@the source homepage Issue #38
Bar and Bat Mitzvah in Israel: The Ultimate Family Sourcebook,
by Deborah Rosenbloom and Judith Isaacson
Updated contact information will be sent
upon request by e-mail.

Double-Pronged Mitzvah

7: Gifts and More Gifts

6: Ben's Teffilin Tiyul

5: Bar Mitzvah Gibush

Bar Mitzvah in the Wake of Terrorism

4: The Magic Age of 13

3: Ben's Bar Mitzvah

2: Ben's Bar Mitzvah

Lila's Bat Mitzvah. 1

New Online Diary: Ben's Bar Mitzvah

Online Diary of a Bat Mitzvah Planning Parent

Post Bat Mitzvah Reflections

Anita Jacobs
Portraits in Passion: Vision and Values of American-Israeli Women


Passion and faith as well as common sense, guts, integrity, tenacity, business, leadership and people skills (plus luck and good health) are shared characteristics of the women included
in Portraits in Passion: Vision and Values of American-Israeli Women, Anita Jacobs, author of the recently published book, told @TheSource Israel. ``Passion and faith fuel success'' and these women all have faith in themselves, in people generally and in the future of the State of Israel.

``Values enrich success'' she continued, and identified four key values she found these women share: ``kol yisrael aravim z'lzeh'' -- all Israel is
responsible for one another; kavod ha'brit -- respect for one another; inclusiveness -- reaching out to the entire community; education; and diligence. The stories are inspiring and motivating and each demonstrates the power of an individual to make the
world a better place.

The book includes the stories of twenty-one women including Judith Edelman-Green, who created a program enabling special needs children to become bnai mitzvah;
Sari Rivkin
, founder of Yedid: The Association for Community Empowerment, assisting the disenfranchised to secure government services, educating them on the values of democracy and pluralism, and
advocating policy changes on their behalf and Barbara Bloom
Silverman,
who created A Package from Home, sending thousands of care packages to combat soldiers and to soldiers without families in Israel.

Dr. Jacobs identifies ``American know-how'' as key to their successes. Although it is probable that all would have been outstanding achievers in the US, she thinks that their missions
would not have been as well defined. Anita Jacobs hopes that the women will serve as role models for bat mitzvah age girls as they think about their futures and the contributions they will make to their communities.

While she hopes to ultimately produce a video about these women's work, until that time this book can be used as a resource in religious schools, bat mitzvah classes, and seminars. Dr. Jacobs conducted her research in 2001 as a Melton Senior Educator Fellow
at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is currently the president of the National Center for Effective Speaking and is the former director of the New Jersey-Israel Chamber of Commerce.

Text by Deborah  Rosenbloom.



















[an error occurred while processing this directive]