Tzofim Chetz v'Keshet
Letters from Israel: The “CVK” Experience

                                   

My name is Adir Even and I’m here to tell you about the amazing experience that is CVK. The main idea it to take American youth and team them up with Israelis and grant them an opportunity to see the land, the culture, and the people of Israel, from Rosh HaNikra to Eilat. We have already explored Jerusalem, travel the beautiful desert called the Negev whose future was predicated by Ben Gurion’s vision. In the strenuous Gadna week that we all loved so much, we learned skills such as navigation and how to shoot a weapon. We were impressed by the luscious Galil and the beautiful North of Israel.

But the most important thing was meeting new people whether Israeli or American. The idea of connecting Israelis to Americans is very special because we have the chance to learn about eachother’s lifestyles, where it’s m&m’s or falafel in the Jewish quarter.

On a personal level, I am glad that I was able to partake in this life-altering journey. I recommend for all who can to participant in this adventure. And of course, nothing would have been the same without our amazing mefakdim who were always making sure that we had fun.


~ Adam Even, Machlaka 2

Letters from Israel: Once In A Lifetime



CVK has been a once in a lifetime opportunity for me to not only learn about the country my family comes from, but also to learn about myself.

I can’t believe I’ve only know all of these people for a few short weeks, because I feel like our relationships are as good as the ones with my friends that I’ve known for years back home. Driving, laughing, eating and pretty much living together has created a bond between us that I think is really special and not always easy to form.

Everything within us was tested during Gadna week, and I think we came out stronger and closer than we did going in. We supported each other through all the tough times and I especially remember being literally pushed up the mountain during the night hike when I thought I couldn’t take another step.

Besides the hard times that we help each other through, there are equally important times spent together when we are just relaxing outside before bed; playing music and enjoying each other’s company. Even though we didn’t have any organized activities during these times, they contributed a lot to the trip and really allowed me to get to know everybody better.

Finally, I want to talk about something very personal that I’ve experienced, through CVK. It’s that feeling of self-pride when I’ve accomplished something especially difficult such as climbing the Masada and and received my own dog tag with my name engraved on it.

Overall, I’ve had a really special experience on this trip, and I know I won’t ever forget all of the memories I’ve made here.


~ Yaell Livni, Machlaka 1

Letters from Israel: South Week


The South wek was very challenging but really bonded our Machlaka together. The heat took a tole on us but made the experience much more worthwhile. The climb up Masada was the most meaningful to do, side by side with th new friends we’ve made. The feeling after Masada was indescribable — you really feel a sense of accomplishment and relief. Sleeping in the desert, under the stars, was a memorable experience because it is unlikely any of us would be willing to slep on the rock floor again. The hike the next morning was extremely difficult and long but worth it because the view of Syria, Jordan and Israel was incredible. In general, South Week was great!


~ Ashley Tempstet and Sandra Perl, Machlaka 3

Letters from Israel: Hiking, Hiking, Hiking


The North week began after our first free weekend following Gadna. All of my friends and I were glad to escape the army and enjoy a week of touring in northern israel. During the week we visited one of the Druze villages. It was nice to be able to see the way in which these villagers live, eat, and practice religious customs.

The following day consisted of Arab/Jewish discussion and cave rappelling. The Arabic girls and my American peers compared customs in our religions, one being dating. Their parents do not allow the girls to date until they leave for college. We were also told that some of their classmates secretly have boyfriends and girlfriends. Although it would be difficult to follow these Arabic customs, I respect and admire them.

Water rafting in the Jordan river and the Banyas hike occurred later in the week. I personally love hiking, but the unbearable heat made the hike more challenging.

A BBQ was prepared for us as soon as we arrived at the kinneret, as well as a beach party at night. After an eventful night, we fell asleep under the stars. I woke up the next morning with eleven mosquito bites- most of which have unfortunately not yet gone away. The Mefakdim finally allowed us to enter the water and take part in the extreme water sports. Hiking in the Magrase river concluded north week.


~ Michelle Abramov, Machlaka 2

Letters from Israel: A Week Up North


North Week in CVK has been such an experience to remember. I have rappelled down cliffs and rafted down rivers, ate with Druze and had a dance party like them. I have seen an ancient city with more history than I can fit in a week and crawled through caves. Although at times the lectures could feel like alot, I can honestly say that I am proud to leave Israel with more than I came. Sometimes the program has been hard, like in Gadna week, but I only feel like I grew from it.


~ Ofir Elyakim, Machlaka 4

Letters from Israel: Army Life


“One of the main reasons I decided to partake in CVK was Gadna week, as I wanted to experience what I was unable to in America, yet knew was one of the most important parts of Israeli life and society.  I thought I was prepared for five days of intense military training, as I had participated in the Boy Scouts and Karate classes for six years, yet I now firmly believe that nothing short of attending military school could have prepared me for what I experienced.  About four days of learning to embrace dirt, count from eser to echad, and help my fellow soldier, later, I now know the true purpose of Gadna training: to form a unit.  I discovered this only after I had compiled every lesson we were taught into a single thought, which was that no one could get through such a week of rigorous training alone, and so we all depend on our unit and our unit depends on us to help accomplish our goals.  Although this is what I believe the I.D.F’s basic training is about, when each lesson is thought of individually, they are still as important as the one true goal of basic training. 
The first lesson we learned during Gadna week was to deal with the dirt.  After our first ח, we were ordered to put on uniforms that had been lying on the dusty ground in the sun.  We all followed our orders, and by the second day it was clear that we would either have to suffer or forget our normal desires for cleanliness.  Most of us decided to suffer, but for those of us that disregarded the smell of sweat and the uncomfortably consistent feeling of thorns in our socks and backs we all but embraced the new, musty lifestyle.  After rubbing mud on our faces nearly a dozen times for camouflage, ripping burs out of our hair, and crawling over the earth with our entire bodies, eventually everybody grew accustomed to the lack of showers, though some still looked forward to putting their head in the water truck’s troth and turning the faucet to full blast.  We learned that in actuality, even though we always prefer to stay clean, it’s a superfluous action that must be left out of our daily routine if we hope to complete our training.
In order to appease our commanders and not have to do push-ups, we had to form a perfect ח to face them, which meant we needed to form the shape of a ח with a base longer than the arms, arms the same length and perfect distance from the base, and faultless right angles.  The purpose of this was to form a shape that provided everyone an opportunity to hear the commander. The catch was that we were timed every time we made the ח, and so we had to count out loud from ten to one in Hebrew (or longer, depending on how many people there were to form the shape), which proved not to be an easy task.  The most common mistake was not having equal amounts of people on the arms, but this was still only one of the many mistakes we made.  Whenever people were outside the חwhen the time was up, they could be given push-ups.  If the commanders didn’t hear everyone counting, they might be given push-ups.  If someone moved to make the ח correct when the time was up, they could be given push-ups.  If any single person wasn’t standing perfectly in line with whatever part of the חthey were in, they could be given push-ups.  We proved to be as uncoordinated during the last day as we were during the first, leading to a surplus of push-ups; yet, besides making us stronger, forming the ח’s had another purpose: it separated the leaders from the followers.  In every ח and set of parallel lines we were ordered to form, unless someone took charge and started yelling directions (and people followed them) we were uncoordinated.  Not only were the ח’s there to teach us teamwork and coordination, but also to find the leaders in each group. 
By far the most important lesson taught during the Gadna week was one of self-discovery. Once we were taught certain techniques the I.D.F used to complete their missions, we started a competition to see who the best in our group was at each one.  While the competition to see who could get to the objective the fastest wasn’t that demanding, as it only required patience and careful planning, we felt the pain when we practiced the army crawl.  We discovered that the only way to close distance fast during the crawl was to use your knees as much as possible, and although that doesn’t seem like a big deal, everyone was finding it difficult to sit down after learning to crawl because of the powerful tension on our knees.  I remember during our race to see who could crawl the fastest, I was tied with someone right next to me just a few feet from our goal and had to make the decision of whether to rip the scab on my hand open, as it had been caught in a thorn bush, and get first, or to keep my hand as intact as it remained at admit defeat.  A moment later I was proud of my fresh wound on the side of my palm and a cut across my pointer finger.  The purpose of the race may have been to see who was the fastest and to push us to our limits, but it taught me how much I was willing to sacrifice to achieve my goals.
Although I’m happy to be able to replace the layers of caked dirt under my fingernails with sand, it doesn’t mean I didn’t enjoy the experience.  In fact, I think even the participants that deny the benefit of the program to them are unaware of the deep outcome that a short four days of Gadna training provided them.  We’ve now had a taste of what it takes to become a real soldier, an essential part of a force that protects the wellbeing of us Jews that we’ve fought for two thousand years for.  In due course, I know that we’ll all realize the importance of such a program in one way or another; but until then, we’re all just happy to accept beds, real food, and showers back into our lives.”


~ Adam Izik Goldstein, Machlaka 4

Letters from Israel: Army Life

“One of the main reasons I decided to partake in CVK was Gadna week, as I wanted to experience what I was unable to in America, yet knew was one of the most important parts of Israeli life and society.  I thought I was prepared for five days of intense military training, as I had participated in the Boy Scouts and Karate classes for six years, yet I now firmly believe that nothing short of attending military school could have prepared me for what I experienced.  About four days of learning to embrace dirt, count from eser to echad, and help my fellow soldier, later, I now know the true purpose of Gadna training: to form a unit.  I discovered this only after I had compiled every lesson we were taught into a single thought, which was that no one could get through such a week of rigorous training alone, and so we all depend on our unit and our unit depends on us to help accomplish our goals.  Although this is what I believe the I.D.F’s basic training is about, when each lesson is thought of individually, they are still as important as the one true goal of basic training. 

The first lesson we learned during Gadna week was to deal with the dirt.  After our first ח, we were ordered to put on uniforms that had been lying on the dusty ground in the sun.  We all followed our orders, and by the second day it was clear that we would either have to suffer or forget our normal desires for cleanliness.  Most of us decided to suffer, but for those of us that disregarded the smell of sweat and the uncomfortably consistent feeling of thorns in our socks and backs we all but embraced the new, musty lifestyle.  After rubbing mud on our faces nearly a dozen times for camouflage, ripping burs out of our hair, and crawling over the earth with our entire bodies, eventually everybody grew accustomed to the lack of showers, though some still looked forward to putting their head in the water truck’s troth and turning the faucet to full blast.  We learned that in actuality, even though we always prefer to stay clean, it’s a superfluous action that must be left out of our daily routine if we hope to complete our training.

In order to appease our commanders and not have to do push-ups, we had to form a perfect ח to face them, which meant we needed to form the shape of a ח with a base longer than the arms, arms the same length and perfect distance from the base, and faultless right angles.  The purpose of this was to form a shape that provided everyone an opportunity to hear the commander. The catch was that we were timed every time we made the ח, and so we had to count out loud from ten to one in Hebrew (or longer, depending on how many people there were to form the shape), which proved not to be an easy task.  The most common mistake was not having equal amounts of people on the arms, but this was still only one of the many mistakes we made.  Whenever people were outside the חwhen the time was up, they could be given push-ups.  If the commanders didn’t hear everyone counting, they might be given push-ups.  If someone moved to make the ח correct when the time was up, they could be given push-ups.  If any single person wasn’t standing perfectly in line with whatever part of the חthey were in, they could be given push-ups.  We proved to be as uncoordinated during the last day as we were during the first, leading to a surplus of push-ups; yet, besides making us stronger, forming the ח’s had another purpose: it separated the leaders from the followers.  In every ח and set of parallel lines we were ordered to form, unless someone took charge and started yelling directions (and people followed them) we were uncoordinated.  Not only were the ח’s there to teach us teamwork and coordination, but also to find the leaders in each group. 

By far the most important lesson taught during the Gadna week was one of self-discovery. Once we were taught certain techniques the I.D.F used to complete their missions, we started a competition to see who the best in our group was at each one.  While the competition to see who could get to the objective the fastest wasn’t that demanding, as it only required patience and careful planning, we felt the pain when we practiced the army crawl.  We discovered that the only way to close distance fast during the crawl was to use your knees as much as possible, and although that doesn’t seem like a big deal, everyone was finding it difficult to sit down after learning to crawl because of the powerful tension on our knees.  I remember during our race to see who could crawl the fastest, I was tied with someone right next to me just a few feet from our goal and had to make the decision of whether to rip the scab on my hand open, as it had been caught in a thorn bush, and get first, or to keep my hand as intact as it remained at admit defeat.  A moment later I was proud of my fresh wound on the side of my palm and a cut across my pointer finger.  The purpose of the race may have been to see who was the fastest and to push us to our limits, but it taught me how much I was willing to sacrifice to achieve my goals.

Although I’m happy to be able to replace the layers of caked dirt under my fingernails with sand, it doesn’t mean I didn’t enjoy the experience.  In fact, I think even the participants that deny the benefit of the program to them are unaware of the deep outcome that a short four days of Gadna training provided them.  We’ve now had a taste of what it takes to become a real soldier, an essential part of a force that protects the wellbeing of us Jews that we’ve fought for two thousand years for.  In due course, I know that we’ll all realize the importance of such a program in one way or another; but until then, we’re all just happy to accept beds, real food, and showers back into our lives.”

~ Adam Izik Goldstein, Machlaka 4

Letters from Israel: Time Well Spent

For those of you who didn’t know the significance of the words “army training”, ignorance is bliss. For those of you who do know, you will understand the bitter-sweet feeling of hard work and training and the sweet reward of applying new skills.
We learned to navigate and successfully found checkpoints and returned to the bus. We learned how to fire guns and did so with it being the first time for myself and others. We learned how to disguise and move like a soldier, culminating in the great battle of the forrest; where espionage led to the victory and capture of Machlaka II and half of group 12’s flag.

Now  I shall reassure you, everything is fairing well and we are almost done. I enjoyied our free time before Gadna Week and will enjoy it all the more once Gadna has finished. Getting that bitter-sweet taste of life in basic training has been something that myself and others will take with us for a long time.


~ Matt Stapylton, Machlaka 4

Week Two: Gadna Week

Last week, CVK’ers got a taste of what army life is like. They spent the week camping at an army base, shooting rifles, and having barbecues - talk about a bonding experiences. They began their week-long Gadna with a masa, or journey, at night. Led by soldiers and their madrichim, the CVK’ers traveled around the area near their base, carrying (empty) stretchers and following the correct path. They took orders from their commanders, and held the Israeli flag proudly high. What a rush!

Week Two: Gadna Week

Last week, CVK’ers got a taste of what army life is like. They spent the week camping at an army base, shooting rifles, and having barbecues - talk about a bonding experiences. They began their week-long Gadna with a masa, or journey, at night. Led by soldiers and their madrichim, the CVK’ers traveled around the area near their base, carrying (empty) stretchers and following the correct path. They took orders from their commanders, and held the Israeli flag proudly high. What a rush!

Letters from Israel: Gadna Week

I can not begin to describe the way I feel about my week in the Gadna . From the start, I did not know what awaited me in the future week. After, all I could think about was when this was going to be over. The days were long, the sun was strong – this was definetly not the typical day for an ordinary teenage girl. The first mission that tested our true physical and mental abilities was the “masa”, a challenging journey late at night. The “masa” prepared us for what is expected in the army, which is strength, determination, perservernce, and cooperation. Completing the masa gave us a sense of accomplishment and fear for the upcoming challenges.

Overall, the Gadna week was an eye-opening experience that truly depicted what the reality is. After completing the week of hard work, I’ve gained a lot of knowledge about how the army operates.


~ Hannah Swieca, Machlaka 3

Letters from Israel: The Beginning

CVK started in the airport when everyone was shocked. The Israeli campers first saw the Americans after all the preparations. The American’s couldn’t even believe they were in Israel to start an amazing summer. After everyone met, we got on the busses to go to Jerusalem and start our first week filled with new experiences. We awoke the next morning to begin our first day in the City of David. It was still only the first day and we didn’t even know each other’s names. But, it didn’t matter. We entered the week with a lot of excitement and energy.

We got settled into our groups, and awaited our first Shabbat dinner. We all were left with a very special feeling after that night. As time moved on we became closer and closer as a group. The next night, we got a taste of what was to come in our approaching Gadna week.

When we arrived to Gadna, we did not understand what was expected of us. It took a lot of time and practice to learn the ways of the army. We transformed from campers to soldiers in only four short days. Our first night, we all completed our first masa. It was a challenge but we all finished feeling accomplished. Throughout the rest of the week we learned different lessons about the army, while learning about each other as well.  We even shot real guns for the first time, which was a once in a lifetime experience. This week brought each team even closer together. Friendships were established while everyone built up their team more than we ever thought possible. We ended the Gadna week using teamwork and perservernce. It took a lot of hard work, discipline, and strength, but in the end it was worth the experience. After all of this work, we were proud of ourselves along with our commanders. This week is one  that we will remember for the rest of our lives, all of the campers at CVK are waiting to se what will come in the rest of the program. We could not be more excited.


~ Shira Peretz and Shannie Chacham,  Machlaka 2