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September 25, 2007
20 Things I Love About Israel
By Rabbi Leiby Burnham
1. Being able to speak to G-d on a local call. There is simply no place in the world, with the palpable sanctity of the Kotel, Home of G-d.

2. The fact that Israel, like G-d, gives the Right of Return to all Jews regardless of background, denomination, race, ethnicity, or economic strata.

3. The ability to traverse the entire country in one day, while passing through deserts, metropolises, mountains, coastal plains and orange groves. You can start your day skiing down Mt. Chermon, then hike through a forested wadi to the Banias Waterfall, and finish it off scuba diving in Eilat!

4. The fact that on Shabbos, you can feel Shabbos in the air. The streets are for people, families, and Shabbos, not cars and buses.

5. The ability to have a taxi driver who quotes Gemaras and the parsha, the way an American taxi driver would talk about last night's Yankee game!

6. Let's not forget the other taxi driver we love so much. The one who is your father, psychologist, rabbi, fashion consultant, political pundit, financial advisor, and sommelier. Or at least he thinks he is.

7. Every 4 Amot you walk you in Israel, you get a mitzvah

8. Falafel, schwarma, laffa, chumus, Kosher KFC, sufganiyot, baguettes, French crepes, Massov's, and Fro Yo!

9. There are so many mitzvos we can only keep in Israel, including shmitta, terumos, and ma'asrot. The gemara (Sotah 14A) tells us that this was the reason Moshe wanted to enter the Land of Israel. It was not to enjoy the physical pleasures of the land, but to be able to keep the mitzvot ha'tluyot ba'aretz, the mitzvot contingent on the Land.

10. It is the only place in the world that any tourist can spend an afternoon volunteering for an organization that gives out thousands of tons of food each year to economically challenged Jewish families.

11. You can pray with Adam, Chavah, Avram, Sara, Yitzchak, Rivka, Ya'akov, Leah, Rachel, Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, the Rambam, the Beis Yosef, Baba Sali, Rav Shach. You can even learn in the same spot where the Arizall learned, and use his personal mikva.

12. If you go to the Dead Sea, you can see the lowest point on earth. How often do you see anything that holds a world record?

13. It is the only country in the world where you can find a phonebook that has 85 pages just for G'machs, free loan societies (with an average of 35 Gmachs per page!). These g'machs offer everything from chairs and tables for simchas, to tools, medicines, bridal gowns, rooms available for guests, crutches, pack-and-plays, space heaters, mother's milk, bentchers, Dead Sea mud, Shabbos food....

14. The calendar follows the Jewish holidays. People are always off for the Yomim Tovim, Shabbos, and fast days. Chanukah shopping is really Chanukah shopping.

15. The fruit is fresh, crisp, unprocessed, flavor-filled, luscious, and divine. Every box of Israeli fruit should have a stamp on it, proclaiming "Made in G-d's Land, by G-d, for You!"

16. For six months a year, you never have to worry that your plans will be ruined by rain. For the other six months, you can see people who are actually happy to see it raining.

17. You can sit on a bus and meet Jews from tens of countries, from every continent.

18. Every public building has a mezuzah.

19. On a public bus, the sometimes written and sometimes unwritten rule is that the first two rows are reserved for the elderly.

20. G-d always says it better than me, so let me quote Him;
(Deut. 11:12) A land that Ha-shem, your G-d, looks after; the eyes of Ha-shem, your G-d, are always upon it, from the year's beginning until the year's end.



Leiby Burnham, LMSW, is a rabbi, psychotherapist, and writer. He lives in Detroit with his wife, an ICU nurse, who is on strict orders to "leave her patients at work" and their two daughters, Orah and Shifra. Rabbi Burnham works for the Jean and Theodore Weiss Partners in Torah program of Yeshiva Beth Yehudah, where he does community outreach, and runs a Jewish educational programs at University of Michigan, Wayne State, and Oakland University. He taught learning-disabled high school students for eight years in NYC, while receiving Rabbinical training at Shor Yoshuv Institute, and obtaining his Masters in Social Work from Yeshiva University.


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Recent Comments

I was just in Israel this past summer for three weeks, and I agree with everything that was writtten. As my friend Michal said to me "Even the garbage is Jewish" There isn't a thing in Israel that I don't like, except for Tel Aviv smelling like urine. Prior to my last visit I was there in 1975, Although so much has changed, so much has stayed the same.

Ava Block-Super posted on 10/12 at 01:00 AM.

I love Israel. This article makes me yearn for its sanctity, its holiness and purity, especially on Shabbos.

Zissi posted on 10/12 at 01:02 AM.

i miss israel so much and after reading this i want to go back this second!!!!

Jane posted on 10/12 at 01:59 AM.

I am going to Israel for my son's wedding on December.
This article was quite emotional to me.
I am sure that I'll love to be in Israel again after 40 years!

Clara Chalom posted on 10/12 at 02:50 AM.


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