Blog dev and testing page
H1 Title here
Plane ride to a new life: Emotions soar aboard aliyah flight to Israel
Vivian Grossman
Categories: Impact Blog,
Tags: travel,
Photo: Shahar Azran New olim from North America disembark the first Nefesh B'Nefesh chartered flight of the summer last week. |
Every once in a while you're offered an opportunity you just can't say no to, and for me that happened last week. I was invited to be a guest on a Nefesh B'Nefesh chartered flight taking North American olim, or immigrants, to start their new lives in Israel. Nefesh B'Nefesh, a JNF partner, encourages and facilitates aliyah from the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom, helping new olim navigate all aspects of the big move.
I was fortunate to have been among those greeting Nefesh B'Nefesh chartered flights at Ben Gurion Airport twice over the last few years, and the images are still etched in my memory -- a few hundred people arriving after an overnight flight from JFK, laughing, crying, dancing, singing.
So many stories. I remember a grandfather running down the stairs to embrace his granddaughter, who had chosen to make Israel her home. They embraced and cried for what seemed forever, as if he was letting the world know his dream had come true.
Photo: Shahar Azran Former U.S. Marine Steven Rich of Los Angeles, one of the passengers headed to a new life aboard the Nefesh B'Nefesh flight. |
I met a guy who had been in the navy for 20 years, his retirement just official. He dreamed about making aliyah for 20 years and was finally able to make it happen. I spoke to a 26-year-old religious man who is gay, and looking forward to being able to celebrate both those parts of his identity living in Israel. A guy who carried the Torah as if it were his child touched everyone's heart, as did those wrapped in the Israeli flag.
Nefesh B'Nefesh is a well-oiled machine, and this became apparent as soon as the flight was in the air. Information that years ago would have taken months to process is now handled in the airport and during the flight.
Nefesh B'Nefesh software allows the organization to process passports while in flight and upload it as soon as the flight lands and the new citizens can have their identification cards within days. Amazing, considering it used to take months. The employees worked through the night processing the information -- an incredibly fine-tuned operation that understands the magnitude of its responsibility.
Photo: Vivian Grossman Cheers and flags as the Nefesh B'Nefesh charter flight lands. |
Nefesh B'Nefesh software allows the organization to process passports while in flight and upload it as soon as the flight lands and the new citizens can have their identification cards within days. Amazing, considering it used to take months. The employees worked through the night processing the information -- an incredibly fine-tuned operation that understands the magnitude of its responsibility.
Hundreds of people greeted the flight, singing, laughing, and dancing. Some new immigrants kissed the ground, and some cried. The emotion of an aliyah flight is an "only in Israel" moment. There's nowhere else in the world this happens -- where people cry, dance, dream, and sing when moving to a new country, or better yet, going home.
For more on what it looks like when a Nefesh B'Nefesh chartered flight lands in Israel, see the images below, taken last July at Ben Gurion Airport.
Vivian Grossman is a member of JNF's national board of directors.
Vivian Grossman is a member of JNF's national board of directors.
...
Plane ride to a new life: Emotions soar aboard aliyah flight to Israel
Vivian Grossman
Categories: Impact Blog,
Tags: travel,
Photo: Shahar Azran New olim from North America disembark the first Nefesh B'Nefesh chartered flight of the summer last week. |
Every once in a while you're offered an opportunity you just can't say no to, and for me that happened last week. I was invited to be a guest on a Nefesh B'Nefesh chartered flight taking North American olim, or immigrants, to start their new lives in Israel. Nefesh B'Nefesh, a JNF partner, encourages and facilitates aliyah from the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom, helping new olim navigate all aspects of the big move.
I was fortunate to have been among those greeting Nefesh B'Nefesh chartered flights at Ben Gurion Airport twice over the last few years, and the images are still etched in my memory -- a few hundred people arriving after an overnight flight from JFK, laughing, crying, dancing, singing.
So many stories. I remember a grandfather running down the stairs to embrace his granddaughter, who had chosen to make Israel her home. They embraced and cried for what seemed forever, as if he was letting the world know his dream had come true.
Photo: Shahar Azran Former U.S. Marine Steven Rich of Los Angeles, one of the passengers headed to a new life aboard the Nefesh B'Nefesh flight. |
I met a guy who had been in the navy for 20 years, his retirement just official. He dreamed about making aliyah for 20 years and was finally able to make it happen. I spoke to a 26-year-old religious man who is gay, and looking forward to being able to celebrate both those parts of his identity living in Israel. A guy who carried the Torah as if it were his child touched everyone's heart, as did those wrapped in the Israeli flag.
Nefesh B'Nefesh is a well-oiled machine, and this became apparent as soon as the flight was in the air. Information that years ago would have taken months to process is now handled in the airport and during the flight.
Nefesh B'Nefesh software allows the organization to process passports while in flight and upload it as soon as the flight lands and the new citizens can have their identification cards within days. Amazing, considering it used to take months. The employees worked through the night processing the information -- an incredibly fine-tuned operation that understands the magnitude of its responsibility.
Photo: Vivian Grossman Cheers and flags as the Nefesh B'Nefesh charter flight lands. |
Nefesh B'Nefesh software allows the organization to process passports while in flight and upload it as soon as the flight lands and the new citizens can have their identification cards within days. Amazing, considering it used to take months. The employees worked through the night processing the information -- an incredibly fine-tuned operation that understands the magnitude of its responsibility.
Hundreds of people greeted the flight, singing, laughing, and dancing. Some new immigrants kissed the ground, and some cried. The emotion of an aliyah flight is an "only in Israel" moment. There's nowhere else in the world this happens -- where people cry, dance, dream, and sing when moving to a new country, or better yet, going home.
For more on what it looks like when a Nefesh B'Nefesh chartered flight lands in Israel, see the images below, taken last July at Ben Gurion Airport.
Vivian Grossman is a member of JNF's national board of directors.
Vivian Grossman is a member of JNF's national board of directors.
...
html content and images here
Some content and h2