Rabbi Barry Stern a"h |
For many years before coming home,
I trolled email lists, blogs, online forums and the like for any tidbits of
information that could aid our planned aliyah. In reflection, I lived vicariously through
other people’s aliyah experiences.
I read about the food in Israel, how we would
not be able to find our favorite brands and how we should be ready to learn to
appreciate the local fare, or expect to spend a fortune of money at the
checkout for the American cuisine we would crave. I learned about cars – owning vs. leasing vs.
renting vs. using public transportation and tremping (hitchhiking). I was
mostly told was that we would not want a car because it would be very expensive
and we would, eventually, wind up doing what everyone else does: getting around
by tremping, buses, trains, and taxis. I
learned about banking in Israel – and was drilled expect to be robbed at the
counter because “all the banks in Israel are about taking one’s money, not
helping one to save it!”
I also read tales of olim who
underwent nightmarish experiences with shippers and customs. Either the shipper would tack on humongous
unexpected fees at the destination and hold their belongings for ransom, or
customs would charge exorbitant customs fees and taxes. Whole shipments would disappear or show up
completely damaged and the insurance which ostensibly was to cover replacement
value would be something one could wind up fighting for months to receive.
There was the story of the refrigerator that was damaged—just the door was
damaged but without the door the refrigerator could not be used - and the
insurance company was insisting it was only “25% damaged”.
Additionally, I heard and read
many horror stories of the unwieldy bureaucracy of Israel – of corrupt clerks,
or of being shuttled back and forth between desks or offices with no one
actually helping the individual accomplish the task they had set out to do. I read stories of olim reduced to tears by
uncaring and rude agency officials, having to pay more than their fare share of
fees, and so on.
Did these tales of woe frighten
me? Yes, at least a little bit. I also have the additional “burden” of being
severely hard of hearing and I require hearing aids. Even though I had learned to speak Hebrew in
an Ulpan in Israel some thirty years prior to my aliyah, my ability and fluency declined in
the intervening years; as they say, “Use it or
lose it” and I feared I had lost
it. Being that much older did not help –
learning a new language (or rather RE-learning it) is harder for us “older
folk”.
Then, several years into my aliyah research, tragedy struck when my beloved husband died
suddenly and tragically. He had slipped and fallen on icy pavement, struck his
head on the ground, and suffered a major subdural hematoma. He was brain dead
upon arrival at the emergency room. We buried him six days later.
After a week of shiva, in which possibly
a thousand people traipsed through my house making condolence calls, I was
alone – incredibly, irrevocably alone.
It was only then, in going through my late husband’s affairs, that I
came to realize that my life had been terribly altered, and the change of
circumstances would be more than just a loss of my husband. Also involved was a
huge change in my financial status – one that would pit me against his family
and ex-wife in a litigious affair that lasted most of the two and a half years
prior to my aliyah. In the end, my
losses included not only my husband, but his family, my house and home, my
community (I had to move to a more affordable community), my car, and my
job.
None of this stopped me, however,
from pursuing my dream of making aliyah. I even continued to read the horror
stories (while living one of my own). In
retrospect, I realize now that I was trying to internally “prepare for the
worst”. So, in a bid to avert disaster, I
then went to work: I researched everything:
cars, banks, finance issues in Israel, places to live, cost of living, health
care, housing, employment, services for the hearing impaired; you name it, I
researched it. I accumulated all the pertinent
documents and articles and information and compiled all the information into a
binder, organized by topic. I discovered
organizations that offer personal grants to Jews making aliyah. I sold some of my possessions to help finance
my aliyah, in addition to the grants which I received. I reached out to my friends who were already
living in Israel and told them of my plans and asked for their help.
So here I am, living in Israel.
I made aliyah and shipped all my
worldly possessions to Israel. My
interactions with the shipper in the States, the shipper in Israel and with
customs was very smooth. A few boxes
initially went missing, and a few items sustained minor damage. Ultimately four out of the five missing boxes
were returned to me, and the damages were repaired or minor enough to leave
alone. I was insured for the missing
fifth box. My possessions were not held
ransom and there were no surprises like additional fees in store for me. The
workers who came and packed me up and loaded the truck and those who unloaded
and unpacked my belongings were extremely respectful to me and of my
possessions. I would describe this as a
positive experience.
I eat the food that I can afford
to buy and I am not starving nor missing “American” delicacies. Much of what I ate while in the US is readily
available here, and it is not all exorbitantly priced. I drive a car, and yes, it is quite expensive
to drive in Israel. But I had made the decision
before I came to Israel that I would have a car and would be willing to give up
other “creature comforts” for that mobility.
It was a decision based in the reality of whom and what I am: a fifty-two year old woman with arthritis in
her knees and ankles and a congenital hip deformity. Walking to the trempiada, or bus stop, or
train station, dealing with a multitude of weather changes, schlepping bags of
groceries or whatever I had need of schlepping – well, it just was not going to
be do-able for me anymore. A car was
(and is), to my mind, a necessity.
I have a US bank account which
does not charge me foreign transaction fees, a credit card with no foreign
transaction fees, an Israeli bank account that does NOT charge fees for every
standard transaction, health insurance with Maccabi Zahav that is quite amazing
(I can make appointments with my doctors online!) and have had no problems
dealing with any of the bureaucrats I have had to do my business with. It is true that many of the
bureaucrats working within Israel’s extremely hierarchical infrastructure lack
a true sense of customer service and are oftentimes rather abrupt in their
interactions with the public, and sometimes even downright rude. However, I learned a valuable lesson from my
mother: honey catches more flies than
vinegar. Translated, this means to
always smile and be nice to those you are dealing with, even if they are not –
trust me, it never fails, to at the very least, to soften them up. I have found it usually changes their
demeanor to downright sunny!
I have retained enough Hebrew to
manage my life (although holding a deep, profound philosophical discussion in
Hebrew remains beyond my abilities), and I am living in a lovely community in a
beautiful house. I have a blossoming
social life and am close to my family here which includes my married daughter,
two grandsons, my sister and her family, several nieces and nephews, and my
mechutenet. I am close to many of my
friends who made aliyah from Monsey, Teaneck and Baltimore – all the
communities in which I lived at one time or another. I have made many new friends
as well.
It never occurred to me that I
could not do this. It still does
not. I am here. In the face of many trials and tribulations I
made aliyah in August 2011. I did so
with the help of Nefesh B’Nefesh, The Cyrus Foundation, Ebenezer, and the
Jewish Agency and with the help of my wonderful family and amazing
friends. I did so by being resourceful
and never taking no for an answer, but mostly, I did it with the help of Hashem
– to whom I spoke and prayed on a daily basis – asking for the zechut to make
aliyah and to live in the Holy Land, Eretz HaKodesh. Apparently He said “yes”. I have so much to be thankful for and I bless
and thank Hashem every day for the miracles He has allowed me to witness.