Now that we're over a month into Kaveret, we've now established a pretty stable weekly schedule! I've decided to split this post into four important aspects of Kaveret: Messima, Yom Kvutza and Yom Kaveret, Poland Seminar, and Karmiel Adventures!
Messima
On Sundays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays, I travel to Tveria, a city along the Kinneret (Sea of Galilee), to do messima at a middle school with Max and Julia, two of my kvutzamates. Messima (which literally means "mission") is work that the movement sees as actualizing its values. With the guiding of our melaveh (accompanier), Orr, the three of us do our messima by running peulot for kids to not only teach them English, but to encourage them to question their identities and the way that they relate to their classmates and the world around them.
Sundays: Our mornings at the school begin at 8:30am, and we proceed to run peulot for five classes until the end of the school day. We then go to Hanoar HaOved run Bayit L'Meida V'Amda (BAMA), which stands for the House of Science and Stance. While the permanent site of the BAMA is under renovation, the BAMA's temporary location is set in a small room within the school. My tzevet plays games with the kids who come, eat lunch with them, and aid the madrichim in running peulot and fun chevratis!
Tuesdays: On Tuesdays, we again run five morning peulot beginning at 8:30am. In the afternoons, however, we run an hour and a half long English Club for students struggling a bit with English. Our most recent peula was one focused on positive communication. Julia, Max, and I set the classroom where English Club is located up like a theatre, with chairs placed in rows facing a "stage," or empty area. The three of us dressed in silly costumes and performed skits for the chanichim, with each skit displaying either a positive or negative social interaction between characters. The students analyzed each skit, explaining what aspects of the interactions made them either negative or positive. We then created an English Club Communication Declaration, where the chanichim listed types of methods they want to utilize in relating to each other within the English Club. Afterwards, the chanichim each signed their names to the written declaration, all the while marveling at one another's handwriting when writing in English. Once English club finishes, Max, Julia, and I head to the BAMA to once again hang-out with the kids there and help the madrichim.
Messima has been very fun and meaningful thus far! The chanichim are usually active participants in our peulot, and are genuinely friendly to and interested in us Americans! Our chanichim are also eager to discuss tensions in their own lives, such as animosity between Moroccan and Russian students, perceptions of Israeli Arabs, and dislike of living in a state of war in some way or another.
Yom Kvutza and Yom Kaveret
A consistency between Boneh and Kaveret is that Mondays are still Yom Kvutza! Every Monday, Sarah and Bar (our new madrich, as Yo'av needed to leave around a month ago) run peulot for us at our home in Karmiel. Lately, the peulot have been very focused on how we relate to one another as kvutzamates, and what we demand from another in this collective.
Poland Seminar
Following the seminar, our kvutza has had a group-wide check-in about how we're all feeling going into this Poland journey, and about the goals that we have to grow as a kvutza during this process.
Karmiel Adventures
Living in Karmiel has been extremely different from living on Kibbutz Ein Dor. Our house is only a few minutes walk from a mall and a strip with many stores and eateries. Some of my favorite spots in this area are the bakery--where I love to indulge in potato burrekasim and chocolate ruggalach--and the ice-cream parlor, which has the most delicious berry sorbet! Still close by is the Park HaMishpacha (Family Park), where Karmiel residents can bowl, slide, golf, do other fun outside activities for free. Across the street from the park is the home of a lovely family that invites Workshoppers and members of other gap-year programs into their home as often as they want. The family truly is wonderful, offering us home-cooked meals, produce to take home, excursions to the park, and the opportunity to hang-out with their teenage son with cerebral palsy.
Only a five minute walk from our home is a masorti shul, where many of us attend services on Friday nights and a couple go to on Saturday mornings. Two weeks ago, a large group of us attended Friday night services and then joined the shul in a wonderful Tu'Bishvat seder and potluck. The food was delicious, and the experience provided us with the opportunity to make friends with more Karmiel residents!
Three weeks ago, I celebrated my 19th Birthday here in Israel! I had a joint Birthday party with my friend Zak, who lives in Rishon L'Tzion, and a fair amount of members of the Rishon kvutza traveled here to the Karmiel house to celebrate with us! The theme of the party was "Bible Bakery," and everyone was encouraged to dress-up like their favorite Bible character and bring homemade baked goods! Knowing how much I fancy the doughnuts here in Israel and being aware of my disappointment that the bakery here has ended its doughnuts season, Abigail surprised me by making jelly sufganiot! At midnight, everyone sang me Happy Birthday, and lifted me in a chair in a Habonim Dror ritual to chant our traditional Birthday cheers!
Late at night, a large amount of us ended my Birthday by going out for sorbet and icecream! Due to my Birthday being in January, I've never before been able to celebrate my Birthday in a Habo context, so I especially enjoyed being able to this year, and being able to do so with my kvutza!
Tomorrow we'll be flying off to Poland! Kvutzamates are currently packing, cooking, and cleaning in preparation for our journey. I traveled to Poland with my grade during my program in Israel in eleventh grade, so what I'm really looking forward is this time is having a kvutzati experience.