HAKOL - May 2021

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The Voice of the Lehigh Valley Jewish Community

www.jewishlehighvalley.org

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Issue No. 443

May 2021

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Iyyar/Sivan 5781

AWARD-WINNING PUBLICATION EST. 1977

See how we celebrated Israel’s 73rd birthday p6-7

Join us in Celebrating Women this month in our special section p12-16

FROM THE DESK OF JERI ZIMMERMAN p2 LVJF TRIBUTES p8 JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE p11 JEWISH DAY SCHOOL p17 JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER p18-19 COMMUNITY CALENDAR p23

Freestyle mission to Israel in the works for older adults By Stephanie Smartschan JFLV Director of Community Development and Operations A few months after moving to Allentown in 2019, Phil and Ruth Michel were inspired by their first JCC film event and were already off to Israel. It was the first trip there for the semi-retiree, and it “blew all our expectations away,” Phil said. While he enjoyed the recreational sites, and ate so much good food, he knew there was lots more to see and do. “We really didn’t get that much into the cultural and the historical and none of the religious aspects,” Phil said. “That’s what we want to do this time.” Upon returning from his visit, Phil

began working with Carol Wilson from Jewish Family Service and Jeri Zimmerman from the Jewish Federation of the Lehigh Valley to plan a trip specifically geared toward older adults. The trip, originally planned for spring of 2021, was to have a more relaxed feel, with later start times, flexible schedules and full accommodations. The trip never got off the ground, of course, due to COVID-19 travel restrictions, but now those restrictions are finally loosening and plans are again in the works for a spring 2022 sojourn. A core group has already begun meeting, and the plan is to add on a few more travelers before the trip caps at 20. In the year preceding the trip, the

travelers will not only have the opportunity to shape their own itinerary, but will meet regularly to learn basic Hebrew and Israeli culture, as well as form early bonds. “There’s going to be an opportunity to make some lifelong friends with this kind of a trip,” Phil said.

Are you interested in participating in a freestyle mission to Israel for older adults? Learn more at a parlor meeting scheduled for Wednesday, May 26, at 7:30 p.m. via Zoom. To register, contact Carol Wilson at Jewish Family Service of the Lehigh Valley at 610-351-9956 or cwilson@jfslv.org.

Israel won’t require masks outdoors, will allow vaccinated tour groups

JACK GUEZ/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

By Ben Sales Jewish Telegraphic Agency

The El Al departure counter at Ben Gurion International Airport was empty after the airline canceled flights to Italy amid a coronavirus outbreak, Feb. 27, 2020. Non-Profit Organization 702 North 22nd Street Allentown, PA 18104

U.S. POSTAGE PAID Lehigh Valley, PA Permit No. 64

Israel has reached a milestone in its return to normalcy: As of April 18, Israelis will no longer be required to wear masks outside. The announcement from the Health Ministry comes as Israel’s COVID case numbers have plummeted along with its successful vaccination drive. At certain points last year, Israel reported case numbers that were among the highest in the world, but the country since has vaccinated more than half its population. The rising vaccination rates have pushed the COVID numbers down to an average of a couple hundred cases a day among more than 9 million Israelis. “The masks are intended to protect us from the coronavirus,” Health Minister Yuli Edelstein said, according to The Times of Israel. “After professionals decided this was no longer required in open spaces, I decided to enable taking them off.”

Masks will still be required in indoor public spaces. The change in mask protocols is one of a few ways that Israeli society is reopening. Schools have fully reopened, and starting May 23, fully vaccinated tour groups will be allowed to visit Israel. The Jewish state hopes to allow individual vaccinated tourists by early July, a source in its Tourism Ministry told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. “It is time that Israel’s unique advantage as a safe and healthy country start to assist it in recovering from the economic crisis, and not only serve other countries’ economies,” Tourism Minister Orit Farkash-Hacohen said in a statement. “Only opening the skies for international tourism will truly revive the tourism industry, including restaurants, hotels, sites, tour guides, buses and others looking to work and provide for their families.” The reopening to tourists will happen in three stages:

Beginning on May 23, the country will let in a small number of tour groups, about 10 to 20 a day, led by licensed tour providers. Tourists will still need to test for COVID before the flight, and test for antibodies upon arrival. A few weeks after May 23, if case numbers remain low, the number of tour groups allowed in per day will rise. Israel then hopes to reopen to individuals and families who are vaccinated. In 2019, some 4.55 million tourists visited Israel, and the country’s tourism industry employed some 200,000 people, according to the ministry. But Israel closed nearly all entry to foreigners with the onset of the pandemic, and shut down its main airport completely earlier this year due to rising case numbers. Editor’s note: To learn more about how Israel has navigated the pandemic, read about our upcoming Maimonides Brunch@ Home on page 5.


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HAKOL - May 2021 by Jewish Federation of the Lehigh Valley - Issuu