Comments
Phil-
It’s difficult to imagine what it is like to be in a situation that is not part of our experience. Thanks for using your gifts of observation and verbal communication in order to bring Sderot to us. May the need for early warning blimps disappear, may the children be safe in their own beds, and may the mothers of Sderot experience now and forever the freedom of blasting the volume on their car radios.
Posted by Susan Vick on 04/09/08 at 07:38 PMPhil,
Here I am, in the middle of life in these United States worries: helping my children, taxes, jobs, home budget, fixing and cleaning, including for Pesach -
when I read all of your blog notes about Sderot and Ashkelon. That’s a big picture moment.
Like, if rockets were launched from downtown Baltimore to Upper Park Heights, randomly landing here, what would we do?
Family in Sderot and Ashkelon is in trouble, though I’ve not met them.
Maybe you can tick off a few ideas for us, Phil, and everyone else reading this blog. I’ll try with starting a very bare list. Please improve it:
1) Is there an organization single-mindedly devoted to this? Remembering the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry...a focused group may be the best method.
Maybe there several good (intellectual and especially emotional) messages that can be created, for repeating a million times and mobilizing people for all the other actions. Tie in to specific actions that can be done: political, direct aid to Ashkelon / Sderot / displaced from Gaza, more…
Are students interested in this? Are Israeli Hasbara organizations, ZOA, well spoken local and nationally known individuals, and other experienced groups able to lend advice / energy?
2) Reaching out to local / national Jewish organizations and non-Jewish organizations
Posted by Barry on 04/09/08 at 04:59 PM

