Tuesday, December 25, 2007

A short update


I guess I have lost all my readers by now, but still - I am now on my winter/Christmas break, which means I have loads of time to answer all my long neglected mail, to finally furnish my study, to take care of my plants, to spend some time with my friends and with my family and - to write my blog.

I hope to start to write short posts regularly again. Today, let me update you on the last couple of weeks before I start to post short, witty and opinionated posts again.

The last weeks have brought only little new, which I consider very good news. I continue to teach at the school. I am so organised now that I can spare even 3-4 hours of free time every day, which is a very pleasant change. So far I have been using it - like all normal people - for meeting friends, going to the movies and spending time in coffee-houses reading. Recently it struck me that I should probably try to do something more organised and I decided to learn French. In fact, I made a public vow in front of several of my friends that by the time I am 30 I shall be able to spend my holidays in France speaking the local language. This was not a very wise public commitment. A-it is very difficult to accomplish, B- many of my friends consider it an unhealthy reaction to the partly interesting but largely frustrating shiduch marathon my dear and caring friend Shmil has prepared for me in the last three months. Be it as it may - I have the book, I have the tapes - we shall see what happens.

As far as the school is conserned - the teaching goes quite well. Apart from the usual stuff - this Chanukah we put up an all-in-Hebrew Chanukah play with the 1st and 2nd-graders. I was very proud of them, because we had been learning Hebrew together with them only for 3 months by the time of the play. It was a tremendous success, the parents were moved and the rabbi said we did a great job and I was enormously happy :-)

I have largely fixed the one but last room in my flat - my study - I have bought a new set of shelves in Ikea, which I all put together by myself (yey!). Now I only have to finish putting all the books and papers in it and I can move onto planning my terrace - wow - how very strangely adult and non-hip of me - an I growing old and boring?

Anyway, now I have ate least 9 more days of the holidays in front of me. The good thing about Christmas when you are Jewish is that you have all this extra free time and you dont have to do the holiday stuff that makes everybody else exhausted and over eaten - wonderfull. I have already done a lot of house and paperwork, I guess I have to save some time for fun too. We shall se how this goes. For the time being, I am off to my French text book. See you soon!

Monday, December 03, 2007

Absentminded for a month

I am sorry, I sort of was. I got hooked up for Facebook and I am sorry I havent posted anything new for such a long lime. In the meantime, chanukah sameach to all!

Monday, October 08, 2007

September full of good stuff

Do you also hate it when people keep apologizing on their blog for not having written for a long time? That´s why I am not going to do it:-)

September was a very good month. I started the school. What a difference it is compared to the last year! Everything goes much smoother, I feel much more relaxed and I actually really enjoy getting ready for my classes. I don´t have to stay up till late at night (at least not because of the school) and while I still spend loads of time preparing my lessons and dealing with the school stuff, everything I have to do I do at a much slower pace, in a much more easygoing manner.

I should also mention that I am surprised at how well it goes with teaching Hebrew. So far the kids respond surprisingly well to the Tal Am program, they learn with joy and eagerness and it seems they are developing a cute craving for learning more. What more could a teacher wish for?

In between all the autumn Jewish holidays my brother and Olga got married. Honestly, I got a bit worried when I saw the hectic preparation havoc (which, I admit, I purpousfully stayed completely out of), but I have to say - kol ha kavod to all involved, it was a very nice, dignifying and joyful event. Mazal tov!






After they had left for their honeymoon (not that the two events are connected in any respect)
I built my sukkah and started a marathon of inviting of friends during the 8 days of the holiday of Sukkot. I again realized what a great holiday it is and what a genious religious commandment it is to be obliged to invite guests and have fun. The picture is from a visit of my 8th graders. (Dont get allarmed by their facial expression, they just hate to be photographed :-)



In addition, I went to two other weddings in the past month, one of them was a wedding of my next door neighbors. This year has actually been very fruitful for happy occassions so far. I was invited for as many as 13 weddings (many of which I actually really attended :-), one engagement party and 3 circumcisions (and I missed one more just by 3 hours). Well, should the rest of the year be as marry!

Sunday, September 23, 2007

The sukkah is built


Today in the evening my parents and I finished the sukkah. It is my first sukkah in my new flat and I am childishly happy it is up. I still have to decorate it, but the lifting and fixing job is done. Now I only hope the wind won´t be too strong and the sukkah will stay where it is.

Sunday, September 02, 2007

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome the new Gafna!

This is a horrible expression, but I couldn´t help using it. Yesterday, I finished my 14 month long work for Masorti and started a new life of a person who has just one job. Naturally, I started the day by approximately 90 minutes of phonecalls and emails dealing with Masorti issues, but I sincerely hope that this is really the last day when this happens. Tomorrow I have to go to pick the last Masorti bill and settle one more issue with the orthodox community and then "ze hu, gamarnu:-)" The new coordinator is Katka Vyzvaldova, an excellent substitute, a very nice and sophisticated girl, who - I am sure - will do her job with grace and dignity.

Tomorrow a new school year starts. I have spent the last 3 weeks trying to get ready for the classes and by now, having most of the crucial stuff prepared, I am anxiously waiting for the year to start. What a difference it makes this year to know already a lot of the material I will be teaching, to know basically all the students but for grade one and to work in a tandem with my great co-worker Shmil! Before Shabbat I called my 8th graders to let them know I am waiting for them on Monday and to ask how they have been. I realized that it is a great treat to start another year with kids I aready know - moreover kids I really like. I am proud to be the class teacher of these kids and I am glad that this year we have somewhere to start with and that we do not resume from zero like last year.

I do hope that this year I will spend less time getting ready for the classes and will have more time for developping more after-school activities for the school and personal study. Also, I really hope I will have more time for myself. I have already bought a pass for the local swimming pool. Let´s hope it will get used well. :-)

Sunday, August 19, 2007

My week of fame

Last week the Czech TV broadcasted a documentary film called "Jewish neighbors" dealing with a Jewish museum project called "Lost neignours" and the contemporary Czech Jewery. It was partly shot in our school. Also I had my 10 minutes of fame in it talking about my "Jewish life" and my teaching job. The documentary came out surprisingly well and I was glad to find out that the director very skillfully combined what I said and made it sound sensible. The whole week after the documentary was broadcasted, every time I came to the the JCC somebody turned to me and screamed out - "Hey! I saw you on the telly!" It surprised me because the documentary was broadcasted at 11pm, which is not really the prime time and I thought the only people who would watch it would by my parents and my granny :-). When I already slowly started to enjoy "being a star" on the 7th day after the film was shown, I got a very nasty letter as a reaction to the movie - it was a letter that explained to me how what I said is connected to the sexual practices of the author of the mail. It upsets me the more because I know the author of the letter, a father of 5, very well. Well what should I say. It is hard to be a star...

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Marrying Jewish in Yamaica (in Yiddish)

I got back to work which means I am yet again heavily tempted to take "short little internet breaks" from the "important" work I do. On one of these, I found this:

Monday, August 06, 2007

I was tagged

I have recently been tagged by Adiv. So here we go with a load of worthless information about ... me.

Four jobs that I've had:
1. Medieval stone castle guide (a job that tought me to strongly dislike big crowds of turists)
2. Au-pair (great but strongly contraceptive job)
3. Jewish community coordinator (no comment)
4. Teacher (so far the best)

Four films or shows that I can watch repeatedly:
1. Friends - funny, witty, topical
2. Kristova léta, dámy - shocking and sad truth about today´s women in their early 30s
3. Fenomén Dnes - Czech documentry series - serious, topical, great for my classes
4. Remember Africa - one of the many movies I like

Four places in which I have lived:
1. Prague - eventhough I have always thought I could basically live anywhere, I have recently found out that this is where I really want to be
2. Stockholm - cold, but interesting (great fish, smart ways of overcoming cold and winter dark, the most charming spring I have ever experienced)
3. Oxford - the only thing I really remember well is the library and drung undergraduates - and Roy of course :-)
4. Jerusalem - difficult but great

Four places that I've been on vacation:
1. Amsterdam - free and green (great cheese)
2. Croatia - typical Czech
3. High Tatras in Slovakia - great mountain hiking
4. The Vltava river - canoeing down the river - there is nothing like it

Four sites that I visit daily (other than blogs):
1. doopravdy.com - Czech Jewish news server run by my co-teacher Shmil
2. google.com - doesn´t surprise anybody
3. facebook.com - great to stay in touch with your friends abroad (or far away) - unfortunately, it took away most of my enthusiasm for blogspot.
4. lauder.cz - web of my school, serves for my communication with students and their parents

Four of my favorite dishes:
1. bread and cheese (seriously)
2. bábovka (czech cake)
3. fried (breaded) cheese
4. chicken soup

Four people that I am tagging:
1. Ondra
2. Tovah
3. Shmil
4. Aviad

CS Jack Stack

As my readers know, my brother works at Ceska Sporitelna bank. The CEO of the bank, Jack Stack, is leaving his possition. After having lived in the country for 10 years, he is returning back to The U.S. During the time he worked in Prague he became very well known for being a very tough bussinesman. However, everybody knows him also for his sense of humor. True to his reputation, he decided to say goodbye to his company by creating this remake of Sting´s "I´ll be watching you." It made the headlines in the country. And it well deserves the attention it received.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Back from Israel

I am back from Israel - I didn´t post anything during the time I was there mainly due to the poor internet connection. Sorry :-)

Well, I am starting to make a very bad blogger. Israel was colorful - hot, full of friends, in many ways reassuring and naturally also anoying in many others. I spent the first 2 weeks in the Conservative Yeshiva. I decided to take mainly ulpan classes with my old teacher Meira, which was a true delight. I also liked the advanced halachah class tought by Shlomo Zacharow. The yeshiva was a bit of a surprise to me - it was very different from the year program I took part at a year ago, but I still enjoyed it. On the 3rd week I took a course for techers of Hebrew in Ramat Rachel and during the remaining time I visited my friend Ram in Hebron, spend some time with my friends Hana and Ruven and their kids and rested a bit. It all seems a bit distant now as I quickly returned to my Prague life after I had gotten back. So let me just say - I really enjoyed Israel, but I will not write about it as I didnt manage to write about it when I was there and now it seems too silly.

The good news is I bought my sukah today (yey!) and on the top of that I bought also a brand new olive tree. Yes, I admit it is a bit weird in Central Europe. But I saw it in the shop where I bought the sukah and I could not resist buying it. It comes from Germany (believe it or not). We shall see how long it lasts on my windy terrace.

Friday, June 29, 2007

You can tell me by a flower (teacher and proud:)


Every working day I spent some 90 minutes comuting between my home and work. When I am too tired to read on the subway, I sometimes watch people around me and play a silly little game of trying to guess what their job is. I am actually not very good at that - well dressed people are always "manager kind," sleepy people "baker or worker kind" an weird looking "teacher kind." There is one day, though, when I am sure I can tell teachers without any doubt and that day is today - the last day of school. On this day all teachers on the subway have full arms of flowers that they get as a present from their students for yet another year of their work. In the past I have always watched teachers on this day with envy. Today, I proudly drove back home as one of them with roses, lilies and sunflowers on my lap and smiled at all the other "colleagues" in our vagon. I even started to talk to one of them and wished her holidays full of rest ("Dont we deserve it!" we both agreed) I will give out most of the flowers to my mum, Ales´s mother, Olga and my neighbors this afternoon and leave for Israel tomorrow night. All being well, on Sunday morning, I will be davening Shachrit at my makom kavua in the corner of the Conservative Yeshiva.

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Unfaithful with Facebook

I haven´t posted anything for some time here - partly because of the usual (too much work) but also because of my new account on facebook The last month was a bit less busy than the time between Pesach and Shavuot, mainly thanks to the fact that I consciously cut down on both on my jobs not to drive myself nuts. I started to roller skate again, went to the movies several times, tried to read and meet friends and thus managed to get back to normal with both my sleep and my asthma.

I went to Budapest for a couple of days to observe Hebrew classes in the Budapest Lauder school. Next year, I shall be teaching Hebrew to the 1st and 2nd graders of my school according to a special program called Tal Am and I wanted to see it in practice before I go for a teacher´s training course in Israel this summer. During the trip I stayed in a flat of my Paideia friend Barna. Meeting him and his girlfriend Anna was yet another delight.

At that time my friend and occassional chavruta Ales came back from Israel, much to my delight - it is great to have a bit of intellectual challenge around the Shabbat table again (those of you who know him know what I am talking about.)

The school is almost over, which is hard to believe. This Sunday is the first Sunday in a long time when I woke up without the familiar uncomfortable feeling of knowing that I would have to spend the whole free day getting ready for the long week of teaching. Today in the afternoon, I shall be leaving with my 7th graders and my colleague and friend Vítek for 3 days of a school trip to the mountains. Šimon, one of my kids, prepared am ambitious night game for the whole crowd based on the TV show "Lost," which makes me even more anxious to go.

After I come back (G-d willing), I have 3 more days of school (which means tidying up and getting ready for the holidays) and than on Motzei Shabbat I am leaving for 4 weeks in Israel. I will spend some time studying in The Conservative Yeshiva and some time taking part at the Tal Am seminar. Needless to say I cannot wait to go. This time I am mainly looking forward to taking some time off doing yet another thing that I like - studying and walking.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Slowing down


In the process of slowing down, I did something unheard of yesterday: I stopped working already at 8pm, went home and instead of marking essays I went to my neigbours to pay a visit. It was great - we sat on their balcony, ate babovka I brought, they smoked, I talked and it all felt marvelous. They told me they were getting married in September (Mazal tov) and also shared with me their worries about our new Chinese neibours. They claim that they already have a second dog within a very short period of time and that there is a strange smell coming from their flat. They say they keep a kind of chau-chau dog one breeds for meat in China and that they surely ate the first dog with which they moved in. Well - what do you think? Is this at all possible?

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Just a thought

This weekend, after it had gotten warmer in the town, I redescovered how great it is to live in a flat with a roof terrace. To do your work siting in the sun watching birds flying around is priceless. To go out to drink a cup of tea at night and watch the starts is calming and beautiful.
Today I finally made friends with my terrace neighbors. Their names are Andela and Stepan. I hope this is a start of a good terrace to terrace friendship.
There are 6 more weeks of school to go. I am counting the days.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Quotes from the past couple of days

I have a couple of quotes from the past days:

"When the prophets of Baal did not succeed to light the fire on Carmel, does this mean Baal is a weak god or does it mean he does not exist at all?" Lukas (10 years old)
"I guess Baal exists but he just had a very weak signal reception on Carmel." Adam (10 years old)

"Is there somebody who keeps trejf?" Frantisek (16 years old)

"When the Jews came out to the desert and found the pool of bitter water, I am sure it was petrol." (Lukas (7 years old)

"I thought that the white stuff in your hair is lice eggs but now I see it is only dandruff" Rut (8 years old) - ok, I get it, I should do something about it....

"When G-d said "You shall have no other gods" I think he was mean. Did he want to take over the entire world?" Karel (8 years old)

"Have you read the draft of my work? Is it really bad?" Vera (16 years old)
"Well, honestly, the paper is quite bad." Me
"Really? That´s really weird ´cause I had my granny read it and she thought it was quite ok." Vera

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Aviad in Prague and leaving my job

Aviad has just left back home after his 10-day visit in Prague. During his visit, I successfully aspired for the title of "the most terrible host ever." When he came I lost my voice and wasn´t able to speak to him for at least 2 days. For the rest of his stay I worked all the time, had no time to sight see with him, painfully left my Masorti job, during the process of which I kept updating him about all the difficulties and pains connected with it, I hardly cooked, I refused to go to shop to H and M with him (those who know him will see how painful this is) and I forced him, the poor Israeli, to observe Shabbat with me. On the top of it all when he was leaving Prague at the airport, the security people took away from him the Czech Tatar sauce he bought and carried with care and love to the Holy Land. But I hope he enjoyed the stay at least a little bit. I certainly did.

Last week, I decided to leave my Masorti job. I was exhausted and realized I cannot carry on having two jobs any longer. My leaving unfortunately causes many problems in the community because at the moment there is nobody to replace me and this poses some hard questions about the future about the whole kehilah. Well, not nice and very painful.

The striking Prague news apparently is that Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are staying for 2 months in the town to shoot a movie called "Wanted." Well - what more could one wish for, right?

Sunday, May 06, 2007

Which countries have you visited?

I have just found this on my friend Nikki´s website. If you click on the link below, you´ll find a website that will generate a map of countries you´ve visited. Harmless fun :-) I guess I really have to go to Spain and Portugal. I have never been - what a shame!



create your personalized map of europe
or check out our Barcelona travel guide



create your own visited country map
or check our Venice travel guide

Friday, April 27, 2007

Silence continues

This is my third day of being speechless. It is a very interesting experience. People are actually very nice to you when you have such a handicap. They smile at you, they are evry helpful and they wish you all the best. The bad thing is that when you need somebody to move in a crowded bus you have to touch them and whisper into their ear, which not many people interpret the way you mean it. Well well. I am abck at school today whispering to all my students, who find it absolutely amusing. Great. In the evening I am heading for the Paideia alumni conference. I will be silent again. Well, scilence is golden, isn´t it?

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Second day without a sound

This is my second day of being speechless, literary. I can´t talk, I lost even the last trace of my voice. I know very well that this is a sign of me working too much. Yesterday, after the meeting with the parents during which I whispered only, my boss asked me to stay at home today, which I am happily doing now taking care of all the paper work I have not been able to do during the past couple of days. I am horrified to see that I have become a burn out victim of my own work. I have become the kind of person you read about in life style magazines. Scary. But ayway, today, my long time Israeli friend Aviad is soming to Prague so that´s something to be cheerfull about. We wont be able to talk - we will have to write to each other. But still, I hope it will be fun!

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

And the final silence

Ok, here we go - today I lost my voice. Completely. My exhausted body uses every possible way of showing me that I should slow down. Tomorrow, we are having a parent meeting at school - I am going to whisper to the parents :-) isn´t that fun?

Monday, April 23, 2007

Israel, yes!

I have just learnt I was granted a Legacy Heritage Scholarship for Jewish professionals for this summer, which will make it possible for me to attend the summer program of the Conservative Yeshiva. Yes, indeed, I am a Jewish professional and let me add I am a very depressed and tired one. But I am glad that thanks to my job which I am starting to be very negative about just because I have very little energy to carry on I will be able to go to Jerusalem. Akhlah:-) Happy independence day! (Oh, my - cant I write something more optimistic?)

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Stripping for feelings on blog

Two weeks ago I read a very interesting article in the papers about the phenomenon of blogs. The author of the article wandered how come people are willing to share their very intimate feelings with others. Well, I have no idea how this is possible either but I will share a few insights with you again.

I still owe you a post about my (work) trip to London - well - it was wonderful to be in the UK again. The moment I landed I realized how much I have missed it. I went there just for 3 days and I worked all the time. I managed to meet my Oxford friend Daniel Kleinberg for a short breakfast and to my great regret missed both Lena and Natalia, two friends of mine from Sweden who currently live in London. The trip was great but it was one of the last drops of the overfloating cups of my tiredness. For a month now I have been thinking wether to tell you about how knackered I am after the US, London, Poland last week and especially Pesach. I decided not to strip my tiredness and bore you with my breakdowns but - I am really really really - oh G-d how much I wish I had a week of normal sleep.

Anyway - next time I will be more cheerful.

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Happy Pesach!


Exodus 14:21 "And Moses stretched out his hand over the sea; and the LORD caused the sea to go back by a strong east wind all that night, and made the sea dry land, and the waters were divided."

Those that know to play, never grow old:-) Have a peaceful Pesach!

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Aren´t the kids charming?

When I was applying for my current teaching job, it was not clear at the beginning, which ages I would teach. In the end as much as half of my classes are with elementary school (ages 6-11) Teaching such small kids is a challenge but also a lot of fun. The source of the fun is very often the fact that the kids simply say what they really think at the moment when the thought comes to their mind. If they think it is important, they just say it. After Kaja has informed me I had a mustache last Friday and Simon wandered if the white stuff in my hair was dandruff on Monday (see my previous post,) I thought there was very little that can surprise me more. Alas! I was wrong. Today, Sara(6 years old)came to me in the morning and huged me (as she often does before we start the morning prayer class.) Then she suddenly looked at my chest and said - "Gafna, you know what? You have really, really large brests." Well - awesome, that was sincere. Needless to say I took it as a compliment:-) However, guess I will think twice before I wear my today´s T shirt to school next time.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

More quotes

I still owe you a post from my trip to London last week. But before I do it, let me post a couple of quotes from the last weeks:

"Have a safe trip to the US. And please, say hello to Gearge Bush for me." (Lukas, 9 years old)

"What a jerk!" (David´s honest exclaim when he learnt what king David did with Bat Sheva - 9 years old)

"Gafna, have you ever noticed that you have a mustache?" (Karel, 8 years old)

"Is the white stuff in your hair dandruff?" (Simon, 10 years old - it was actually hair gell - never mind.)

"I have read some Erich von Daniken recently and I cannot help it - God is an astronaut, I am possitive." (Kristina, 13 years old)

"I have no idea, who your God is, I think we should not leave Egypt, I am very happy here, I don´t mind being a slave and stop interrupting me when I speak for G-d´s sake!" (Adam during our drama class - 9 years old)

"Gafna, you look exhausted. You should drop your Masorti job. I am sure you earn enough in the school to buy your skirts." (Irena, my friend from school - skirts...?!)

Sunday, March 11, 2007

She gmalani kol tov (who has bestowed to me all kindness)

Today in the shachrit service, I was honoured with the 7th alyiah (I was called to the 7th part of Torah reading.) This was the first time after I had come back from the States that I took part at an egalitarian minyan. Rabbi Hoffberg encouraged me to recite the Gomel, a blessing that we recite after coming back from a dangerous journey or after surviving a dangerous situation. I have always found it rather strange to thank for surviving a dangerous situation when nothing dangerous actually happened (which was the case of my US trip.) But I said the appropriate blessing and continued to follow the service.

Tonight, after the end of Shabbat, my father came with his car to pick me up in my flat to take me to my parents house, where I planned to spend the Sunday. We drove on a highway. At one point we came closer to a truck. My father started to overtake the truck in the left line. All of a sudden, the driver in the car behind him started to speed up, which is the common way of idiot drivers in my country to tell the other people on the road "how dare you drive so slowly in MY very left line?" My father overtook the truck, went back to the right line and as the mad driver overtook us, my father gave him a quick blink with his lights to say "I don´t aprove of how you behave." At this point we all were driving at a 100 km/h speed. The other driver, at this point cca 20 in front of us, went back to our line and suddenly stopped his car in the middle of the road. I have seen such behavior in movies, but I didn´t know there existed idiots that did things like these in real life. My father stepped on the breaks and so did the truck behind him. Luckily, we managed to stop about a meter behind the car. In what seemed to be ages to me I waited for the hit of the truck from behind. All of a sudden the expected noise came from the right as the truck, obviously unable to stop with its weight and at this speed, decided to overtake our car from the other side and hit our wing mirror.

My father and the truck pulled to the side, got off, looked at each others cars, inspected the broken mirror, calmly said to each other "Oh boy, what an idiot," and went back to the cars. At this point my hands started to shake, but I said "Thanks God nothing serious happened, it could have been much worse." My father nodded in a strangely calm way and said "Yes, you are right. I will have to have the mirror changed." We saw that the driver of the other car stopped 200 meters in front of us and looked in our direction to see what happened. He never came closer to us, he just looked. My father started the engine and slowly moved ahead towards him. In what I now realize was fear, we decided not to stop to talk to him and drove on. As we were passing him, I saw how he hesitantly waived at our car.

Human mind works in a very weir way, we came home and only then fully realized what happened. For an hour we sat in the livingroom realizing that we could have been - God forbid - squashed in our car from both sides. We kept repeating how glad we were not to be dead. In the end we drank a shot of vodka and for the first time in my life I have to admit I felt it helped to release the preasure.

I dont understand why anybody would want to stop in the middle of the road like this. I dont get why anybody would want to put the lives of 3 other people and his own under such a danger. I don´t.

When I sat down to the computer now, I read the text of birkat ha-gomel again. It says: "Blessed are You O Lord our God ruler of the Universe, who bestows kindness on those who are committed, and who has bestowed to me all kindness." Perhaps it makes sense to thank God for His kindness when you are in a situation when something dangerous may happen and it actually doesn´t. It makes sense to say it even if you are not even close to it. It makes sense to thank for the fact that nothing happened. In a situation like the one tonight you realize that "nothing happened" is great and it is worth acknowledging.

Sunday, March 04, 2007

Back from the States

I returned from the States and I am back in my Prague routine - including my traditional late night Motzei Shabbat which usually creates a huge sleeping deficit and completely ruins the rest on my week:-) The trip to the States was a very interesting experience - and I really mean it. Meeting my old friends, seeing American conservative communities, visiting JTS, talking for hours to Marcus and spending a lot of time with rabbi Hammerman and his wife Sharon gave me a lot of food for thought. It is always helpful to leave your world and have a little bit of an insight from the outside. Sometimes one has to go over the ocean to see a bit more clearly what is in front of ones nose at home. But anyway, let´s not be so serious especially today, on Purim.

Let me just share a couple of things I learnt during the trip.

1. I can fundraise - I had no idea that I could.
2. "No fat milk" tastes like dairy dish water, "no fat horse-raddish cheese" tastes like plastic with horse-raddish flavor.
3. JTS is not what I thought it was, but that´s ok, because I should not have thought what I thought.
4. After fundraising in Florida I realised that the idea that "everybody should have the same" that I learnt as a child growing up in a communist country is stuck in my head more than I thought.
5. I miss my American friends.
6. I am prejudiced about Americans. I am ashamed of it.
7. Brooklyn bridge is atually quite short.
8. Some buildings in the US are really tall.
9. American Jews are crazy about Chinese food. That´s funny.
10. Drunk American undergraduates behave the same way drunk British undergraduates do.

And a Purim bonus at the end. This is a picture my friend Jana and myself from today´s purim megilah reading and carnival - I did not know what to dress up like this year so I brushed up my university gown - I wish I could wear it more often:-):

Thursday, February 22, 2007

A short report from New York

After a couple of days in New York I thought I would let you know that I am safe and sound. My fundraising trip has been going surprisingly well and I am very thankful for the contributions rabbi Hammerman and I have been able to collect so far. We shall see how it goes for the rest of the trip. As for the more joyful sides to my journey - I spent two delightful days with Marcus Lange, a friend who studies in the rabbinical program at JTS. Among other things he took me for a Judaica shopping trip to Brooklin (hey for the Heimishe Bakery in Borough Park) and helped me to pay my debt from my last New York visit and crossed the Brooklin bridge on foot with me. It was so freezing that the cold killed my camera and I have no pictures from this truly historic event. What a shame.

While I stayed in JTS, I met many of my friends from the Yeshiva, who either study there or date:-) the rabbinical students - Corey, Jenny, Melissa, Jeremy, Ben, Richard, Mike and some of the older students that studied at Machon Schechter last year. Today, I briefly met Seth Pertain, who kindly enough took a picture of the two of us for me to have a proof I am actually in New York. I am not sure this proves anything but I swear there is New York around the car.

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Good news and leaving

On Friday night my brother revealed to me that after passing his BA exams on Thursday, he proposed to his girlfriend Olga and she - naturally :-) - agreed to marry him. That´s great news! The picture below shows them during their last year´s holiday in Croatia.


On another note - I am about to leave for the States today in the morning. I packed in rush so I guess I am leaving half of the things I need at home. In addition, the pre-departure time was so rushed that some of the things I need to take care of before I leave are still not done - for instance I will be marking some of the tests of my students on my way to the airport and sending them back with my brother. Well, I am the ultimate time manager, aint I:-)Well, at least I have something to laugh about. Ok - all being well I will write again from New York. Shavua tov

Thursday, February 08, 2007

Another short update

Time flies. Incredible. I am going to the States in a week´s time. In the past couple of days, my 7th graders started to get all very sensitive and teenagy and puberty like and I am worried. On the other hand, my biggest troublemaker David K. calmed down and became the student I have always told him he can become - witty, challenging and simply good. I swiched to first names terms with the headmistress of the school. My brother passed a Russian language exam (miracle!). Shmil, my boss, has had a son born ( The brit is tomorrow.) My community and school has successfully survived a visit of the Presidents of Major Jewish organizations last week and I had my students over for a Tu bi-shvat seder today. Well, that´s about the most important news.



Sunday, January 28, 2007

Short update

I haven´t been blogging that much recently - sorry. The end of term is always a bit busy. I had to write many evaluations for my students, write several tests...you know how these things are. Today, I just wanted to tell you that I have my US visa (yey!) and I bought a ticket to the States. I am leaving Prague on Feb 18th for NY and will be returning back home on March 1st, which should get me back on March 2nd (be´h). Schedule still to be anounced:-)

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Kids´ minds II

I haven´t posted much in the past two weeks, sorry. The end of term is always a bit hectic in a school. To make it up for you, let me post a couple of quotes of my students from the past couple of days:

"You wrote in the evaluation that I am never satisfied with a simple answer and that I always want to know more. Is this good or bad?" (Karel, 7years old)

"I think it is better to have more gods than just one. For example the Egyptians had many gods. Also, they look great. They are mixtures of people and animals." (Karel, 7years old)

"I know you are not supposed to draw God. But is it allowed to have an image in your mind? (Karel, 7years old)

"Are you trying to tell me that you are not married yet?" (Domink, 9 years old)

"You shall not sex." (7th commandment according to Eva, 16 years old)

Sunday, January 07, 2007

Lights and a TV



For some time now I haven´t been updating you on the progress of my moving in. Today, my father came to put up new lights we bought together 2 months ago in Ikea. Bit by bit my flat starts to look like a home. And - one more thing: my parents bought me a TV set. I was very angry at first but now - frankly - I cannot wait to swich it on for the first time. I managed to live without one for 7 months. Now it is the time to stop being brave and face the music. It should arrive on Tuesday or so. Yey!

Going to the States

I have just found out that I will be able to go to the States between 22nd February and 4th March for the Koach Kalah conference (the exact days are to be confirmed shortly.) During these couple of days, I will be visiting New York (shortly), Penn university, Florida (not sure where yet) and Baltimore. If you are around in these days, please let me know - perhaps we could meet up (or - if you are Jewish and would be interested, I could talk to your community about Jewish Europe - you know how much I like to do that when it comes to American Jews:-). I am sure that my schedule will be tight ...but still - going to the States isn´t something I do every
day and therefore I would love to use this opportunity to meet my American friends. So please, drop me a line.