Jerusalem, Israel - Apr. 20, 2021 - Blue and white banners and flags were still flying, as the Yom HaShoah, Yom HaZikaron and Yom Haatzmaut roller coaster of emotional celebrations ebbed away. Besides the month of December, the days and short weeks following Pesach are a time when one can really feel the difference of living in Israel.
Since the last Israeli Indendence Day, in spite of corona, there were 20,456 new Olim according to the Aliyah and Intergration Ministry.
For Olim, new immigrants to Israel, moving to and living in Israel is a different experience than coming on vacation. No matter how many holiday or business trips or missions one has experrienced, there are challenges to expect and overcome. Even for those who studied and speak Hebrew, there are new words and acronyms to learn and understand.
Married couple Arielle Bernstein and Avi Losice made aliya from Lawrence, New York with their children in 2015. From their experiences and research, the US-trained professionals have published a new book - Aliya. Home. Hope. Reality.
Carefully crafting data gleaned from questionnaires and surveys they composed, Bernstein and Losice have published a guidebook valuable to new Olim and their families. While the focus age group of the book is 18 to 35 and their families, much of the general information is universally valuable.
The chapters begin with questioning where to do college, and reviews common topics, concluding with the final chapter entitled "And if all else fails." The hard discussions of explaining "why?" and "now what?" within family frameworks and dynamics are covered in early chapters. Each chapter concludes with a short constructive dialogue to give young people and their parents a tool for positive communication.
I fully agree with the Co-founder of Nefesh Be'Nefesh Rabbi Yehoshua Fass: "This book does a wonderful job of presenting a wealth of information in a practical, engaging, articulate fashion. It will help so many in their preparation for aliya, and how they handle their loved one's aliya. What a contribution - I loved it."
However, this book is not a rah-rah one-sided view of aliya as stated in the last word of the title - Reality. The honeymoon period for Olim and its initial excitement eventually end, as the reality of finding a compatible community or a good job, serve as an inevitable reality check.
There are helpful appendices with additional information, a glossary of terms, including important IDF Army terms.
Frier is defined as a 'fool', like when we, as brand-new off the plane Olim in the middle of what later was named the Second Lebanon War, drove in a rental car to Haifa to claim the belongings on our lift. Only a frier would remark, "How lucky we are there are plenty of parking spaces in the lot!" Veteran Israelis knew to stay away from Haifa that day while missiles rained down from Lebanon.
Bernstein and Losice conclude, "We fell in love with Israel, so we married it. Staying in love with it meant that we've had a few fights, we worked out how to accept the good with the bad, and we are in the process of fixing some things around the edges to make it better for us and the generations to come."
Full disclosure: I have known Ariella and Avi for several years through their volunteer involvement in important community organizations. However, it was only when Avi came to my door with a copy of Aliya to review that I realized they were married.
After almost fifteen years living in Israel, I wonder when one really becomes a "veteran" and stops feeling like a new Olah. This book is a good resource for those thinking of moving to Israel and their extended families. I look forward to their next book, Aliya: Retiring Home.
ISBN: 978-1-7362018-0-0
US: $26.00
Publisher:Loeb Publishing