Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Pictures!


I decided to share with you some fun photos here.

This is from the past few days when I went to Tel Aviv with some friends of mine and then to the kotel with another friend of mine. The first ones are of the sunset over the Medeterainian. That's me in one of the shots. My friend Michelle got ahold of my camera and decided to take one of me standing the water. The water was really warm (and I kept getting attacked by the garbage that is in the water.... uggghhh... Regardless it was really nice. At this point is started to get really really cold. However... we were out of Jerusalem, and that is what matters....Enjoy the photos :)


















Here are my friends Michelle, Sarah and I on the beach in Tel Aviv. It was a fun day. We got to Tel Aviv around 330. Went to Shenkin Street (which is the "trendy/cool" street) then walked over the beach. Here we are showing off their purchases (and my free gift for just being special and with them)










So, I very very rarely go to the Kotel. It's just one of those things that I don't do. I find the kotel very touristy and disney-esq. It's really hard to get close (as the women are actually violent) and you are berated by beggars and the modesty police (who normally aim to pick a fight with me.) HOWEVER. I decided to try again (as I went last week and it was waaaay to busy) as I had tzedakah money (charity) that I was specifically told to give at the Kotel. So I went with my very good friend Yannah (Yannah and I lived together at one point - she owns Shanti- the insane orange cat that used to terrorize the apartment...) ANYWAYS. Yannah and I always seem to go to the Kotel together, so we did. After finally getting there, we managed to actually get up the kotel. I delivered a slew of "kotel letters" that I had been given and the Tzedakah money that I had. We naturally decided to take the obligatory us at the kotel photos. Leaving we decided to walk out through the Arab Quarter. After dodging a tractor (true story) we finally got out and walked through the new MALL that exists. YES there is a MALL right next to the old city. However, there is a MAC make-up store there.... which could be a bad thing... Anyways, here are some pictures so enjoy. I will try to keep adding more as I take them.

Tonight I will be at the nationally televised Yom HaShoah tekes (Holocaust Remembrance ceremony.)
The President and the Prime Minister will be there, so I will bring my camera in hopes of getting a few shots. It's a pretty moving ceremony and is broadcast all over the country. I went a few years ago and I am glad to go again this year. More on that tomorrow...

On my side, the job hunt continues and I am sure something will come up soon - I'm looking, the whole world seems to know that I am looking so something will work out... always does!

Be in touch and leave a message!

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Canada has what is known as monopoly money. It’s colorful and bright. Recently they started putting brail on it so all could know what denomination it is.

America has green money; though lately, they’ve been adding some color to it.

Israel now has plastic money. That’s right. Yesterday I got a new 20 sheckle bill and it’s plastic. You can’t rip it. Heck, you can go swimming with it and throw it in the laundry (now you can really launder money) and it still won’t fall apart. The new 20-shekel bill is made of a polypropylene polymer. If you go to the ha’aretz article () you can read all about it. It’s plastic. It even has a little window on it. Cute.

So what am I up too?

Well Pessach was nice. I spent most of it sick with a sinus infection that would not go away. This past Sunday I decided I needed to get out of Jerusalem and went to Tel Aviv. After a long Sherut there (where I was stuffed in the back seat with someone practically on my lap) we headed to Shenkin street then to the beach. It was nice to just sit and play in the sea. I didn’t actually go swimming, but it was nice to just sit on the beach and not be in Jerusalem. Ask anyone that lives in the Holy City – sometimes you just need to get out. So I did. Went with a few friends of mine and it was just nice to leave for a bit.

Hmm… Nothing else of exciting…
On Wednesday night I am going to the official Yom Hashoah Ceremony at Yad Vashem. This is the big ceremony – the Prime Minister will be there, dignitaries, Shoah Survivors and a limited amount of people from the public. I was able to get in as I got an email about it. I am taking 2 students from Toronto that are here. Thought they would enjoy it before they head back there to finish up school (look at that, no longer employed by Hillel yet still fighting the good fight….) I’ll write more about that after it happens. I went a few years ago and it was really cool, so I am glad that I get to go again.

Also, still looking for a job… Taking it easy though, really going to go full force next week, so this week, in essence is my last week of nothingness…


Leave me a post, amuse me. I need to be amused. J

Nikki

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Lettuce be free

I went to the Seder on Penis Street. Yes, you did just read correctly- Penis Street. Ok, I will let you recompose yourself before typing any further.


Ready?


OK. So my friends the Hymies knew that I had no Seder plans so they brought me along to their friends place. Knowing that time with the Hymies is always fun, I accepted, purchased a few bottles of wine and dug out a hagaddah off of my shelf. The Seder itself was pretty interesting; it was the UN of Seders. 6 Countries were represented. (Ok, closed to the size of a Security Council, details) Canada, USA, Australia, Yemen, Russia and Israel all sat around the table. Now, just like the UN there was a table, a task to be done and many different customs and assumptions of how it SHOULD be done. There were also language barriers (in theory, Hebrew should have been the universal language HOWEVER not everyone was fluent in it.) We started off singing the order of the Seder – 3 times, as instructed by our Yemenite hostess. Now, I would also like to say that all of these Seder delegates were also tone deaf and nobody knew the Yemenite-whiney-off-beat-tune that us pasty white people just couldn’t get. But we tried. We sang. We accomplished it, one thing off the list for the Seder,

In past Seder experiences-, which have occurred in 4 countries- we’d all go around the table-reading paragraph after paragraph. But tonight was different than all other nights. We would read it allowed, together, in Hebrew. One thing I really despise is reading Hebrew out loud. It takes me longer to think about what I am reading as I have to try to translate it in my brain, figure out how to say it, remember how to say it properly and not be a sound off or else I could say something totally wrong. But, I did. The leader of the UN Seder – one of the Yemenite Hostesses from Penis Street was going to make sure we all did it. And Read we did. We read and we read and we read. Oh, of course we drank. Now, all in all, there were only 2 people that drank the whole 4 cups. Naturally I was one of them and Hymie was the other. Throughout the Seder everyone would argue about different things – Is this really the bitter herb? IT’S LETTUCE! Or Lemon Juice instead of Salt Water – why I never…

Now, normally here would be the point where I would introduce the anecdotal funny of the evening. However, that never happened. It was just a nice, loud, off beat and out of tune Seder. Every 30 min the hostesses (Yemenite sisters) would have typical Yemenite fight about something and we would just continue like nothing happened. The company was fun – very random people who all came together for the Pessach seder – very appropriately everyone around the room had come from somewhere else – for one reason or another – everyone had their own exodus from something and somewhere.

It was a nice night. The food was good (and we were stuffed) the company was good. I think I got home around 2. The Hymies chilled out for a bit until later at my place. I just remember trying to calculate the number of glasses of wine that were consumed. I still don’t know. When I woke up this morning, I was still feeling said effects of the Seder.


I made myself lunch pretty late in the day and just relaxed.

Not sure what is on the agenda for the week. Talks of travel around the country, but we will see.

After pessach the real job hunt begins. I think I am getting bored of unemployed life.


Hope your doing well and getting a little Seder in your own life.

Friday, April 18, 2008

ah the bread we are not going to eat...

Wishing everyone out there in blog land a Chag Samayach-

Happy Passover.

Here are a few funnies that I enjoy (and my own personal one at the end)

Q: Why do we have an Haggadah at Passover?
A: So we can Seder right words.

Q: What do you call someone who derives pleasure from the bread of affliction?
A: A matzochist.

A British Jew is waiting in line to be knighted by the Queen. He is to kneel in front of her and recite a sentence in Latin when she taps him on the shoulders with her sword. However, when his turn comes, he panics in the excitement of the moment and forgets the Latin. Then, thinking fast, he recites the only other sentence he knows in a foreign language, which he remembers from the Passover seder:
"Ma nishtana ha layla ha zeh mi kol ha laylot."
Puzzled, Her Majesty turns to her advisor and whispers, "Why is this knight different from all other knights?"

How did Passover get its name?
Since the Seder table is usually made larger, people can't reach for the items on the table and invariably ask others: "Could you please Pass Over the matza, etc."!

How is a good sermon like a piece of matza?
They both should take less than 18 minutes!

My fave (and one I've been telling since I was six!) :

What do you call a stupid frog on Passover?
DAM SFARDAYAH

hahaahhaha.

I'm a dork.

Chag samayach - leave a post, give me something to read!

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

I can't smell the garlic!

Today I ventured out of my apartment. It was a big step for me as I am still jet lagged. Normally by this point I have resumed normal life, however, I am not really sleeping that well…yet.

I decided that it was time to go to the shuk. I needed chicken to cook for the next few days and the shuk is the place I go. I noticed that with different seasons, the shuk has different smells. Right now, it’s garlic season. Piles and piles of fresh garlic line the stalls. Some braided, some tied in beautiful knots, others available for single purchase. Everyone is yelling and screaming to get you to purchase their garlic (Shoom in Hebrew) It looks like there is fear that Dracula and friends are going to start sucking blood out of every Jerusalemite unless they hang bunches of garlic in their homes. Last year (or I think it was last year?) I bought one and it came home with lots of little bugs, since then I refrain from mass amounts of garlic.

Otherwise, I seem to have developed a case of the sniffles, drips and sneezes. I am not sure if it is hay fever or just my body telling me it needs a break. Grrrr… thank goodness for the COSTCO size Nyqui….


Tomorrow I am actually planning on leaving the apartment for more than 30 min.. Meeting a friend for breakfast, have to go baby-sit someone’s plants (which also means raiding their movies…. Oh, and I have to clean their fridge….) and maybe, just maybe, go out tomorrow night. We’ll see…. Otherwise, I need to start Pessach cleaning and sell my chometz. Fun fun…. I know how to have a good time…

What’s up with everyone…. I know that I have some new blog readers (as facebook tells all) so welcome, hope you enjoy my rambles… it’s just like being in the fishbowl… just without the chaos….

Sunday, April 13, 2008

My travels pt.3

So, I finally have my bags. The first one showed up at 1030 this morning, the second, at 1930.

They went through one of them (mother%^!@^%@s!) but in the end I got 99.9% of my stuff.

So that's it.

I will be blogging more as I am currently unemployed (for the first time) yet, I will still be looking for a job.

I am open to any (and every) lead.

Have a great week people, I am sure I will write more in the next few days.

Nikki

Saturday, April 12, 2008

my travels pt. 2

(If you have not read the entry "my travels pt. 1, please scroll to the previous entry...)

I rush off the plane. Trying to find where the heck I am going as I have missed my flight. I go through security, get yelled at that I have a water bottle in my bag (which I forgot) then scolds me. I make my way to the BA lady to try and figure out what is up. So, she tells me that my bags have been rechecked. I say to her:
Do I have food on that flight? As the last one I didn’t
“Oh” says LouLou. “There wasn;t enough food?”
“No, there was, I just didn’t get my kosher meal and I was ignored.”
“Oh, well I will give you a voucher for here, maybe you will find something?”
“Um.. ok. Sure. (thinking that worst case I will have beer)
“So, you are booked on BMI you will be in Israel this afternoon. Please go to BMI show them your luggage tags and they will make sure that they get your bags.”
“Oh” I say.

I leave her and make my way to the terminal. Go through security (again) and make my way to BMI. They booked my ticket, made sure that my bags would be on the flight and I would get a kosher mean. They then told me to wait for the announcement for my gate.

I start to wander around Heathrow sending facebook messages to Adam (a friend that lives in Londo that I will not be spending the weekend there) to Moshe (that I am coming) and to my father (that I am alive.) I then remember that I am about to kill someone as I am so hungry and go in search of food. I find this little café place that actually has kosher sandwhices! So I get my bland cheese sandwhich and sit down.
Finally. It’s time to get on the plane. At this point I am calm, I know that everything will be fine and that I will be in Israel soon.

I get on the plane.

“Um…. Hello there ladies and gents! Welcome to BMI! We are sorry, but because of the weather outside (it’s raining) we can’t take off yet.”

I fall asleep.

I wake up an hour later.

We are still on the ground. Oh, I should mention that I am in the last row near the bathroom. People are nocking me every time they have to use the small bathroom.

Finally, we take off.

Crappy take off (again.)

Then the meal person. Ms. Would you like chicken or beef?
“um.. I have kosher.”
“Oh… we don’t have one for you. Vegetarian?”

Now. For those of you that know me I have a hard time eating most things. So I decline the meal. They make me more Bloody Mary’s. I keep drinking.

Turbulance.

I felt sick. I never feel sick. Ther eis a line up at the bathroom and there is a girl puking her guts out oh, and I am hungry.

More turbulance.

Finally…

“Ladies and gentleman, we will soon be in Israel. Please put your tray tables….”

Fine. I am finally almost there.

We land. I see it. Finally. No more problems. Just get my bags and get out of here.

I wait by the luggage delivery thing. Slowly more and more people are laving with their luggage. I have nothing. Still nothing. Nothing. NOTHING!

I go to the baggage people.

She starts in Hebrew.

I tell her that I have had enough and just need to do this in English.

“Take this form. Fill it out. Take it to customs. Then come back to me.”

I fill it out and come back. I wont even tell you the time.

They then give me a small toilitree bag and tell me they will call me.


So now. I write this from Israel. All my stuff is somewhere in the world. I have one outfit that I have been wearing for days. You might be saying, “but Nikki, you have all your stuff in Jerusalem. “ Yes, I do. But I am at Moshe’s in Moddin. I don’t home until Sunday.

So here I am. No bags. No word on the bags. I will call them tomorrow morning.



This journey isn’t over… yet.

Welcome back to Israel Nikki, welcome back.

My travels pt. 1

I am used to travel disasters. Getting delayed, bumped, rerouted, accused of being a terrorist, a drug smuggler or even jus the “random” check. The past 12 hours have been insane. I am writing this from London where I am currently delayed (I will be posting this when I get to Israel… which I hope will be soon)

It all started in Toronto. I checked in 24 hours in advance to make sure I didn’t get the crappy middle seat. I had windows both on the way to London and to Israel. Check in was quick. However, when the perky check-in lady (in her soft Irish accent) that “everything is on time!” I knew something was going to go wrong. I boarded the plane, sitting next to a woman that was from country that they don’t speak English (I learned soon that she was from Romania) and I realized that this would mean it would be a quiet flight. No forced conversations. In front of me was a couple flying to India, and behind me one to London and one to India. The olderman sitting behind me (who was going to India) was about the same hight as my Bobba. Less than 5 feet tall, perfectly tied turban and a budda belly (we’ll get back to him later) As we are all sitting down and safely stowing our tray tables, the first announcement came:


“Hello Ladies and Gents!,” said the overly excited BA Steward. “Glad you’re hear with us today. As you can feel it’s a bit hot here in the back part of the cabin. We apologize for that. Everything will be fine once we get going. We are just going to board the last passenger then we are going to leave!” This was at 18:20, we were supposed to depart at 18:25.

Ok fine. It’s hot. But who is this last passenger and why aren’t they on yet? Got a connection to catch… Then signal that another announcement was coming….

(It is now 18:40)
“BONG”
“Hello there again Ladies and Gents. We are just having some trouble with the hydrolics of the left engine. But don’t worry, we are going to have that fixed. Our engineers are working on it and as soon as that is fixed we will be off!”

Now the lady beside me had no idea what was going on. So I had to tell her (using my acting skills) what was happening using hand motions and shadow puppets. (Ok, no shadow puppets, however how cool would that have been?)


19:00

“BONG”
“Hello there Ladies and Gents,” (he was still bubbly, but not as bubbly from when we started this game close to an hour prior.) “Sorry about all these shenanigans. The engineers are working on the engine. We are not sure if this plane is going to leave tonight. We have 2 other BA planes leaving tonight so if you look out your right window you will see the large jumbo jet that will accoomidate everone. We are just waiting to hear what we should do. Thank you for your patience.”


Now. At this point I was not amused. They were cutting into my connection time…

19:10
Then, in order to offset a riot, the BA staff started to hand out drinks and snacks. Really it was a choice of water or OJ and a baby bag of pretzels….


19:15
“BONG”
“Hello there. If you are currently on your mobile calling British Airways to make sure you get on the next flight, PLEASE HANG UP. You are slowing down our process of booking you on a new flight. This does not mean that you should get off the plane. We are still not sure, However, please hang up your phones.”

Now. I don’t speak Romanian. Infact, nobody did. Try explaing this to the woman who speak no English.

19:20

The natives get restless.

Everyone is talking to eachtoher. Plotting their own revenge on BA. Everyone takes a pact NEVER to take BA again.

Romanian lady offers me cookies. I politely decline.

19:30

“BONG”

“PLEASE SIT DOWN. We are just waiting to hear from cutoms and immigration if we can let you off the plane. Our engineers are still working on the plane. However, the airconditioning is now fixed.”


20:00

We begin to notice that all the expensive seat people are now disembarked. They didn’t tell us. We then begin to gather our stuff only to be yelled at.

“LADIES AND GENTELMAN. PLEASE SIT DOWN. WE ARE DISEMBARKING BY CABIN. WE WILL GET TO YOURS. YOU WILL GET ONTO THE NEXT FLIGHT. THE ONE OUT THE RIGHT SIDE OF THE PLANE. YOU WILL FLY IN THE JET BESIDE US. THERE IS ROOM FOR EVERYONE. ALL YOURS MEALS ARE BEING TRANSFERRED. DON’T WORRY, YOU WILL ALL GET FED.”

This time, the Romanian looks at me for translation, I do something with my hands. She nods. Then starts poiting to her leg. NOBODY has a clue what she is talking about. The Indian couple infront of me start trying to understand this woman (or talk to her in English with their thick Indian-accented English- I’ll call it “In”glish. Still no help. Then we try the flight attendent. The perky blonde who probably listed “To see the world!” as her reason for wanting to work for BA had no idea what she was saying. The little man behind me is now kicking my seat. I think it’s just because he can’t reach the floor, I decide to just ignore it. The rest of us play a game called “Who is going to make their connection and who is just royally screwed.” Everyone was in agreement that IF we took off ontime on our soon to be new flight AND flew fast I could make it. I was doubtful.

20:15

Ok, you all can move off. Please have your boarding pass. We then wait in line. Everyone is trying to be the “Most screwed.” Now, back to the Romanian lady. So, one of the people that we were inline with just couldn’t take it anymore. He works in London and one of his workers is origionally from Romania. He calls him (in London) the lady now smiles, knows whats going on and everything s fine. So we continue to play the game. The small buddah like man points to the girl beside us and says, “Her’s is worst. She is to be married on the 13th.” We all stare. “Wait, THIS Saturday…. I’m shure you will get to London,” I say “No, India. I have to fly to London, then to Delhi THEN it’s a 7 hour drive away.” We all realize at this moment that she will show up at her wedding straight from the airport. We try and cheer her up. We make sure she gets to the front of the line- never to see her again. I finally get to the line “Ms. I need to get to Tel Aviv because of the Sabbath I know that this delay isn’t your fault, but I can’t fly on the Sabbath.” The BA lady says “Don’t worry, I know about Shabbat, I am part of the ganze mushpucha.” I get my ticket. Nonody knows what will happen to me when we get to London, but I decide to press on.

20:35
I get on the plane. I am stuck in the middle. I friggen checked in 24 hours in advance to make sure I didn’t get screwed this way. Fine. I sit down.

9:00

We take off.

Woman beside me goes to sleep. She is a “kicker.” I want to crawl out the window.

Dinner time.

Hello Ms. You ordered a special meal, right?
“yes, Kosher.”
“Oh, will vegigtarian do?”
“no”
“Let me go check to make sure that I have this right.”


(5 min pass)

“I don’t have any kosher meals left. Will the vegetrarion do?”
“NO.”

Oh.

She then walks off.

I am hungry. I want to eat my arm. No food. The man said I’d have food. I booked my meal almost a year ago. I am pissed. I’ll have a(nother) drink.

Time to sleep
(kick, elbow, elbow.)

Ok, no sleeping.

Breakfast

Would you like breakfast Miss?

My meal never made it on the plane.

Oh.

Sir, would you like breakfast… (totally ignoring me or the fact that I am hungry….)

10:00 am (London)

Finally landed… now to figure out my flight to TLV….

More on that soon….

(No spell checks, sorry…)