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An Inside Look at the Historic Efforts by Israel’s Defense Ministry to Combat the Coronavirus

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Home Front Command soldiers at the Dan hotel in Jerusalen, which was turned into a quarantine facility, on April 13, 2020. Photo by Yossi Zamir/Flash90

Avi Dadon, who leads the Defense Ministry’s Directorate of Production and Procurement, tells JNS about weeks of round-the-clock efforts that transformed the Israeli health-care system’s readiness for the impending outbreak.

By: Yaakov Lappin

As the coronavirus pandemic put the State of Israel into an unprecedented lockdown last month, the Defense Ministry’s Directorate of Production and Procurement (DOPP), which usually deals with the acquisition and maintenance of military equipment, suddenly changed course.

In less than four weeks, after launching a series of massive operations spanning the globe, the DOPP has transformed the readiness of the Israeli health-care system for dealing with the pandemic. The organization’s head, Avi Dadon, spoke to JNS and provided an insider’s look into those historic efforts.

The DOPP usually deals with items such as tanks and planes, but it had, on occasion, purchased a small number of ventilators for the IDF Medical Corps in past years. “It was under the radar—something I’d only know about afterwards,” said Dadon. Then, on March 13, ventilators, together with other lifesaving medical equipment, suddenly became the main target for the DOPP.

Dadon attended intensive discussions that Friday at the Kirya, site of the Israel Defense Forces’ national headquarters and Defense Ministry, and learned of the mammoth new tasks his organization now faced.

“The first thing we needed to take care of was the setting up of hotel recovery centers for coronavirus [COVID-19] patients in good condition,” he said. “The idea was to give hospitals more space and not overload them because our concern was to make sure that hospitals don’t crash under the burden of caring for patients in good condition, together with critical patients and those who need to be ventilated,” he said.

A day later, Dadon and a number of hotel managers had a signed contract at hand with an agreement to activate it within just two days. Hundreds of COVID-19 patients began streaming into the newly established isolation centers, leaving hospitals able to focus on those who really needed them. The initiative then grew with time, encompassing hotel isolation centers for populations with their own sensitivities, like haredi patients, and acting as quarantine centers for new international arrivals.

 

‘We have to rely on ourselves and produce’

Dadon describes the project as an excellent example of inter-ministerial and inter-agency cooperation.

“The Interior Ministry stipulated what was needed, the IDF Home Front Command took care of the how, and we arranged contracts that struck a balance between reasonable costs and providing a service for civilians,” he explained. “The rest is history.”

On April 21, Dadon reached an agreement with the last hotel chain in Israel that had yet to join the program, Fattal. “We took into account the hotel’s needs and how much this set up costs them,” he said.

The DOPP’s second critical task was getting medical equipment to the Israeli health-care system—and fast. This includes personal protection equipment, ventilators and all of the components needed for testing: swabs and reagents—a world of items that Dadon and his teams had barely interacted with in the past.

The problem was that Europe was shutting down as a source for testing kits due to its own domestic needs. For the first time in its history, the DOPP faced the reality of tenders canceled last minute with orders for millions of N95 masks sold to others. “We were amazed to find that it had been sold to another buyer when we arrived,” he said.

As a result, the DOPP was able to rapidly place replacement orders in South Korea, China and Mexico.

“The good news is that we didn’t lose a single shekel of taxpayer money in these bizarre incidents. But we were disappointed. My lesson was that we have to rely on ourselves and produce here,” said Dadon.

On March 8, the DOPP arranged 30,000 protective suits and tens of thousands of COVID-19 test kits to arrive from South Korea. On March 15, the Defense Ministry announced a major import from South Korea of approximately 100,000 COVID-19 test kits.

By mid-March, Dadon had also decided to “set up a bridgehead in China.” Equipment had begun arriving in Israel by the planeload.

“The Accountant General recommended that we work with the Israel Chemicals company. This company was already there, meaning that we didn’t need an unknown broker,” said Dadon. “They came to help with very high motivation.”

That effort results in waves of aircraft bringing in supplies throughout recent weeks. Finally, a request came in from the Health Ministry to stop the imports, as stockpiles were overflowing. The equipment included masks, protective gear and ventilators, according to Defense Ministry statements in March.

 

‘Where the excess production will go’

Meanwhile, the DOPP reached an agreement with the Sion Medical company, which has a factory in Sderot, to begin mass production of PPE in Israel.

The move is part of a wider strategic shift to medical self-sufficiency, according to Dadon.

The DOPP worked with Israel’s largest defense companies—IAI, Elbit and Rafael—each play major roles in assisting ventilator manufacturing and upgrades, linking them up with smaller medical equipment producers.

“We began examining the Israeli market and finding out who produces ventilation systems and specialized masks, and we found 16 manufactures,” he said. The Sion Medical company, which has a factory in Sderot, is now mass producing specialized N95 and surgical masks.

The DOPP also isolated components that were missing from the supply chain and that were needed to make ventilation machines in Israel and found Israeli producers that could fill in the gap. “A certain component was made abroad—without it, there is no production of ventilators,” said Dadon. “I remembered knowing a factory in Kibbutz Merom Golan, called Bental, which makes these things. Within a week, the ventilation machine producers were linked with the factory. This component no longer needs to be imported. We achieved full independence.”

According to Dadon’s estimate, Israel will soon be making 500 ventilators per week. “It’s gotten to the stage where we have start thinking about where the excess production will go,” he said. “The level of product is very high.”

On the testing front, the DOPP helped import a full lab from abroad, which should be up and running within two weeks. “The concept that holds that mass public testing can enable the economy go back to work is the right approach in my view,” he said. “Here too, we are making progress on locally producing the swabs and reagents that we previously needed to import.”

A DOPP transport unit, which usually moves defense equipment from the United States to Israel, was instrumental in importing medical equipment from China to Israel.

Once the shipments arrived at Ben-Gurion International Airport, the DOPP reached a same-day release agreement with the Israel Customs Administration, meaning that the items were first allowed to exit the airport and only afterwards was the paperwork filled out. Health teams were surprised by how rapidly the equipment was showing up at their hospitals.

Dadon described an ego-free joint effort among all of the relevant agencies and ministries, each bringing their relative advantage to the table. “We can’t replace the doctors and or know what is needed, but I do know how to do efficient, economical acquisitions, and to bring in equipment quickly or to produce. Ultimately, producing here in Israel will save us hundreds of millions of shekels,” he said.

Throughout this effort, the DOPP also helped a friendly country receive equipment that enables sedated ventilated patients to be flown without disconnecting them from machines.

  (JNS.org)

An Open Letter from God During Coronavirus

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Because He knows how hard it is and every single step you’re taking.

By: Batya Levy

My Dear Child,

I just wanted to check in and say hi. As this quarantine continues on, with tensions rising and uncertainty mounting, I just wanted to remind you that I’m here for you and that I love you.

My dear child, I wanted to remind you that you’re doing a really great job and that I’m noticing and loving you so much for your efforts. I see you. Amongst the constant mess and endless noise that comes from a bustling home filled with kids, I see you. Amongst the painful loneliness and deafening silence that comes from an empty home, I see you. Amongst the restlessness and cabin fever and everyone getting on everyone’s nerves. I see you and the growth you’re making and the strides you’re taking to deal with your situation. I see you and I love you so much for the huge effort you’re making to stay positive in these challenging times.

My dear child, I know how hard this is for you right now. I know you’re feeling sad. I know you’re feeling overwhelmed. I know you’re worried and stressed and anxious. But please, my dear child, express it to Me. Talk to Me, let Me in. Tell Me how you’re feeling. Tell Me what’s on your mind. I’m your Father, and love and care for you so much. I want to help you. Tell Me how hard you’re finding this situation. Tell Me that you hate this. Tell Me that you hate being alone. Or that you hate being with your family. Or that you hate that you can’t go out. Shout at Me. I don’t care. I just want to hear from you. Don’t cut Me out now that there’s no structure in your life.

I know I’ve shut all the shuls, I know I’ve made it way more challenging for you to connect. But please, I beg of you, don’t think I’m not here. I’m closer than ever and I still want to hear from you, now more than ever.

My dear child, I created you, I love you more than anything else in the world. I know these are challenging times and that sometimes you let your guard down and say things you shouldn’t, or do things you normally wouldn’t if you had less time or more of a schedule, or that sometimes you behave in a way that you later regret because you’re just spending way too much time with the same people and it’s all feeling a bit too much. I just want to remind you, there is nothing, and I mean nothing you can do that will change how much I love you. My beautiful precious child, no matter how far away you feel, know I am right here beside you and I’m never leaving your side. No matter what you’ve done, however bad you think it was, I still love you. My love for you is unconditional and no one loves you more than I do. Hear it. Believe it. Feel it.

My dear child, you’re so confused, and that’s okay. You have conflicting emotions. On the one hand you feel you just can’t survive this; it’s too overwhelming; you can’t cope. But on the other hand you’re trying so desperately to keep it all together. Just know this – I only give you a challenge that you can overcome. So the fact that you’re placed exactly where you are right now means I believe in you. You can deal with this situation. You can even thrive. I know how much potential you have and I so desperately want to see you actualize it. I know it’s so hard for you right now, and that it’s really difficult to internalize, but believe Me, I know you can do this. I believe in you. I always have, I always will.

My dear child, I know you feel that the world is so unsafe right now. I know you’re scared. I know how unsettling it feels, not knowing what tomorrow will bring. Not knowing how many more people will die. Or get infected. Not knowing who you will be saying goodbye to next. Not feeling safe going to the shops or going for a walk. Having that safety net pulled out from under you is very unsettling. But My sweet precious child, know this: I am your safety net. And I know it’s hard but I want you to trust Me. Trust that I’m holding you. Trust that I know what’s best. Trust that I can get you through this. That together we can pull through and succeed. Together.

My dear child, I know you’re scared but feel My warmth. Feel My arms around your shoulders comforting you. Feel My presence holding you. Feel Me carrying you through this. Feel Me here, like I’ve been here with you your whole life. You’re overwhelmed right now. And that’s okay. Life is overwhelming right now. But remember that I’m quarantined with you. When it’s getting too much just look to Me and I’ll be here, waiting for you. You’re not alone. I’m right here, listening. And I’m not going anywhere. Ever. You can rely on that.

My dear child, I am so proud of you right now. For what you’re achieving. For what you’re learning through this process. I am so proud of your progress. I see every tiny step forward you make. And though you may think it’s tiny, in My eyes it’s a massive deal. I’m rooting for you. I know you can do this. I know you can make this quarantine amazing. I know you have it within you to do what you can do best.

My dear child, I know you better than you know yourself and better than anyone else knows you. So stop comparing yourself to everyone around you when they talk about all the activities they’ve thought up for their kids or all the food they’ve made or all the new skills they’re learning or all the things they’re ticking off of their bucket lists. Stop beating yourself up and putting yourself down and telling yourself that you should be doing better. You’re wrong. I know how much effort you’re putting in. I know that you’re giving it your absolute all. I know how much you’re struggling. I know how much you’re achieving. I know how much you’re holding back. I see your innermost heart. I see your desires. I see what you’re doing and what you’re holding yourself back from doing, and My dear child, I am so proud of you.

I’m telling you again so that you’ll believe Me when I say you’re doing such a fantastic job. You’re amazing. And when all this is over, I hope you can come out with your head held high, feeling proud of what you achieved. And I really hope we can maintain the strong bond we’ve formed during these challenging times. I hope our connection can take you through to when we’re no longer in quarantine. I hope you won’t forget Me.

Signed, with so much love and admiration for all your efforts,

Your Loving Father

            (Chabad.org)

Advice on Combating Loneliness from Leading Expert

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Feeling lonely isn’t necessarily the same thing as being alone. “Loneliness is a state of social hunger,” explains Dr. Steven Cole, Professor of Medicine and Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Medicine.

By: Dr. Yvette Alt Miller

Loneliness is killing us – literally.

It’s long been recognized that feeling lonely is bad for our health. Dr. Julianne Hold-Lunstadt, a professor of neuroscience and psychology at Brigham Young University, has studied loneliness for years. “We’re social beings,” she’s explained, “and our bodies respond when we lack the proximity to others.” She estimates that feeling loneliness harms our health as much as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. One study found that feeling lonely increases the risk of dying early by a whopping 26%.

Feeling lonely isn’t necessarily the same thing as being alone. “Loneliness is a state of social hunger,” explains Dr. Steven Cole, Professor of Medicine and Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Medicine. People can be lonely even when they’re surrounded by others, if they feel little or no connection. Conversely, some people who live alone might feel secure and not lonely at all. “Loneliness is about a person’s dissatisfaction with the social contact they’re getting,” Dr. Cole explains. “Essentially it boils down to: Do you have a set of people who have your back, and a group of trusted others you can turn to in a time of need?”

In an exclusive Aish.com interview, Dr. Cole shared his urgent advice about what people can do to alleviate loneliness, as millions of people face fear and uncertainty as well as social isolation in the coronavirus pandemic.

Dr. Cole has a long history of studying loneliness, and what he’s found has shocked him and the scientific establishment. As well as making us feel sad and cut off, feelings of loneliness actually change the way our cells behave: feeling lonely and isolated weakens the responses of our immune system at a cellular level, making us more vulnerable to viral infections. Lonely people also experience more inflammation than others.

“The human brain treats loneliness as a state of unsafety,” Dr. Cole explains. Loneliness “turns on a set of cellular and molecular defenses that might have made great sense thousands of years ago when the things we feared were something that was going to bite us or stab us – but that equation isn’t serving us so well now.” Even more damaging, experiencing loneliness can trigger physical changes that make it harder to reach out and connect with others, thereby dooming some lonely people to years of loneliness. Feeling lonely can make us more suspicious of others, and make us see others as a threat. That in turns makes it harder to connect with others and exacerbates the feeling of being lonely and out of touch.

How can we break this destructive cycle? Surprisingly, some common approaches have been found to have only limited success in battling feelings of loneliness. Putting people together with others doesn’t address the deeper feelings of alienation and lack of trust that underlie loneliness. Even psychotherapy has been found to have only limited effects on treating the root causes of loneliness.

A series of recent experiments has shown that giving to others is one of the key ways to break the cycle of loneliness. Today, as millions of people experience lockdowns and insecurity, these findings are more important than ever before.

“We were studying other adversities,” explains Dr. Cole of a series of research papers he wrote with colleagues. He and his colleagues spoke with people facing intense loneliness and other extreme hardships, including poverty, war and life-threatening disease. “We started looking at people who were doing well even when they were in this threat system,” he explains. The researchers made a startling discovery: “People who have a strong sense of purpose or meaning in their lives seemed surprisingly well protected. It’s not like they didn’t feel some objective sense of threat, but it wasn’t registering in their brains” in the same harmful ways that loneliness did. Hopeful, optimistic people – even when they faced grave problems – were “connected to something greater than themselves and their own personal well-being”.

Dr. Sonja Lyubomirsky, a psychologist at the University of California, Riverside, built on these findings. She led a team that decided to see if encouraging lonely people to perform acts of kindness to others could help foster that sense of connecting to something greater than themselves – and if that would help alleviate the crushing burden of feeling cut off that lonely people reported.

Her results, reported in February 2020, just before the pandemic shut down much of the world, were startling. She asked people who described themselves as lonely to perform simple activities to help other people, such as running errands for them or helping them solve a problem with their computers. After doing even these small, mundane acts of kindness, people described themselves as feeling significantly less lonely.

Their blood cells also showed a decrease in the inflammatory responses that are typically associated with loneliness. “When it comes to the pursuit of happiness, popular culture encourages a focus on oneself,” Dr. Lyubomirsky concluded. “By contrast, substantial evidence suggests that what consistently makes people happy is focusing… on others.”

Forcing ourselves to look beyond our own needs and focus on the needs of other people as well is a key way to fight feelings of loneliness and despair.

Dr. Cole lists five central ways we can refocus our attention to others, and help alleviate the loneliness and worry that many of us are feeling right now in this perilous time.

  1. Volunteer.

Volunteering isn’t always easy when people are living under lockdown, but Dr. Cole explains that it’s a crucial first step to connecting with others in a meaningful way. “If you start working with others around some common purpose, then you start to learn that at least a few other people in the world see the world the way you do, and that there are some people you can trust.” He recommends signing up for political or social campaigns, or for any cause that reminds us of goals outside our own immediate well-being. Volunteering alongside others – even just discussing goals with them – “is surprisingly effective at buffering people against the adverse impacts of loneliness.”

  1. Perform Acts of Kindness.

Reach out to help others in any way you can. Call up a neighbor or friend to check up on them. Run an errand for someone else if you are able to. Volunteer to tutor someone in an area in which you have expertise. “One activity that’s surprisingly impactful,” Dr. Cole explains – and which is possible to perform even in the confines of being stuck at home during a lockdown – is “getting older people to write some form of letter or create a video for the next generation, explaining ‘this is what I’ve learned in my life, and this is what I think matters, and this is what I wish I’d known when I was younger.’” By focusing in this way on the well-being of other people, we can remind ourselves that we are still important, valuable people who have much to contribute to the world.

  1. Connect.

As hard as it might feel, pick up the phone and call other people. “Don’t focus on the news; focus on your neighbor and what she’s doing,” Dr. Cole urges. Sign up for Zoom chats if you can. A key way to combat loneliness is to “give yourself reasons to get up and get dressed, because people are counting on you.” It’s not always easy, but remaining engaged with other people is an important tool in the arsenal to fight loneliness and stress.

  1. Go Outside.

Spending time outdoors “reminds you that the sun rose today, and the birds are still chirping – this can work surprisingly well in connecting you with what’s enduring and true” in the world. In addition, numerous studies have linked spending time in the sun to a range of health benefits from having more regular sleep cycles to producing higher levels of serotonin, the hormone our brains produce that’s linked to feelings of calm and well-being. Making time to get outside each day, even briefly, can lift our moods and help us focus on things other than ourselves.

  1. Take a Class.

This is a great time to sign up for an online class and spend time acquiring new skills or knowledge. In addition to taking our mind off our own personal circumstances and the news, learning new things and broadening our minds is empowering. “The process of learning new stuff and becoming stronger and more capable – that’s a great neurobiological antidote to the free-floating anxiety of the pandemic era.”

(Aish.com)

Remembering HaRav David Jemal, zt’l – From a Family Member 

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Rabbi Jemal was a great man, a Hacham, a leader, and a beacon of light amongst us. His love for Hashem and for mitzvot was astronomical, and his love for each and every person will be felt for eternity. May his memory be blessed.

Written by a Family Member

Everyone who knew Rabbi Jemal knew that he was a great man, a malach who loved everybody. To someone who didnt know him, it is very hard to describe who he was on paper. The Rabbi was humble beyond words, and always had true simcha that was contagious. He treated every individual with respect, always careful to never make anyone feel bad. Many knew him as a great rabbi and a leader, but I also knew him as a dear uncle.

Growing up, the rabbi was our leader and role model, and was always there for us in time of need. When our family left Beirut, my mother was a young woman with five children under the age of 6. My father was unable to travel on the same route as us, and she was uneasy taking the trip alone. My mother approached Rabbi Jemal, who was a young boy at the time, and asked him to travel with her. The flight was the same day. Within a few hours, he was dressed, packed, and on the plane with us to a new country. Even at such a young age, Rabbi Jemal’s selflessness was extraordinary. Whenever we had any type of problem, we would call Rabbi Jemal and we would be comforted in knowing that he would help us with whatever it was.

The rabbi was also a mohel, and loved doing brit millot. Once, he was asked to do a brit milah in Manhattan, for a family that was not so affiliated with Judaism. During the brit, instead of singing traditional songs that are usually sung, he started to sing “hava nagilla”.

He was the youngest of eleven, yet all of his siblings looked up to him with awe and respect. They never called him by his first name, but rather referred to him as “The Hacham”. He was our spiritual rock, he elevated and inspired us in great ways. When he was a young man in his twenties, my mother noticed him walking with his head slightly bent. Concerned, she asked him why he was walking this way, by which he responded that one should not walk with his head up, as it is a sign of arrogance. From then on, whenever we saw him walking, it was with his head slightly bent. This was just an inkling of the profound anavah he exhibited. While one of the traits of the Jemal family is anavah, he was the epitome of this middah.

The rabbi was also a mohel, and loved doing brit millot. Once, he was asked to do a brit milah in Manhattan, for a family that was not so affiliated with Judaism. During the brit, instead of singing traditional songs that are usually sung, he started to sing “hava nagilla”. Immediately, the whole room transformed as the crowd started to sing and dance, radiating happiness. He celebrated everyone’s simcha as if it was his own. He attended every one of our semachot, and sang and danced as if it was his child getting married, or his child that was born.

My son recounts how after he got married, Rabbi Jemal would start singing “od yishama” and break out into a dance whenever he saw him in the street. Even two years after the wedding! To Rabbi Jemal, every person was the most important person in the world. And everyone he encountered felt it. True, genuine care radiated off him whenever he would interact with someone. Even when dealing with people that were far from his level, he always knew how to lift them up and make them feel good. For many years, the rabbi taught children from public school for no charge and never said a word about it. He didn’t want anyone to know about his great acts and the multitude of what he was doing for these children.

Every Shabbat, my sons would go to Rabbi Jemal for tehillim class. He would give out prizes and candy, and instill in the boys a love for Torah and Hashem. He always looked forward to holidays and celebrated them with great exuberance. As a child, my family would attend his Pesach sedarim. Those sedarim were truly uplifting experiences that I’ll never forget. During chad gadya and mi yodea, he would get up and re-enact the stories with singing and dancing that would put a smile on everyone’s faces. Years later, when I got married and moved a few houses down from the rabbi, we would hear him erupt into joyous zemirot from his backyard every Sukkot.

My children would get so excited when they would hear him, and would join in from our own Sukkah with much enthusiasm. The love for Torah that he instilled in us is still part of me today. One of my sons once ate a shabbat meal with the rabbi in Israel. The host and his family sang a song talking about longing to serve Hashem and running after Hashem. Rabbi Jemal who never heard the song before was moved to tears by the song.  It impacted my son so much as he recognized that it was the rabbi’s life mission to serve Hashem. When the rabbi was hospitalized, family and friends were brainstorming to come up with ways that could help him. So much so that the president of the hospital exclaimed: “Who is this man? I’ve been getting calls from so many different people who are concerned about him. It’s as if he’s the president!”. The rabbi was loved by all, with so many considering him a close friend.

Rabbi Jemal was a great man, a Hacham, a leader, and a beacon of light amongst us. His love for Hashem and for mitzvot was astronomical, and his love for each and every person will be felt for eternity. May his memory be blessed.

Parshas Emor – Prisms of Light; Reflections From a Shattered Glass

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A husband and wife are essentially one soul divided into two opposites, and when they unite in harmony and peace the divine presence rests between them

By: Naftali Reich

The essential theme behind the counting of the sefirah is, of course, perfecting our character traits. This is alluded to in the famous words of Rabbi Akiva, the teacher of Rav Shimon Bar Yochai, who explained the verse, “Love your neighbor like yourself,” to mean that this quintessential Torah law is the source from which flows all the Torah’s teachings. ”

In order to fully appreciate the import of Rabbi Akiva’s teaching, let us read the famous narrative recorded in the Talmud Kesuvos (daf 62:2) about Rabbi Akiva and his righteous wife, Rachel.

“Rabbi Akiva worked as a shepherd for the wealthy Kalba Savua, whose daughter, Rachel, recognized Akiva’s modesty and aspiring greatness. She approached him with an offer: “if I become betrothed to you, will you go to the Yeshiva to study Torah?” After he responded in the affirmative, they became secretly betrothed, and he went off to study. Upon discovering his daughter’s marriage to the unlearned shepherd, the wealthy Kalba Savua disowned her.

Rabbi Akiva remained in the Bais Hamedrash learning Torah for 12 years. When he finally returned home, he was accompanied by 12,000 students. As he was about to cross the threshold of his home, he heard an elderly man provoking his wife about his long absence. “How long will you remain a living widow?” the man asked, to which she replied, “If my husband would only listen to me he would devote himself to another twelve years of uninterrupted study.”

With these words of permission and encouragement, Rabbi Akiva turned around and returned to the yeshiva. He studied for another twelve years after which he returned with 24,000 students. His wife, Rochel, went out to greet him. Approaching him, she fell to the ground and kissed his feet. His attendants tried to push her away but were stopped by Rabbi Akiva, who told them, “All that is mine and all that is yours belongs to her.”

With this episode, the Talmud gives us insight into the supreme and selfless dedication of Rabbi Akiva’s wife and Rabbi Akiva. Yet the narrative prompts some basic questions: Is there a significance to the number 12,000 (students) who accompanied him on his first return home? Furthermore, upon his second return after another twelve years, shouldn’t the growth of his students have been exponential, not merely double?

In another interesting twist, the sages teach us that whenever the Talmud refers to Hu Saba, “an elderly man,” it invariably refers to Elijah the prophet. Elijah had come at that specific moment to prompt Rabbi Akiva’s wife to respond with her selfless declaration that she wished he would learn Torah for another twelve years. Clearly, this was all divinely engineered. Why was it so important for Rabbi Akiva to study uninterrupted for another twelve years to the point where Hashem actually sent Eliyahu Hanavi to bring this about?

I believe the answer lies in a basic understanding of Rabbi Akiva’s teaching about the essential meaning and purpose of Torah study, and of life itself. In essence, Hashem is the unifying force that sustains and permeates all of creation. Nevertheless, Hashem created a finite, fragmented and divided world where this unifying force is not easily perceived. The different compounds and elements, components and polarities that comprise the physical world serve to mask the fact that they all emanate from a single primary source.

Our mission is to glimpse what lies beyond the external divide, to see Creator in creation by connecting the dots. We are all essentially souls that flow from one place-the Heavenly throne. We are all thus bonded as one at our source. Nevertheless our souls are implanted in independent bodies, each uniquely different from the other, each agitating for its own individual needs and operating on its own instincts of self preservation.

How can we transcend our physical differences and genuinely bond with one another, thereby uniting with our divine source?

Rabbi Akiva provides the answer. Love your neighbor as yourself; this is the noblest and most fundamental doctrine governing a Jew’s life, and it is acquired only through Torah. Through Torah we connect to Hashem’s infinite mind and will. When we study Torah, however, each of us has our own pathway and medium, our own unique way of understanding. We are so certain we have arrived at the truth though our own perceptions, it is difficult to see the bigger picture and to accord the appropriate respect to our counterpart in study.

There is no greater challenge than achieving a true internal synthesis whereby we can maintain our independent mode of thought while recognizing at the same time that everything contains elements of truth, and that all flows from one divine source.

Rabbi Akiva’s greatness as a unifying force among the Jewish people was to raise 12,000 students. The Jewish nation consists of 12 tribes, each invested with its own unique, principled pathway and mission. The number 1,000 in Hebrew is “elef,” represented by the same symbol as the letter one. With 1,000 students in each tribe, reflecting the total diversity of Torah understanding, Rabbi Akiva could nevertheless unify them as one, inspiring and bringing together all the tribes jointly to bond through Torah to their source. A lofty accomplishment indeed!

Yet there was higher level of achievement that Heaven had ordained for Rabbi Akiva and his wife. It required harnessing a form of supernatural energy and it would accomplish a supernatural goal.

A husband and wife are essentially one soul divided into two opposites, and when they unite in harmony and peace the divine presence rests between them. So too, each of these 12,000 were to become zugos, pairs. It is natural for two individuals to argue the finer nuances of their individual line of Torah reasoning and thus approach the matter from all possible angles.

If, while dissenting with one another’s arguments, they would display the appropriate respect and esteem due a Torah scholar of such stature, the opposite, yet cohesive forces produced by their Torah leaning would bring the ultimate revelation of the Divine presence to this world. The highest spiritual goal for human existence would then be achieved.

(Torah.org)

Parshas Emor – Spiritual Elevation Through Mitzvot

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Rabbi Osher Jungreis writes: “Our father, HaRav Meshulem Halevi Jungreis, Zt”l, was a pioneering Orthodox rabbi in Long Island. Our mother, Rebbetzin Esther Jungreis, a’h, established the Hineni organization to inspire a new generation to Torah commitment.”

By: Rabbi Osher Jungreis

In the opening verse of our parsha, G-d instructs Moshe, “Say to the Kohanim…” (Leviticus, 21:1), and puzzlingly, in that very same verse, G-d once again repeats the command, “Say to them…”

Since there is no redundancy in the Torah, we must try to decipher the meaning of this duplication. Moreover, we will discover throughout the parsha that that which Moshe imparts to the Kohanim is not only significant to them, but instructive to us as well. The Torah is teaching us that once the Kohanim receive their “special commands” (which only they can perform), G-d tells Moshe to repeat the other mitzvoth to them because through the performance of mitzvoth, the soul is elevated and attains a new, enhanced state.

It therefore follows that when one grows spiritually through the performance of mitzvoth, one is not simply performing the same mitzvah, but because of one’s new, heightened spiritual state, one brings oneself and the very same mitzvah to a much higher level.

Mitzvot actually have the power to change us, so if we are consistent in our observance then we can attain a much higher level today than we enjoyed yesterday, and this is the lesson that we must bear in mind as we count the Omer, the forty nine days from Pesach to Shavuos, when we were given the Torah. Each day, we keep growing until we come to that awesome moment when G-d sealed His Covenant with us.

As we perform mitzvoth, we are not simply adding more mitzvoth, we are creating a change in the essence of our beings. What an amazing opportunity for spiritual growth has been given to us! What a tragedy not to avail ourselves of it.

Our sages teach us that this double language of “say” has yet another meaning, and that is that the adults must instruct the young. What is puzzling; however is that this command is given to the Kohanim specifically when the Torah is discussing contact with the dead.

Once again, there is a special lesson to be derived from this. When we are overcome by grief at a death, it becomes easy to abandon our responsibility to teach the young; it becomes easy to fall into a depression and forget that little eyes are watching us. Therefore, the Torah teaches us that even in face of pain and suffering, our responsibility to serve as an example to our children can never be abandoned. Our commitment to passing on Torah knowledge must transcend all other considerations.

We have personally witnessed this in the homes of our revered parents and grandparents, who, despite the pain of their Holocaust experiences, devoted themselves to imparting the light of Torah to a new generation. Upon arriving on these shores, our grandfather, HaRav HaGaon Avraham Halevi Jungreis, Zt”l built a yeshiva. Every morning, our grandmother, Rebbetzin Miriam Jungreis, a’h, stood at the entrance to the yeshiva, greeting every child with a home-baked cookie and asking them to make a bracha – to say a blessing over the treat.

Our father, HaRav Meshulem Halevi Jungreis, Zt”l, was a pioneering Orthodox rabbi in Long Island. Our mother, Rebbetzin Esther Jungreis, a’h, established the Hineni organization to inspire a new generation to Torah commitment. In the spirit of the teaching of our parsha, they did all this despite their personal pain and the suffering that they experienced in the concentration camps.

But life’s tests are never quite over. When our father learned in the course of a routine check-up that he had what appeared to be a malignant tumor, his immediate reaction was go to the home of his grandchildren and teach them Torah. Only then did he call our mother to inform her of the painful news. This, indeed, has been the imperative of our Jewish people. No matter how difficult or painful our personal situation might be, our commitment to teach Torah must remain unswerving.

Let us then never succumb to the forces of darkness, but rather, let us bear in mind that we have a mission to elevate ourselves and those who are near to us to G-d’s Divine calling.

(Hineni.org)

Keeping Your Marriage Strong during Quarantine

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4 practical suggestions on how to best use this time together to find peace with one another

By: Slovie Jungreis-Wolff

This has been a straining time for many couples. Crisis can bring out the best or worst in people. Living together 24/7, many in small spaces, with emotional and financial stress along with the fear of the unknown can give even the best relationships a whack.

Add kids, teens, housework, and homeschooling to the mix and it becomes easy to see the heavy toll this may be taking. Before Covid-19 we had a built-in breather – getting out to work, kids going to school, socializing with friends and extended family, but now we are left to spend days and nights constantly together. Many are frustrated and in a negative zone. (I am of course speaking to couples in this piece who were not in a severely dysfunctional relationship and seeking help before this situation).

How can we successfully navigate these days as couples?

  1. Focus on Needs and Goals

Though we may be a couple, it does not mean that we see every situation eye to eye. One may see catastrophe looming, the other may see no big deal. We can be in the same situation and have completely different views. Our unique perspective can bring us to conflicting places.

In order to keep our relationship strong, now is the time to remove confusion and identify needs.

Voice needs. If we need a partner to hear our views, to take health concerns more seriously, or to lighten up a bit so that we don’t fall into anxiety, then we should have a conversation and express ourselves.

Living together under quarantine also means that there is a lot more responsibility in the home. Instead of becoming frustrated and going into resentment mode, talk about how we will both be accountable. Divide the checklist. Consider each other’s schedules.

Who cooks? Who takes out the trash? Who does the laundry and then puts it away? If we have children living at home there is no reason that they not be a part of this conversation. Too many parents have told me that they feel sorry for their kids now, or that their children are sleeping, eating, snacking, constantly online, and then going to bed at ridiculous hours. It’s time to take back our homes with wisdom and guidance. This is what parenting is all about.

  1. Create Personal Space

Space is not just about a floor plan, it is also mental space. We each need room for reflection, quiet, work, exercise and down time. Just because I am asking for alone time does not mean that I don’t love you or want to be with you. It means that unwinding and finding self-time is healthy for us both.

Think about providing both physical and emotional space. If you live in tight quarters, can you set up a screen and a desk? Can you figure out a schedule so that both parents are not ‘on’ all day?

Getting into some sort of routine makes us feel as if we have regained some control and safety. Voice your feelings in a calm, private conversation. If we each carve out some alone time and create a schedule, we will feel less antagonistic and overwhelmed.

  1. Practice Kindness

In times of stress it becomes easy to say and do things that we regret. Kindness falls away without our realizing that we have become hardened. We over react. We take each other for granted. We forget ‘please’, ‘thank you’, and ‘would you like me to warm a slice of pizza for you, too?’

Go out of your way to be kind to your spouse. Give a good word, encouraging thought, a hug, even a smile is considered kindness. Express gratitude for the little things that become overlooked. Hold back from becoming that critical person. Don’t attack, belittle, and call names and shame. Yes, this is true for all times but especially now it becomes more vital to remember.

Don’t grow selfish. When you do for yourself, do for your spouse, too. This includes making your bed, a hot cup of coffee or a midafternoon snack. Not because you are counting on ‘payback’ but simply because you are kind. If you see that your spouse is down be extra sensitive. Use humor to lift spirits, be positive, forgive, apologize, stop blaming and find a way to express ‘I love you, we will make it through this’.

  1. Find a New Way of Connecting

Stop checking the news all day. No devices or corona conversation at meal times. Enough!

Transform this challenge into an opportunity. If you would have been asked: What would you do if you had free time together with your spouse? What would have been your response? Well, now you have it! Go for it!

Think about these days as a segue towards connection. Take the corona challenge. Rethink priorities, values and lifestyle. All those things you thought you needed have fallen away by the wayside. Now it’s just you and your spouse. What can you do together to bond more? Even if you have kids at home you must find the time and place for privacy. Create meaning in your days. Take an online Torah class together. Cook a meal, bake a dessert together. See the world online and plan a future vacation. Take a walk (safely of course). Put on music. Paint. Take an exercise class online. Do whatever it is that you love and do it together. Create an at home date night.

This is your chance to get creative. Turn darkness into light, bring joy home and use this time together to find peace with one another.

(Aish.com)

Understanding Lag B’Omer

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What lies behind this enigmatic festival? And why the bonfires?

By: Yair Danielsohn

In Israel, months before the advent of the festival of Lag B’Omer — the 33rd day of the Omer, the 49 days that bridge between Passover and Shavuot — one can see youngsters dragging all types of combustibles, from fallen trees to broken chairs to old mattresses. Their destination? The nearest empty lot, where they pile their treasured possessions to impossible heights and wait with eager anticipation until the night of Lag B’Omer, arguably their favorite time of year, when they turn the piles into enormous conflagrations. Ask anyone what the bonfires are for, and you’ll be told they are in celebration of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, a great sage who lived and taught approximately half a century after the destruction of the second Temple.

What lies behind this rather enigmatic festival of Lag B’Omer? What’s so special about the 33rd day of the Omer? And who was Rabbi Shimon, to whose name Lag B’Omer is inextricably tied, and why do we celebrate him? And why the bonfires?

 

Some Background

The first 33 days of the Omer are observed as a period of mourning. We do not take haircuts, perform weddings, or listen to music. What’s the mourning all about?

Rabbi Akiva, the towering sage of the Mishna, exerted a powerful influence on the Torah scholars of his day, to the point that he had 24,000 disciples. Great as the members of this group was, they had one short-coming: They failed to show proper love and respect for one another. The tragic consequence of this shortcoming was a brief but cataclysmic epidemic that claimed the lives of these students – all 24,000 of them. The period during which the epidemic took place was none other than the first 32 days of the Omer.

To get a better idea of the impact this tragedy had on the Jewish People for posterity, consider the following facts: All of the Torah that we possess and study today, with all of its interpretations, perspectives, dimensions and applications, is all the Torah of Rabbi Akiva. Although the Oral Torah always existed, each Torah personality who immerses himself in Torah adds his own understanding and flavor to Torah, thus enriching the Torah which will be passed on to the next generation. As we shall see, the Torah we have was transmitted to us by Rabbi Akiva via the five students whom he taught after the loss of his first group of disciples.

The Torah we study today is endless. One can study for a lifetime and not “finish” it. But it is not complete. There are whole areas and dimensions of Torah that are not satisfactorily explored; there is much argument and there are many areas of confusion. All of this might well have been different had we received the full breath of Rabbi Akiva’s Torah, as assimilated and interpreted by 24,000 disciples, along with their unique perspectives and understanding. The demise of the first group of students essentially resulted in our receiving only a fraction of Rabbi Akiva’s Torah. Instead of its full amplification by 24,000 great human beings, we have only the interpretations of five.

It is not so much the lives that were cut short that we mourn; after all, they wouldn’t be alive today even had they lived long lives! It is rather the lost dimensions of Torah, the lost worlds of Torah, that we mourn. We mourn our own lack of ability to connect fully to Torah which was caused by that loss.

 

Need Each Other

It is significant that the death of the first group students was the result of a lack of love and respect amongst themselves. The Oral Torah can only exist on the basis of continuous absorption and incorporation of new perspectives, interpretations, and applications. These new discoveries are unique to those who discover them, but then become the legacy of the entire Jewish people. Torah is only complete when enhanced by each and every Jew. No Jew on his own, no matter how smart, talented or advanced, can reach the totality of Torah. Therefore a prerequisite for connecting fully with the Torah is the ability to appreciate the contribution of another. As the Sages ask, leading into an invaluable teaching “Who is wise?” Their response: “One who learns from every person” (Ethics of the Fathers, 4:1).

The 33rd day of the Omer signified a new period in the life of Rabbi Akiva. The last students of his aborted legacy died, and he established a new venue for his legacy. This consisted of five sages. Their names were Rabbi Meir; Rabbi Yehuda; Rabbi Elazar; Rabbi Nechemiah; and Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai. All of these names are familiar to any student of Mishna or Talmud, but the most prominent among them is the sage Rabbi Shimon, about whom we shall learn more. (There is an opinion that Rabbi Shimon later died on the 33rd of the Omer, and we therefore celebrate his memory on that day.)

If these five new students were able to survive and keep the chain going, there must have been a qualitative difference between them and their fellow disciples of Rabbi Akiva. If the first group failed in their interpersonal relationships, the second were able to rectify that defect. Just as we mourn the dimensions of Torah lost through lack of appreciation for one another, so do we celebrate the reclaimed dimensions that were made possible by devotion to one another.

All of this transpired specifically during the Omer, the period of time leading up to our celebration of the receiving of the Torah at Sinai. This is because preparing for receiving the Torah is all about integration into the Jewish People. God did not give the Torah to me, you or any other individual. He gave it to the Jewish people as a whole. One who cannot put himself within the context of the Jewish people cannot connect to God’s gift of Torah.

So on a deeper level, we mourn that part of ourselves which refuses to recognize the fact that someone else might have something valuable to add to our lives or understanding of Torah. Once we have internalized the depth of the destruction this tendency can cause us, we are ready to begin again with a fresh awareness of the greatness of our peers and acquaintances. We are now ready to celebrate our integration into the totality of the Jewish people and to use that wholeness as background for understanding the Torah.

Additionally, we are ready to celebrate the re-establishment of Rabbi Akiva’s legacy, which is what sustains us in our commitment to Torah study and observance until this day. Rabbi Akiva was destined as the man who would transmit the Torah to posterity. If not for this re-establishment, there would be no Torah.

(Aish.com)

How Coronavirus Has Changed Observance of Jewish Life-Cycle Events

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Alexander and Vivan Rosemberg expected around 100 people join them at home to celebrate their son’s brit milah, but when that became impossible, far more friends and family from around the world joined them and Rafael Jacob on Zoom

From the joyful naming of a baby to the lonely burial of a parent, finding ways to carry on

By: Aharon Loschak

Everyone knows that Jewish life-cycle events are communal affairs. Be it a circumcision, a wedding, or unfortunately, a shiva house, Jews traditionally celebrate, and mourn, together. With the global pandemic of COVID-19 foisting social-distancing rules on billions of people worldwide and keeping them at home, Jews marking various stages of the lifecycle have hit upon an unprecedented dilemma: how?

Yet, as Jews from New York City to Johannesburg to rural Maine are rediscovering, the essence of Jewish life is not a miles-long guest lists or buffet tables heaping with food, but rather affirming the Jewish people’s bond with G‑d and carrying on the tradition that began at Sinai. The following stories tell the tale of a people carrying on their tradition under some of the most trying circumstances.

 

An Intercontinental ‘Brit Milah’

Alexander Rosemberg is the deputy regional director of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) in the New York and New Jersey region, and lives with his wife, Vivian, in Jersey City, N.J. This year was particularly special for them, as they were expecting their first child at the end of March. As both hail from large families, typical gatherings are always a big bash, the average Shabbat dinner incorporating 40 attendees. For the brit of their son, they were expecting nothing less than a party with a planned 100 or so people from around the world.

Family members abroad had plane tickets in hand, and everyone was waiting for the anticipated moment to arrive when cries of “Mazal tov!” could be heard, and everyone would sit together for the joyous seudat mitzvah meal.

And then things started to slowly clamp down. Work moved from the office to the home, the country entered into lockdown, and Alex was hearing from other expecting friends that they weren’t even letting expectant dads into labor and delivery wards.

It was Rabbi Levi Heber, their mohel—the trained professional scheduled to perform the circumcision—who first suggested to the Rosembergs that maybe they should consider scaling things down. While it was initially thought that the party was still on, albeit on a smaller scale, by the time Vivian and their new baby left the hospital, it was clear that this brit would have to be something entirely different.

“It was immediate family only,” Rosemberg  told Chabad.org. “We were all wearing gloves and masks, taking extreme measures to maintain maximum caution. While it was very small at home, I purchased a license for Zoom video conferencing, and between everyone who logged on, we were joined by probably 150 people or more.”So while the event at home was very small, the global audience was actually bigger than it would otherwise have been. Of course, the most important aspect of the celebration—a Jewish boy entering the covenant of Abraham—took place without a hitch.

“Did our new son, Rafael Jacob miss out? I don’t know,” said Rosemberg. “But we’re grateful that we were able to celebrate the simcha and still share it with so many people this way.”

Rabbi Jonathan Fox works for the Chevra Kadisha, the Jewish burial society, in Johannesburg, South Africa, where the organization assumes an outsized role of tending to the overall needs of not only those who have passed, but also the elderly and other populations requiring care. It is in that context that he serves as the rabbi for the residents of the Sandringham Gardens retirement home.

Never would he have imagined that their retirement home minyan would one day become a baby-naming hotspot for the global Jewish community.

As it turns out, the residents of Sandringham Gardens entered into lockdown at the very beginning of the crisis, not letting anyone in or out. The entire home has tested negative for the virus, so the administration saw no need to cancel the thrice daily minyan in the home.

As word got out that there is a COVID-safe minyan at the bottom tip of the African continent, requests started coming in to perform the duties that only a minyan can perform—for instance,naming newborn baby girls, which is done at the Torah on days it is read, Mondays, Thursdays or Shabbat.

At this point, Fox is naming a whole list of newborn babies across the globe three times a week. “We feel very privileged to provide this service,” he said. “On schedule for tomorrow, we have naming services for babies in Montreal, the United Kingdom and Israel.

With video recordings circulating on social media via WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram, this small minyan of elderly residents in South Africa are literally a connection point between the entire Jewish world.

From the beginning of the pandemic, as synagogues began closing in various locations, Chabad.org created a kaddish saying service in a similar, isolated location . Thousands of individuals have filled out the forms in multiple languages, and each morning kaddish is recited for the departed.

So while most may be stuck at home, the modern world affords ways for girls to be named and Kaddish said, safely, on the other side of the world.

 

Dancing With the Bride and Groom on Instagram

Jewish weddings are lovely affairs, with guests, spirits and a whole lot of hoisting young brides and grooms up in the air. Ilana Ybgi was waiting for that special moment, as she and her fiancé, Srulick, were planning their big day in a countryside cricket club in Shenly, England, for close family and friends. Both based in Brooklyn, N.Y., they were eagerly awaiting the moment that they would join up with family and friends and celebrate their wedding together.

As has become a familiar storyline, when the calendar turned to mid-March, Srulik phoned his fiancé and struck up the conversation about changing their plans. With U.S. travel bans in place from Europe, it was becoming clear that the wedding would probably have to be local, in New York, with family and friends having to miss the celebration.

It was March 12—a few weeks before the planned wedding on March 30 in London. After a flurry of phone calls, particularly with Devorah Benjamin of Chevrah Simchas Chosson VeKallah of Crown Heights, a wedding was arranged a mere week later on March 19.

“It was surreal to go from inviting so many people to telling them, ‘Don’t come!’ ” said Ilana. “Once we moved the wedding to New York and the situation developed to what it was, I was forced to tell my own mother not to come to my wedding.

“It’s a harsh reality. Our wedding was nothing like I would have ever imagined. If someone had told me that I would be holding my phone during my own wedding and putting the ceremony on Instagram, I would have never believed them! But that’s what happened.”

Ultimately, the wedding went on, and via the wonders of technology, many people joined in.

From the comfort of their living rooms, video attendees dressed up, donned makeup and danced the night away with the young couple establishing a new home in the People of Israel. For as much as a global pandemic can keep the Jewish people in their own homes, it cannot keep Jewish life from continuing..

             (Chabad.org)

On Tap: Breweries in the Pocono Mountains

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By: Rachel Camaerei

Whether trying new brews or buying your favorite, Pocono Mountains breweries have beer available to-go. Treat your taste buds by supporting local businesses; its a win-win!

The Poconos original brewpub, Barley Creek Brewing Company, has been brewing for over two decades in Tannersville. They brew their tap beers right on site and are served through their glycol chilled tap system. They also run a full-service restaurant, so you can order food as well.

Our breweries have made it easy for you to still get your drinks during this time, and some even offering curb-side pickup as well as food. Browse the map for brewery locations throughout the area.

Be sure to call ahead to the establishment to confirm current offerings. Discover to-go options and facts about breweries in the Poconos.

Breweries Map

Barley Creek Brewing Company

Here & Now Brewing Company

Jam Room Brewing Company

Mountain View Brewing Company

ShawneeCraft Brewing Company

Wallenpaupack Brewing Company

 

Barley Creek Brewing Company

Located on Main Street in Honesdale, Here & Now Brewing Company is inspired by the area’s seasons and resources, which are utilized in crafting their beers and food. They run a rotating tap list where some of their brews change regularly. They also create new menu dishes for guests to enjoy as well.

To-go: Growlers, crowlers, 24 and 4 packs and single cans, and offering food takeout

Fun Facts: The Poconos original brewpub, Barley Creek Brewing Company, has been brewing for over two decades in Tannersville. They brew their tap beers right on site and are served through their glycol chilled tap system. They also run a full-service restaurant, so you can order food as well.


Here & Now Brewing Company

To-go: Growlers, and food takeout

Fun Facts: Located on Main Street in Honesdale, Here & Now Brewing Company is inspired by the area’s seasons and resources, which are utilized in crafting their beers and food. They run a rotating tap list where some of their brews change regularly. They also create new menu dishes for guests to enjoy as well.

 

Jam Room Brewing Company

To-go: Growler and crowler fills

Jam Room Brewing Company in Newfoundland is “pouring the soundtrack to our lives. We live it. We brew it.” A group of friends with a passion for beer and music married the two into a one-of-a-kind business. The cleverly named brews will sound familiar, and taste even better from the local ingredients made to craft them.

Fun Facts: Jam Room Brewing Company in Newfoundland is “pouring the soundtrack to our lives. We live it. We brew it.” A group of friends with a passion for beer and music married the two into a one-of-a-kind business. The cleverly named brews will sound familiar, and taste even better from the local ingredients made to craft them.

 

Mountain View Brewing Company

Whether you prefer drinking by the glass or growler, Mountain View Brewing Company has the brew for you. Located in Stroudsburg, their house-made beers feature different bodies with sustainable elements. And when you’re hungry, grab a bite to eat from their on-site bistro.

To-go: Beer bottles, 4 packs and growlers, and bistro food takeout and delivery; see delivery criteria here. Also Take-and-Sip Program – 50% off all beer purchases

Fun Facts: Whether you prefer drinking by the glass or growler, Mountain View Brewing Company has the brew for you. Located in Stroudsburg, their house-made beers feature different bodies with sustainable elements. And when you’re hungry, grab a bite to eat from their on-site bistro.

 

ShawneeCraft Brewing Company

“True to nature, true to the craft” is ShawneeCraft Brewing Company’s motto, which shows through their innovation and creation. Based in Shawnee on Delaware, their Tap Room serves up to ten craft beers on tap in addition to their canned beers, and pizza, pretzels and garlic knots to munch on.

To-go: Growlers and 4 packs from The Gem and Keystone Brewpub

Fun Facts:  “True to nature, true to the craft” is ShawneeCraft Brewing Company’s motto, which shows through their innovation and creation. Based in Shawnee on Delaware, their Tap Room serves up to ten craft beers on tap in addition to their canned beers, and pizza, pretzels and garlic knots to munch on.

 

Wallenpaupack Brewing Company

To-go: 14-day Quarantine Pack, growlers and crowlers, and food takeout

Just off the shores of Lake Wallenpaupack in Hawley sits a brewery that’s been making waves in the industry. Wallenpaupack Brewing Company features dynamic craft beer with unique tastes brewed on-site. A robust food menu is available that includes locally sourced flavors and ingredients, and they even host a brunch menu.

Fun Facts: Just off the shores of Lake Wallenpaupack in Hawley sits a brewery that’s been making waves in the industry. Wallenpaupack Brewing Company features dynamic craft beer with unique tastes brewed on-site. A robust food menu is available that includes locally sourced flavors and ingredients, and they even host a brunch menu.

We suggest calling our breweries to confirm current offerings and operation status. Pocono Brewery Company is one of our breweries who is closed at the moment, and will reopen at their own discretion per the Governor’s orders.

You can also contact our wineries and distilleries to find out their takeout policies during this time. Local restaurants are also offering takeout and delivery options as well, find more information here. Don’t forget to drink responsibly and be safe.

AUTHOR: RACHEL CA­MAEREI

Experience the beauty of the Pocono Mountains from the comfort of your home. Watch our live cameras and soak in the sounds and sights of the area.

Rachel is the Communications Manager for the Pocono Mountains Visitors Bureau. As a native to the Poconos, Rachel works to rediscover the beautiful place she calls home. Blogging for the bureau since 2017, she’s able to pursue her passions for writing, learning and traveling. When she’s not sharing her stories, this Penn State alum enjoys hiking, yoga and photography. Keep up with her blog posts on our website and social media platforms, or reach out to her at [email protected].

Wet your whistle with craft beverages locally sourced in the Pocono Mountains.

FDA Approves Remdesivir as Effective Therapy Against Coronavirus

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In this March 2020 photo provided by Gilead Sciences, rubber stoppers are placed onto filled vials of the investigational drug remdesivir at a Gilead manufacturing site in the United States. Given through an IV, the medication is designed to interfere with an enzyme that reproduces viral genetic material. (Gilead Sciences via AP)

By: Matthew Perrone & Marilynn Marchione

U.S. regulators on Friday allowed emergency use of the first drug that appears to help some COVID-19 patients recover faster, a milestone in the global search for effective therapies against the coronavirus.

The Food and Drug Administration cleared Gilead Science’s intravenous drug for hospitalized patients with “severe disease,” such as those experiencing breathing problems requiring supplemental oxygen or ventilators.

President Donald Trump announced the news at the White House alongside Gilead CEO Daniel O’Day and Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen Hahn.

“This was lightning speed in terms of getting something approved” said Hahn, calling the drug “an important clinical advance.”

The FDA acted after preliminary results from a government-sponsored study showed that the drug, remdesivir, shortened the time to recovery by 31%, or about four days on average, for hospitalized COVID-19 patients.

Those given the drug were able to leave the hospital in 11 days on average vs. 15 days for the comparison group. The drug may also help avert deaths, but that effect is not yet large enough for scientists to know for sure.

Dr. Sameer Khanijo, a critical care specialist, said he wants to see additional studies to clarify the drug’s benefit.

“I don’t think this is a cure yet, but I think it’s starting to point us in the right direction,” said Khanijo of North Shore University Hospital in New York. “As a society it’s nice to have something that will help stem the tide of this disease.”

The FDA said preliminary results from the government study warranted Friday’s decision, though regulators acknowledged “there is limited information known about the safety and effectiveness of using remdesivir.”

The drug’s side effects include potential inflammation of the liver and problems related to its infusion, which could lead to nausea, vomiting, sweating and low blood pressure. Information about dosing and potential safety issues will be provided to physicians and patients, the FDA said.

The National Institutes of Health’s Dr. Anthony Fauci said Wednesday the drug would become a new standard of care for severely ill COVID-19 patients. Remdesivir, which blocks an enzyme the virus uses to copy its genetic material, has not been tested on people with milder illness.

The FDA authorized the drug under its emergency powers to quickly speed the availability of experimental drugs, tests and other medical products during public health crises.

In normal times the FDA requires “substantial evidence” of a drug’s safety and effectiveness, usually through one or more large, rigorously controlled patient studies. But during public health emergencies the agency can waive those standards and require only that an experimental treatment’s potential benefits outweigh its risks.

Gilead has said it will donate its currently available stock of the drug and is ramping up production to make more. It said the U.S. government would coordinate distribution of remdesivir to parts of the country that need it most.

No drugs are currently FDA-approved for treating the coronavirus, and remdesivir will still need formal approval.

The FDA can convert the drug’s status to full approval if Gilead or other researchers provide additional data of remdesivir’s safety and effectiveness.

“This is a very, very early stage so you wouldn’t expect to have any sort of full approval at this point,” said Cathy Burgess, an attorney specializing in FDA issues. “But obviously they want to get this out to patients as quickly as possible.”

The FDA previously allowed narrow use of a malaria drug, hydroxychloroquine, for hospitalized patients who were unable to take part in ongoing studies of the medication. Trump repeatedly promoted it as a possible COVID-19 treatment, but no large high-quality studies have shown the drug works for that and it has significant safety concerns.

(AP)

With Many States Reopening, Coronavirus Testing Levels Still Too Low, Experts Say

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By: Robin Foster & EJ Mundell

A new analysis finds inadequate levels of testing for the coronavirus in 60% of states, many of which are actively reopening after weeks of lockdown.

The analysis, conducted by the Associated Press, uses a 2% testing rate per month — a rate advised by federal officials that many public health experts still feel falls short.

In a recent White House briefing, officials said each state would receive enough testing materials to test 2.6% of their populations in both May and June. Representatives of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services also offered another number — 2% — without explaining the reason for the discrepancy between the two rates.

But according to the AP analysis, right now just 40% of states can even meet the lower 2% threshold for testing. The news agency’s analysis is based on data on the average number of new daily tests conducted over the past seven days in a particular state. Data comes from the COVID Tracking Project and includes numbers up to April 30.

Many states that are either already actively reopening businesses or plan to soon — Colorado, Florida, South Carolina, Texas and Georgia — have not met the 2% testing threshold, the AP analysis finds.

Many health experts believe the 2% and 2.6% testing thresholds offered up by the government are insufficient to help monitor and curb coronavirus spread, and don’t take into account current U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines on who should be tested.

“Why don’t they say, ‘We’ll test everybody with any symptoms of coronavirus and all their contacts?’” Dr. James Curran, a former assistant U.S. surgeon general who worked at CDC for 25 years, told the AP. “If that amounts to 2% that’s fine, but the guidelines are not to test 2%. The guidelines are to test who needs it.”

 

Promise of remdesivir

U.S. coronavirus cases passed 1.1 million on Sunday as the death toll neared 66,500, according to The New York Times.

There was one note of good news: On Friday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved emergency use of the first drug that seems to boost recovery among COVID-19 patients.

Remdesivir, Gilead Sciences’ intravenous antiviral medication, is to be used for hospitalized patients with “severe disease,” such as those who need supplemental oxygen or ventilators to breathe, the AP reported.

“This was lightning speed in terms of getting something approved,” FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn said during a media briefing Friday, calling the drug “an important clinical advance.”

The agency based its decision on the results of a government study that showed remdesivir shortened the time to recovery by 31% for COVID-19 patients in the hospital, the AP reported.

Those given the drug were able to leave the hospital in 11 days, on average, versus 15 days for the comparison group. The drug may also help avoid deaths, but there is not yet enough evidence to prove that definitively, the AP reported.

That wasn’t the only good news to come from the medical front of the coronavirus pandemic this week.

On Thursday, the White House announced an initiative that hopes to produce a COVID-19 vaccine that could be available nationwide by January.

President Donald Trump said it is not too optimistic to try to produce roughly 300 million doses of vaccine in eight months, enough for all Americans, the Washington Post reported.

 

A vaccine for all by January?

“No, I’m not overpromising. I don’t know who said it, but whatever the maximum is, whatever you can humanly do, we’re going to have. And we hope we’re going to come up with a good vaccine,” Trump said during a coronavirus task force briefing Thursday.

Even the shorter timeline still means there would be no full protection from the new coronavirus until after most Americans are likely to have returned to work or school.

Dubbed “Operation Warp Speed,” the goal is to produce hundreds of millions of doses by January, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious diseases expert, said Thursday.

“We want to go quickly, but we want to make sure it’s safe and it’s effective,” he said on the “Today” show. “I think that is doable if things fall in the right place.”

That’s likely welcome news to the millions of businesses that have had to shut down or curtail operations during six weeks of stay-at-home orders, with 3.8 million Americans added to the nation’s jobless rolls on Thursday. That brings the six-week total to more than 30 million newly unemployed, the Times reported.

Trump also signed an executive order earlier this week that forces beleaguered meat processing plants to stay open so the country’s food supply isn’t threatened.

The order used the Defense Production Act to classify meat processing as critical infrastructure, to try to keep chicken, pork and other meat flowing to supermarket coolers, the AP reported.

More than 20 meatpacking plants have been shuttered under pressure from local authorities and their own workers because of the virus. Others have slowed production as workers have fallen ill or stayed home to avoid getting sick, the wire service said.

 

To reopen or not to reopen

Social distancing orders remain a patchwork across the United States. Governors in hard-hit New York and Michigan are keeping stay-at-home orders in place until at least mid-May, while their counterparts in Georgia, Oklahoma and Alaska have already allowed certain businesses to reopen, the AP reported.

New York remains the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak in the United States, though deaths and hospitalizations continued to decline, CBS News reported. The Navy hospital ship Comfort left New York City’s harbor this week after treating 182 patients during its 30-day mission.

In preparation for a reopening in the coming weeks, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo has announced the state will implement the “most aggressive” antibody testing program in the country, CBS News reported.

He has also issued an executive order stating all New Yorkers must have a mask or mouth and nose covering when they are not maintaining social distancing in public, CBS News reported.

According to a Times tally, the top five states in coronavirus cases as of Sunday are: New York with over 318,000 cases; New Jersey with nearly 124,000; Massachusetts with more than 66,000; Illinois with over 58,000; and California with more than 54,000.

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the re-closure of beaches in Orange County on Friday. Crowds had formed on those beaches last weekend, stoking renewed fears of viral transmission.

“My job as governor is to keep you safe,” Newsom said. “And when our health folks tell me they can’t promise that if we promote another weekend like we had, then I have to make this adjustment.”

However, Newsom sounded a positive note about the state’s reopening plans on Friday, the Post reported.

“We said ‘weeks, not months,’ about four or five days ago,” Newsom said during his daily briefing. “I want to say ‘many days, not weeks.’ As long as we continue to be prudent and thoughtful in certain modifications, I think we’ll be making some announcements.”

            (Healthday News)

Jewish Initiative Crowdfunds Gear for Health-Care Workers to Protect Against Coronavirus

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AEPi brothers Raphael Eidelman, Tal Ankori and Noah Ben David pick up supplies for Jewish Family Services in Los Angeles. Credit: Courtesy.

Immediate access to lifesaving protective personal gear like masks, gloves and gowns is the best defense against the pandemic for both workers and the people they serve.

By: Josh Hasten

With more than 1 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the United States to date, many of the hardest-hit states include those with large Jewish populations—New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Illinois, California. As a result, Jewish nonprofit organizations in the heath-care arena, including nursing homes and assisted-living centers, hospice facilities and those who provide homecare for Holocaust survivors and other vulnerable populations, have witnessed overwhelming fatality rates as a result of the pandemic.

Unwillingly to sit idly by, a group of “next generation” young communal Jewish leaders and heads of nonprofit Jewish organizations have mobilized, along with the mainstream Jewish community, to launch a world-wide emergency campaign—called “Pledge to Protect”—to purchase and deliver life-saving personal protective equipment (PPE) to the above-mentioned front-line protectors.

Alex Jakubowski, executive director at KAHAL, an organization that connects Jewish students studying abroad with experiences in their host communities, told JNS that in February that “KAHAL saw the writing on the wall.”

“Since we have students in China and around the world, we decided to change our whole organization and become a COVID-19 support organization,” he said.

Jakubowski says he realized that he was hearing pleas for help over and over again from the same segments of the health-care community. “There is a global shortage of PPE equipment in nursing homes and hospice care. These frontline workers, especially those outside of a hospital setting, are not given equipment by state governments. They are not the first priority. We also learned that this equipment needs to be imported at outrageous prices.”

Utilizing KAHAL’s global network and partnering with other Jewish organizations, a well-oiled procurement, shipment and distribution chain for PPE equipment was set up quickly to assist caregivers at more than 200 Jewish institutions throughout the country that support not only Jewish workers, but people of all faiths.

Thanks to the initiative, as of April 28, nearly 2 million pieces of PPE have been delivered to local agencies and communities—surgical mask, gloves, gowns and other equipment—with the goal of reducing the risk of transmission of the novel coronavirus. All of this come even before the “hard launch” of the campaign, as much more is needed.

 

‘Without that gear, it could have cost lives’

Jay Feldman, managing director at the Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity Foundation (AEPi), told JNS that Jakubowski reached out and got his organization on board to work together on the critical project. “We have a wide network, including 90,000 alumni. I was able to put KAHAL in touch with some of our people to start setting up a data network, and to manage and plot the distribution operation.”

At the same time, he added, “we realized, we needed someone for that last mile—the actual delivery. So we tapped into our student network and alumni, and they stepped up as volunteers to actually pick up and deliver the equipment to the institutions.”

AEPi CEO James Fleischer noted that “the mission of Alpha Epsilon Pi International Fraternity—to develop the future leaders of the world’s Jewish communities—is in clear evidence in this program. We are proud that our undergraduate and alumni brothers are playing a vital role in this amazing project. … The fact that so many of these undergraduates recognize the needs of their global community and the importance of tikkun olam at a time like this, means that we are doing our job for the future of Jewish communities.”

Jakubowski said the PPE has been ordered from places all over the world, including China, Hong Kong, Mexico and other countries. One of the obstacles, he says, is fierce competition, as well as delays in shipping and receiving the equipment.

“When shipments are delayed, we must create opportunities to get these agencies what they need,” he said.

Jakubowski is quick to praise AEPi for stepping up to the plate. In one instance, he says that thousands of disposable gowns worn to treat those in isolation needed to be dropped off. He adds that “alum Jordan Elcott created the initiative with AEPi chapters, and got the gowns and more items delivered. Without that gear, it could have cost lives.”

Jordan’s father, Shalom Elcott, works as the philanthropic curator at Samueli Foundation, a family foundation focused on health, education, the Jewish community and Israel. He has been part of the managing team on the campaign, working with Jakubowski, Feldman and representatives from other organizations.

As someone who has had many more years of experience in the nonprofit sector, he has much praise for such quick mobilization during an intense time of crisis.

He says Jakubowski was able to get mainstream and well-established large umbrella Jewish organizations on board, such as the Jewish Federations of North America and the Jewish Funders Network, to be active partners in the campaign. “In just five weeks, he brought longtime established organizations together in a powerful partnership with Jewish leaders from around the world.”

Jakubowski says that $408,000 has been raised so far for the campaign during this “soft launch” stage, with the official crowdfunding aspect of the campaign having commenced on April 29, Israel’s Independence Day. The campaign goal is currently $3 million.

Elcott says that of the total amount raised so far, it is remarkable that more than $100,000 was donated by people living in Israel. “The Jewish Funders Network in Israel has been extremely generous even as demands in Israel [as a result of the virus] are herculean.”

Perhaps most importantly are the results of the campaign on the ground, as reported by the agencies themselves that are being assisted during these difficult and frightening times.

According to a representative of the Kline Galland Home for the aged in Seattle, “we just tested all our residents this weekend and came back with ZERO positive cases. We all know this is 100 percent because we have the PPE to treat our patients safely and responsibly. You all are saving lives.”

(JNS.org)

Israel Will Invest $60M in Coronavirus Research, Netanyahu Tells World Leaders

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(TPS) Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu participated in the leaders’ conference on dealing with the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic with the European Union’s (EU) leadership and leaders from other countries, at the personal invitation of EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

The leaders’ summit focused on improving the international efforts to develop solutions for dealing with the Coronavirus, with an emphasis on developing and producing a vaccine and developing drugs and equipment for patients.

Leaders from around the world, senior officials from international organizations including the Gates Fund were in attendance. The leaders discussed fostering cross-country cooperation in finding medical tools in the struggle against the Coronavirus.

Netanyahu announced during the online meeting that Israel will invest $60 million in research and development in the fields of diagnostics, therapies and developing drugs and a vaccine for the Coronavirus.

Netanyahu told the conference that “defeating the global pandemic demands a global partnership.”

He noted Israel’s “relatively low” casualties from the virus which are the result of “early action to contain the disease, advance technology to locate those infected, first-rate medical professionals and a disciplined population that largely adhered to the mitigation policies” enacted by Israel.

He underscored that the epidemic “is far from over. At best, we’re only at the end of the beginning,” and Israel is now trying to find the “right balance” between protecting the health of its citizens by preventing another spike in infections while enabling the reopening of the economy.

He called on the European leaders to “work together on improving diagnostics, accelerating therapies and ultimately developing a vaccine.”

He expressed confidence that “Israel’s leading research institutions, its world-renowned scientists and our unique culture of innovation can enable us to play an important role in advancing solutions on all three fronts.”

Hours after the conference, the Israel Institute for Biological Research (IIBR) in Ness Ziona announced a significant breakthrough in finding an antidote to the Coronavirus.

The researchers have developed an antibody that attacks the virus uniquely and can neutralize it in a patient’s body.

“We hope to work with other countries to leverage our unique capabilities to find solutions for the benefit of all,” he said.

Among the participating heads of government and ministers were French President Emanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Jordanian King Abdullah II, Omani Health Minister Dr. Ahmed Al-Saidi, Saudi Arabian Health Minister Dr. Tawfiq bin Fawzan Al-Rabiah, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and World Economic Forum Chairman Klaus Schwab. (TPS)

 

KISS’s Gene Simmons Learns of Mother’s Plight During the Holocaust

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Gene Simmons of the band Kiss, left, mugs for photographers as bandmate Paul Stanley is interviewed backstage at the "American Idol" finale in Los Angeles, Wednesday, May 20, 2009. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

By Hellen Zaboulani

Israeli-born rock singer, Gene Simmons, says his mother barely ever spoke of her experiences in the holocaust and the Nazi Concentration camps. In time for Yom Shoah or Holocaust Remembrance Day, a German newspaper has provided him with much documentation about her ordeal in the holocaust, as reported by the Jerusalem Post.

 

Simmons, the now 70-year-old heavy metal singer, songwriter, record producer, and television personality was born as Chaim Witz in Haifa. His mother was Florence Klein, a survivor of the Nazi Concentration Camps, and his father, Ferenc “Feri” Yehiel Witz, was a carpenter.  He has said that in his youth his family was “dirt poor”.  He moved to New York City with his mother when he was 9 years-old, after his parents divorced.   After college he joined several bands, the final of which was Kiss, in which he was the band’s front man, as well as its most outspoken member.

 

His mother has since passed away, at the age of 93, in the United States.  She had been 19-years-old when American troops had liberated the Mauthausen camp on May 5, 1945. The newspaper, Bild am Sonntag presented Simmons with 100 pages of information concerning his mother’s time in the holocaust, including her impact statement, just in time for the 75th anniversary of her liberation.

 

In her statement to the former Restitution Office in Koblenz, Klein had written: “In November 1944, I was brought to the Ravensbruck concentration camp. I lived there in block no. 21 and worked in the fields, gathering potatoes outside the camp. I wore old civilian clothes with a white oil (paint) cross painted on the back, in a camp surrounded by barbed wire and guarded by the SS.”  Klein got transferred to the Venusberg subcamp of the Flossenburg concentration camp in January 1945.  She had arrived at Mauthausen that March.

“She was strong,” Simmons said in an interview with Bild, published on Sunday, as he read over the documents. “She fought all of this on her own.”  Among the documents he received, was his grandmother’s name, Ester Blau, and that she died in the Nazi gas chambers.

 

Simmons took the initiative to speak about the holocaust, warning that people should not forget what happened.  “It can happen again and again. That’s why you have to talk about everything,” he said. “When Jews are advised to no longer wear the kippah on the streets. At least this is being addressed. The same applies to the Muslims. As long as you talk about things, there is a chance. When you see cockroaches in the kitchen, you must point the light at them so you can see them clearly. And you must drive them out of the light.”

Bklyn Born Jewish Comedian’s Cousin Mistakenly Buried in Catholic Cemetery

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by Justin Caper

Comedian Elayne Boosler says her elderly Jewish cousin, who died last month, inexplicably got saddled with a pricey Christian burial package while in a Brooklyn nursing home, The City reported.

“Now my beautiful Jewish cousin is clutching rosary beads after a fake funeral that never — couldn’t have — happened because of coronavirus,” Boosler, who grew up in Sheepshead Bay, told THE CITY from her California home.

The family was never notified, and after three weeks of calling, they finally got through to the facility, Elayne Boosler wrote on Facebook. Nursing home officials said Buschell had died on April 15, according to Boosler.

By then, Buschell had already been interred at Forest Green Park Cemetery in Morganville, Monmouth County, which charged her with a $15,000 Catholic funeral package, the media outlet reported.

Despite no one being present for the funeral, the burial included costs for $600 flowers, $34 for bridge and tunnel tolls, and a $595 limousine, as well as $95 for makeup and $400 for clothes, Boosler wrote on Facebook.

The City reported: The ordeal began, Boosler recalled, when her cousin Harriet Saltzman phoned her from Florida on April 14 and said, “Are you sitting down? Pull the chair closer to the table in case you fall over.”

Saltzman told her that she had been trying to reach their mutual first cousin Dorothea Buschell at the Hamilton Park Nursing & Rehabilitation Center in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, to wish her a happy 83rd birthday.

When no one answered in Buschell’s room, Saltzman said she began leaving voicemails at the main number, but no one returned her calls for weeks.

Finally, on April 14, a frazzled staffer who happened to pick up the phone said, “Oh, no one called you yesterday? Uh, she died this morning.”

“And then Harriet said, ‘Why would someone have called yesterday if she died this morning?’,” Boosler said.

“That’s right folks, they buried my Jewish cousin, who never wore makeup & never spent more than $25 on an outfit, who always tipped 20% and would have known to take Queensboro Bridge to avoid tolls, IN A CATHOLIC CEMETERY HOLDING A ROSARY, WITH A $16,000 FAKE FUNERAL THAT NEVER HAPPENED,” Boosler wrote on Facebook.

Boosler said she had ensured in paperwork as recently as August 2018 that her cousin would be buried at New Montefiore Cemetery in Farmingdale.

“She had a burial plot (Jewish) next to her mother, sister & dad, which I myself reaffirmed was still in her record when I visited her August 2018,” Boosler wrote.

Richard J. Brum, who represents the Allure Group, the company that owns Hamilton Park nursing home, declined to comment on Buschell’s situation, citing resident privacy concerns, The City reported

Kehila Chapels of Brighton Beach, which claimed Buschell’s remains, didn’t respond to a request for comment, the outlet said.

In 1986, Boosler became the first woman to get her own one-hour comedy special on cable when Showtime aired Party of One. Having no credit cards or borrowing power, Boosler saved her money to produce the special herself when cable executives told her that they did not believe people would tune in to see a woman do an hour of comedy. She successfully toured for 50 weeks a year performing a two-hour comedy show. She was discovered by Andy Kaufman and was close frinds with the legendary comedian  Boosler was born into a Jewish immigrant family and raised in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn.