Archives > News > Israel

Print | E-mail | Comment (No comments posted.) | Rate | Smaller Text Size Larger

Betar and ZOA reach out to Sderot

Click image to enlarge

BY: ARLENE FINE Senior Staff Reporter
Published: Thursday, March 27, 2008 9:49 PM EDT
“All of us at Betar are horrified by the terrorist attack on the Merkaz Harav Yeshiva in Jerusalem March 6,” says Betar shaliach Dani Horwitz.

“However, the nightmare that occurred at the yeshiva has been going on for eight years at Sderot.”

Last month, Horwitz decided he could not hear about another rocket hitting the city of Sderot without taking action.

“Sderot continues to be under daily Kassam rocket attack by terrorists in the Gaza Strip,” he explains. Last year, 2,300 missiles and mortars were launched from Gaza. And in the first three weeks of January 2008 alone, there were 430 rocket attacks.

Thirty percent of the children of Sderot (6,000 kids) suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, and the only reality that children 7 and under know is the fear of daily rocket attacks from nearby Gaza, adds Horwitz.

Under the auspices of the Sderot Media Center, Horwitz, with the help of his Zionist youth group members and in conjunction with the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA), has devised a campaign to express solidarity and support to Sderot.

They have organized a traveling exhibit of Israeli artist Noam Bedein’s photographs that depict daily life in that city. The exhibit shows homes destroyed by rockets, weeping children, and empty rocket shells lying on Sderot’s streets. It will be displayed at area synagogues, Jewish day schools, Case Western Reserve University’s Hillel, and The Mandel JCC.

The money raised from the exhibit will be donated to Sderot Media Center and will go toward replacing and rebuilding bomb shelters and supporting needy families.

In an act of solidarity with their counterparts in Sderot, students at B’nai Jeshurun religious school contributed $250 to the renovation of a bomb shelter.

“The Western Negev Regional Council issued a list of 78 bomb shelters in Sderot that are uninhabitable,” says Horwitz. “Each one will require a minimum of $15,000 in repairs.”


Donated money will also be used to rebuild the Ohel Yitzchak synagogue in Sderot, which was destroyed by a direct hit of a Kassam half an hour after 300 people had left the synagogue following the dedication of a new Torah scroll.

Horwitz has also organized a pen-pal program between Cleveland area school children and their Sderot counterparts. To date, he has involved Beachwood High School’s Hebrew students, sixth-graders at Fuchs Mizrachi, Solon Chabad students, and Schechter eighth-graders.

He collected toys, books, games and candy to send in a large shalach manot (Purim gift basket) package in time for Purim.

“If we can brighten the day of just one child living in constant fear of a mortar attack,” says Horwitz, “then this project will be a success.”

To find out the exact location of the exhibit, contact Dani Horwitz at 216-297-9466 or dani@betar.org.

afine@cjn.org



  Next
  Israeli Toll-road baby will get to travel free

Article Rating

Current Rating: 0 of 0 votes!Rate File:

Reader Comments

The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the view of clevelandjewishnews.com.
You must register with a valid email to post comments. Only your Member ID will be posted with the comments. Registration is free.

Registered users sign in here:

Become a Registered User

*Member ID:
*Password:
Remember login?
(requires cookies)
  Forgot Your Password?
 

Do not use usernames or passwords from your financial accounts!

Note: Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required!

*Create a Member ID:
*Choose a password:
*Re-enter password:
*E-mail Address:
*Year of Birth:
 

(children under 13 cannot register)

 
Return to: Israel « | Home « | Top of Page ^
 
Today's Weather
Cleveland, OH




Shabbat

Have you checked the Eruv yet? call 216-586-9222