Borito - Bad Dream | Audiotree Worldwide
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Borito - Bad Dream | Audiotree Worldwide
Repost @prince_chiillz vs @shattawalenima #holit #PrinceChiillz || 👑 Yes ii Will Admit SomeTimes We As Guys Can Go A Bit OverBoard‼️ But Ladies SomeTime You Gotta Take Control‼️ TAKE CONTROL LADIES‼️ If Your Man Trynna Violate Your Insides You Gonna Need To Let Him Know‼️ You Need To Be Able To Walk Tomorrow ok‼️ #PrinceChiillz #NoManners HOLD IT‼️‼️✋🏽✋🏽✋🏽✋🏽✋🏽
The flight I'll never forget
It’s been a long time since my last blog post and almost a month since I arrived in Israel. I forced myself to sit down and actually write down a blog post regardless of my busy schedule in the absorption process and dealing with army bureaucracy. This post is going to strictly cover the absorption process and later posts will deal with my army interactions.
My first interaction with the absorption process was my aliyah (immigration) flight, which is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. My flight was chartered solely for olim (immigrants) of all ages from seniors, families, and 125 young people my age joining the IDF. It was covered on every news station throughout the entire country from prepping for the big move to landing. I myself spoke on a radio talk show and my roommate from college, Aaron Finkelstein, was covered in a whole story on prime-time news.
There is one aspect of the flight that I must cover in this blog post, the landing; it was by far the most moving experience that has ever occurred to me. As we began our descent one-hour before landing, music and cheering roared throughout the cabin. When our wheels touched down onto the runway, I felt chills shoot down my body. I finally landed in Eretz Yisrael (the land of Israel) fulfilling my ancestors’ age-old dream of returning to our ancestral homeland. As I walked down the staircase of the plane toward the terminal, the very first thing I did was drop to my knees and kiss the ground, as immigrants did as they jumped off boats during the establishment of the state.
After landing in Israel, we had multiple ceremonies congratulating us on our decision to immigrate to Israel and welcoming us. From there, I took a bus to my new home, Kibbutz Holit.
While on Holit, we do many activities with army representatives like teaching us about different positions, preparing us for army interaction, or quizzing us about army history. In addition, we study in five-hour intensive Hebrew courses helping us with our future draft date into the IDF, which should be around November.
My program, Garin Tzabar
In two weeks I will be departing for my last of four preparation seminars with my program for aliyah called Garin Tzabar, translated to English as a sabra seed. I joined the program in January along with a group of twenty-eight others that are moving to Israel and joining the Israel Defense Forces. In order to understand the program and how it works, it's vital to understand the plant (the sabra) that it's named after.
My Garin
When someone refers to a person as a sabra, they are speaking about a Jew that was born in Israel. Sabras are known to be prickly on the outside but sweet on the inside. The prickliness on the outside is symbolic of the Zionist "new Jew" that doesn't take sh*t from anyone; as opposed to the "old Jew" that allowed himself to be locked into ghettos and subsequently resisted fighting back. The sweetness of the sabra is symbolic in that when you look beyond the prickly skin, there is a sweet and caring person on the inside.
So looking through my romantic lens, Garin Tzabar is planting myself and my twenty-eight other garin-members as sabra seeds in Israel to sprout, so that one day we can grow into full fledged sabras.
Kibbutz Holit (Yes it's only 4km away from Gaza and 8km away from Egypt)
However, the program is much more than my romantic idea. When we arrive in Israel, all twenty-nine of us will move to the same kibbutz called Holit (map on the right), where we will live until the end of our IDF service. The idea behind this is that we can work as a family/support system during our time in the IDF. During our first three months in Israel before we draft, we will work on the kibbutz and take an ulpan (language course). In addition, the program gives garin-members a support system with bureaucratic help, adoptive families, and access to kibbutz resources.