice Jewish boy…WHO CARES! But, did you hear they were at JTS for Kol Nidre? Apparently, she and Arnie are friends from Stanford!

AYS