Trick or Treating in the Holy Land

Trick or Treating in the Holy Land

The first time I celebrated Halloween abroad was in college when I spent a semester in India. Unsure what to do with ourselves but resolute in our determination to acknowledge the pagan holiday in one way or another, we got gussied up and went to a fancy bar on the rooftop of a luxury hotel. [...]

Israeli Food: A Primer

Israeli Food: A Primer

Last week marked my one year anniversary of living in Israel. Prior to moving here, I had never even visited the country, so was not entirely sure what to expect. As a food writer, I was most excited about one thing: the food. As a fairly young country, Israeli cuisine is something that is still [...]

Reflections on Home

Reflections on Home

Home is a funny thing. For the first 18 years of my life, home was the one bedroom apartment I shared with my mother, father, and sister in Manhattan. And that was it. I never went to summer camp, and my parents didn’t have a “country house” like some of the other families. We didn’t [...]

Alone in the Desert with Camels

Alone in the Desert with Camels

As a fiercely independent woman, it felt odd when my husband and I packed up and moved to Be’er Sheva, Israel so he could attend medical school. I had always been the one leading the travel charge, packing up to travel through India or China or drive cross-country with friends. But since we were moving [...]

A Different Kind of Siren

A Different Kind of Siren

I’ve become accustomed to the sound of rocket sirens, the blaring noise that wakes you up in the middle of the night, prying you from the depths of REM sleep, urging you to get to your safe place within 60 seconds. I thought growing up in Manhattan meant that I was used to sirens, but [...]

Sharpen Your Elbows and Other Tips for Riding the Bus in Israel

Sharpen Your Elbows and Other Tips for Riding the Bus in Israel

A country smaller than the state of New Jersey, Israel is immensely easy to travel around. One could drive from the northernmost tip in the Galilee to the southernmost point in Eilat – practically to Egypt and Jordan – in less than six hours. While rental cars are fairly inexpensive, gas prices are exorbitant and [...]

Learning to Live with (but not love) the Bomb

I was in a dark yoga room when I heard the sirens. I’d heard them once before, when they ran a test, because I live in a place where instead of fire drills school children have bomb drills and line up to go to the bomb shelter. This time I was in such a daze [...]

These Boots Were Made for Walking

When I recently packed my bags to move to Israel, my hiking boots were one of the only pairs of shoes to make the cut. When I pulled them out of the closet a few weeks ago for a trip to Mitzpe Ramon, I was quickly reminded of all the places they have been. It [...]

Learning to Say (and Admit) “I Am a New Immigrant”

Anee olah hadasha. I am a new immigrant. This was one of the first things I learned to say in my Hebrew ulpan, or intensive language class. I had been in Israel for a month, but it had yet to occur to me that I might be an immigrant. I didn’t make Aliyah (which literally [...]