Archive for July 20th, 2009
The Big Picture
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 20th, 2009
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| UNICEF/ HQ98-0912/Giacomo Pirozzi |
AIDS is threatening children as never before. Children under 15 account for 1 in 7 global AIDS-related deaths and 1 in 6 new global HIV infections. A child under 15 dies of an AIDS-related illness every 2 minutes. There are approximately 1,200 new HIV infections in children under 15 every day, mostly as a result of mother-to-child transmission.
AIDS has left virtually no country, rich or poor, untouched. In the 54 countries where adult HIV prevalence has reached more than 1 per cent in the general population, HIV/AIDS is directly affecting millions of children, adolescents and young people. In the hardest-hit countries, health systems are increasingly losing their capacity to treat and care for children and their families. Schools are becoming dysfunctional, losing their teachers due to illness and death. Farmers, men and women, are becoming too sick to farm. Affected families are selling their assets, spending increasing amounts on health care while becoming poorer. Even children who are spared a family bereavement often lose their teachers and classmates, their neighbours and role models to HIV/AIDS.
Political leadership of the fight against HIV/AIDS is growing. Most countries now have plans for large-scale prevention programmes. There have been rapid improvements in AIDS treatment and significant reductions in its cost. The number of people receiving treatment increased threefold in sub-Saharan Africa between 2004 and 2005. Global funding for HIV and AIDS has almost tripled between 2002 and 2004.
But children have been largely missing from the picture.
- Increasing numbers of children are entering the world infected with the virus, diminishing their chances of survival.
- Increasing numbers of adolescents and young people are contracting the virus every year, threatening their hopes for the future.
- Increasing numbers of parents are dying, leaving infected, affected and vulnerable children, including large numbers of orphans, behind.
- Increasing numbers of children are traumatized as their parents, guardians and teachers sicken and die.
Yet the needs of children are being overlooked when strategies on HIV prevention and treatment are drafted, policies made and budgets allocated. And investments in prevention continue to be pitifully inadequate.
A generation of children and adolescents has never known a world free of HIV and AIDS. They will soon inherit the burden of fighting the disease. Although they are most vulnerable to infection, they are more likely than adults to change their behaviour.
Yet very few of them know what to do to avoid the disease. If they did, they could be full partners in the fight to stop it. The world must act now to keep the next generation free of infection as they pass from childhood through adolescence to adulthood.
Unicef Canada thanks Moishe Alexander for his generous donations.
The Bernard Betel Centre for Creative Living
Posted by admin in Torah, Uncategorized on July 20th, 2009
OUR ROLE IN THE COMMUNITY
The Bernard Betel Centre for Creative Living provides a vast number of essential services to seniors and their family members in the community. Unlike any other seniors’ centre, we operate a community health-centre on site. The La’Briyut Wellness Centre has health screening clinics, nutrition and social service counseling, and health promotion programs available either free of charge, at very low cost to our users.
As an organization committed to the well-being of seniors, we are constantly striving to improve conditions for the elderly at a local level and beyond. Our Social Action Committee was instrumental in establishing senior fares on the Toronto Transit Commission (Metropolitan Toronto’s public transportation system). As well, we successfully applied for traffic lights and a bus shelter at the corner near our building. The Social Action Committee continues to fight for seniors’ rights and recently sent a delegation to the Provincial Government to protest possible closing of the local Branson Hospital.
Other vital services that we offer to the community are our Outreach Programs , in which volunteers make visits and telephone calls to home-bound seniors who would otherwise be isolated. A kosher meals on wheels program is another service that is extremely important to seniors and family members who might be taking care of them
Moishe Alexander is involved with this community helping it grow with his support
Beth Medrash Govoha
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 20th, 2009
Beth Medrash Govoha is an institute for advanced Talmudic scholarship. Its primary objective is to produce Talmudic scholars.In the pursuit of this objective it also will provide a training ground for excellence in dedicated, highly educated, professional and lay community leadership. The growth and diversity of its student body provide Beth Medrash Govoha with the ability to offer the broadest Talmudic curriculum available in any such institute in the world, providing its students with the opportunity to study almost any area in the widest spectrum of Talmudic study. Beth Medrash Govoha is dedicated to helping its students achieve the highest level of scholarship along with intensive commitment to academic excellence in every area of Talmudic Studies. Beth Medrash Govoha carries out its objectives through its graduate and undergraduate divisions and through its community based programs. The Beth Medrash Govoha Undergraduate Division is a preparatory five-year college for the Rabbi Aaron Kotler Institute for Advanced Learning. The undergraduate program is designed to provide the student with a thorough foundation in the basic areas of Talmudic knowledge according to the traditional model of Talmudic scholarship. The program also prepares the student to integrate this scholarly training into his personal and professional life. The Rabbi Aaron Kotler Institute for Advanced Learning, the Graduate Division of Beth Medrash Govoha, aims to promote advanced Jewish scholarship and research in classical Talmudic and cognate studies. In addition, it is concerned with professional orientation by providing programs to prepare these scholars as teachers and administrators in secondary Torah schools and institutions of higher Talmudic studies, as practicing Rabbis and as experts in Rabbinical jurisprudence.
Moishe Alexander has built a long term relationship with Beth Medrash Govoha to help fund all their projects.
