Archive for September 14th, 2009
IFCJ with Moishe Alexander
Our Mission
The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews™ of Canada is a registered Canadian non-profit. Our charitable registration number is 86941 1587 RR0001.
Our mission is to foster better relations and understanding between Christians and Jews; encourage greater cooperation between both communities on issues of shared biblical concern; and support Israel and Jews in crises or need.
Building Bridges
Misunderstanding and prejudice between Jews and Christians remain today, in large part, due to a lack of communication between the two groups. This is particularly true in Jewish relations with Evangelicals. Issues inevitably arise that create tension and ill will between the communities. In addition, many opportunities for inter-religious cooperation through joint programs on behalf of shared concerns are lost due to this lack of communication. It is against such a 2,000 year backdrop of fear, ignorance and mistrust that the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews of Canada carries out its bridge-building work.
Bnai Zion Medical Center
Posted by admin in Bnei, Environmental, Health, family on September 14th, 2009
Posted by Moishe Alexander
PROJECT MISSION
Eventually with the financial support of Bnai Zion, the hospital was renamed the Bnai Zion Medical Center in 1988. The hospital has a long history of service to the people of Israel. In its early days, it was known primarily as a facility for the treatment of children with developmental disorders. In 1948, during the War of Independence, it was the only medical facility in Haifa available to treat the wounded. It met a desperate, emergency situation head-on; injured soldiers and civilians were accommodated in tents and makeshift huts on hospital grounds and at the Technion.
In 1982, Bnai Zion Foundation presented an initial contribution to the hospital, which enabled the opening of its new Emergency Room and made a commitment to raise the funds needed to complete the West Wing Project. In 1988, recognizing its $5 million contribution, and in honor of Bnai Zion’s 80th anniversary, the hospital was renamed the Bnai Zion Medical Center.
The hospital is affiliated with the B. Rappaport Faculty of Medicine at the Technion (Israel’s Institute of Technology) and serves as a teaching hospital for its students. Many of the hospital’s department heads and senior physicians are on the faculty of the Technion and are associated with its varied and wide-ranging medical research activities.
COMMUNITY SERVED OVER THE YEARS
The Bnai Zion Medical Center, located on Mt. Carmel in Haifa was voted leading Medical facility, offering high-quality health care in Northern Israel. It expanded to a 450-bed general hospital facility, dedicated to meeting the needs of a growing population that reaches from Haifa to the neighboring villages throughout the North.
The hospital was in the forefront of treatment for frontline victims of the recent war with Hezbollah and other terrorist bombings.
BNAI ZION’S IMPACT
A recent survey conducted by the Macabi Health Insurance Company rated the Bnai Zion Medical Center well above the national average. Patients have praised the medical staff, their professionalism, the admission procedures and efforts to relieve pain, and consider the Bnai Zion Medical Center as an outstanding hospital.
The hospital has been presented with the most prestigious Israeli award given to a hospital in Israel: The Bnai Zion Medical Center has been voted the number one hospital of choice in North Israel for eight consecutive years. Its doctors are known worldwide for the development of groundbreaking treatments and techniques. To meet the needs of all Israelis, the Medical Center has established the following specialized departments:
* Gynecology and Obstetrics
* Pediatrics
* Neurology
* Otolaryngology
* Neonatal and Premature Unit
* Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
* Orthopedics
* Internal Medicine Specialties (including Metabolic, Gastrointestinal, Endocrine Disorders and Cardiac & Liver Disease)
* Ophthalmology
* Childhood Development Center
* Urology
Construction of the Chais Building for child development was completed in September 2005. The Child Development Center was established in 1976 as the only program of its kind in Haifa and northern Israel. Today it is recognized as the region’s leading center for diagnosis and treatment of young children from infancy to six who have neurological-developmental challenges.
The Center provides consultation, assessment and ongiong treatment for a range of neuro-developmental problems: for children with genetic syndromes, autism, cerebral palsy, language and learning disorders, premature babies and others. This multidisciplinary family-oriented program places the family and the child at the focus of the treatment. More than 700 children, both Jewish and Arab, from all over northern Israel are treated here every year.
Ofarim is part of the Child Development Center. It is the only diagnostic, developmental service for blind and visually impaired children in northern Israel. The unit is committed to appropriate developmental treatment beginning in infancy and the staff strongly believes that early treatment can make all the difference. The program includes rehabilitation daycare for blind and visually impaired infants up to age three. Children receive therapy and paramedical treatments along with typical kindergarten activities, which is the best rehabilitative and educational option for these infants.
The hospital recently completed its new Neonatology Unit. This is the only protected neonatology department in Israel.
The Maternity Department was recently renovated as well.
CURRENT EFFORTS
The hospital is working toward building reinforced units for about 250 patients and staff that will protect against direct rocket attacks. In 2008 construction will begin to be able to convert an underground parking lot into an emergency room with one hundred beds to treat incoming wounded in the event of an emergency.
The hospital is in the process of renovating the Gastroenterology Unit.
PLANS FOR THE FUTURE
To finish construction of the Pediatric Department and add a pediatric emergency room to it, to upgrade the Admissions Office, to build a new Otolaryngology Department and to build a new Urology Department are just some of the priorities of the moment.
AWARDS & ACCOMPLISHMENTS
Summer 2007 – Award for Best Hospital Food
Bnai Zion Medical Center won first prize for the best healthy gourmet meal in a competition with fifteen hospitals from all over Israel. The competition took place at Barzilai Hospital in Ashkelon and the panel of judges included a famous author of cookbooks, the minister of Health, the chairperson of the union of chefs, special dieticians and senior chefs. The award-winning meal was prepared with minimal fats and salt and consisted of chicken breast stuffed with antipasto, fresh beetroot salad, sweet potatoes and baked zucchini. It was topped off by a special dessert made of dough in the shape of a basket, filled with fresh fruit and syrup made of tahini (known to be iron-rich) and honey.
Chef Naor Aschenazi heads up the very capable and dedicated food preparation team at the Medical Center.
August 2007 – Award for Excellence
The Bnai Zion Medical Center won an award for excellence in the unique activity of its Multidisciplinary Center for Sexual Abuse and Incest Victims.
The prize was announced at the annual convention of Middle Eastern hospital managers held in Thailand in August. Bnai Zion Medical Center is the only hospital in the world that offers continuous treatment – both in the hospital and in the community – to victims of this abuse on an ongoing basis.
More information about this prestigious award and the activities of this department can be found in the December 2007 Hanukah edition of the Bnai Zion VOICE.
Autumn 2007 – Citation for Courage
Dr. Saab, an intern IN the Ophthalmology Department, received the Commander-in-Chief of the Israel Defense Forces citation last month for his courage in treating soldiers while under fire and rockets during the second Lebanese War. His force was among the first that went into Lebanon, and as a result of the difficult location and many soldiers wounded, they had to ‘open’ a clinic in one of the deserted houses in Lebanon. There he treated soldiers while under enemy fire, while the house was hit, and the soldiers inside were injured. Dr. Saab was injured from slivers in his face, eyes and limbs. Despite these injuries he insisted on continuing to treat other soldiers. A day later he and his staff were evacuated back to Israel.
The hospital is very proud to have Dr. Saab on staff.
Autumn 2007 – Research Conclusion
A recent new survey conducted at the hospital has proven that receiving an epidural at the beginning of delivery doesn’t cause any problems. Based upon this result, women who want an epidural can get it right away. As a result of this research, other hospitals in Israel and abroad have accepted this conclusion and act accordingly.
This research was recently published in the American Obstetrics and Gynecology Journal.
The Inexistence of the Universe
Posted by admin in Rabbi Efraim Levit, Torah, Toronto on September 14th, 2009
Moishe Alexander is posting this article with the hopes that many will read it and support the incredible work of the Jews for Judaism organization.
Groping for a transcendent word in a vocabulary generated by our physical lives, we seize upon “light.” Light is our metaphor for the incorporeal, the spiritual, the Divine. We speak of an era of “enlightenment” dispelling dark ages of ignorance and ignominy, of a “ray” of hope penetrating the blackness of despair, of the Divine “light” that bathes the virtuous soul.
Based on the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Courtesy of MeaningfulLife.com
Light straddles the defining line that runs between the physical and the spiritual. Sans weight, sans mass, sans just about any of matter’s properties, light is the most ethereal of physical “things.” Perceptibly real, yet free of the qualities we ascribe to the objects of our perceptible universe, light serves as a bridge of allegory between a mind grounded in a material environment and the metaphysical abstractions it contemplates.
None Else
In his Tanya, Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi employs the metaphor of light to explain what is perhaps the most radical truth expressed by the Torah: the inexistence of the universe.
Twice in the 4th chapter of Deuteronomy (verses 35 and 39 respectively), the Torah makes this amazing statement:
You were shown to know that the L-rd is G-d,1 there is none else beside Him.
Know today, and take unto your heart, that the L-rd is G-d, in the heavens above and the earth below, there is none else.
The ever-sensible mind, confronted with overwhelming evidence to the contrary, may perhaps interpret these verses to mean that there are no gods other than He. I, the mind will insist, the body I occupy, the table it is sitting at, and the computer screen it is looking at, certainly exist. These verses, then, are only affirming the basic tenet of Judaism — that there is but a single, singular creator and ruler of the universe.
Not so, say the Kabbalists and the Chassidic masters: “there is none else” means that there is none else. Indeed, they explain, to maintain that there are existences other than G-d is ultimately the same as maintaining that there are other “gods” beside Him. What real difference is there between saying that the universe is governed by thousands of gods, or by a god of good and an equally potent god of evil, or by a very powerful god who (almost) always triumphs over a much weaker Satan, or by a great and mighty god who pervades every iota of existence save for a single cubic centimeter of space? Ultimately, one is saying that there is more than one independently potent force in existence. To say that there is a god with the power to create and destroy universes, punish the wicked and reward the righteous, cause galaxies to spin and crops to grow, but that there also exists a single pebble with a power independent of His — be it only the power to exist — is to deny His exclusive divinity and power.
So when the Jew daily declares, “Hear O Israel, the L-rd is our G-d, the L-rd is one,” this is more than an affirmation that there is but one deity. It is a statement on the inexistence of all else save His one being.
Real in Relation
Yes, we perceive our own existence and the existence of the myriads of objects and forces we call “the universe.” But this is our finite and subjective perception of reality. If we could observe reality from the all-transcendent perspective of the Creator, we would see a “world” devoid of selfhood and being. In the words of the Tanya: “If the eye were allowed to see the life and spiritual content flowing from the utterance of G-d’s mouth into every creation, we would not see the materiality, grossness, and tangibility of the creation, for it would be utterly nullified in relation to this divine life-force…”
Modern physics demonstrates the relativity of apparent absolutes such as time and space. An object or event cannot be said to possess an intrinsic size or duration: these are always a matter of perspective. The same object may be an inch in length, as observed from point A, and a hundred miles long, as observed from point B; the same event can be said to transpire over the course of a second or a thousand years, again depending on the position and velocity of the observer. The mind may have to bend over backwards to assimilate a vision of reality so radically different from its first-hand experience of its environment, but every high-school science student has read of the experiments and seen the diagrams that demonstrate this truth.
But the Torah has a more demanding task for the mind: to comprehend the relativity of existence itself. To understand that the very it-ness of creation, even the very “I” that is the making the observations, is also a matter of perspective. That while the created reality perceives itself as real, there is a higher perspective from which reality is the truth that “there is none else beside Him.”
Where, in our experience of the universe, is there an example of this sense-defying truth, an analog that may aid us in achieving this tremendous leap of mind? What model have we for the relativity of a thing’s very existence? Light.
Light exists. We regard light as an entity distinct from its emitter, distinguishing between a luminous body and its luminescent expression. An observer on earth, for example, perceives both the sun and the light that extends from it, and hence our dictionary includes both the terms “sun” and “sunlight.” But what would be the perspective of an observer within the sun? Would he, too, perceive “sunlight” as an existence distinct from the sun? Obviously not. Light, by definition, has a source and a destination, an emitter and an observer; light is information — a communication from one thing to another. Light, then, exists only in relation to that which is outside of its source, but not in relation to the source itself. If sunlight is defined as “the sun’s luminescent expression,” then it cannot be said to “exist” within the sun, where the very notion of “expression” is superfluous and meaningless.
Does this mean that the entity we call light “begins” outside of the sun? Again, the answer is obviously No. The sun itself is not dark; the luminescence that extends from it certainly pervades it. It is just that the concept of “light” has validity and meaning only to an observer outside of the light’s source. Lacking substance of its own, light exists only insofar as it serves its function: to carry information and effect from its emitter to that which lies outside its emitter. Where it has no function (i.e. within its emitter), it does not exist — not because it is any less “there,” but because it lacks the context that defines its existence.
Light, then, both exists and does not exist at the same time, depending on the context in which it is viewed. It goes from non-existence to existence not by undergoing any intrinsic change but simply by being observed from a different vantage point — a point in relation to which its function has significance.
So light, explains the Tanya, is the metaphor through which we can try to understand the relative existence of the universe. Our world is “light” emitted by G-d: an expression of His omnipotence, a revelation of His majesty.2 As “light,” the created reality has no substance of its own, no intrinsic being; its “existence” is defined solely by its function — to express and reveal its Emitter. So the world exists only as observed from without its Creator and Source. As seen from G-d’s perspective, it does not merit the term “existence” — again, not because it is any less “there” (G-d, after all, tells us in His Torah that He created a world), but because in relation to the Divine “sun” the defining function of the sunlight of creation is utterly insignificant.
[Rabbi Schneur Zalman takes this a step further, pointing out an important difference between the sun/sunlight analogue and the Creator/creation relationship it illustrates. With the sun, we identify two distinct areas in whose context the "existence" of sunlight is considered: outside the sun, and within the sun. Outside the sun, sunlight exists; within the sun, it is non-existent. Regarding the Almighty, however, the existence of this "second perspective" is itself only a matter of perspective. In truth, there is no "area" that is outside of G-d's infinite reality; the "vacuum"3 into which G-d emanates His light is a vacuum of perception, real only from our mortal perspective. In other words, G-d did not create a reality outside of Himself, only the perception of a reality outside of Himself. So the "light" of creation is, in truth, "sunlight within the sun" -- that is, non-existent light. To us, the world exists only because we perceive ourselves as being "outside of the sun" -- a perceived vantage point from which "sunlight" is perceived as an "existence."]
The View from Sinai
As cited above, the Torah twice reiterates the exclusivity of G-d’s existence, twice in the same chapter proclaiming that “there is none else” other than He. For there are two paths by which man may come to appreciate the nature of his reality vis-a-vis the Divine: from the top down, and from the bottom up.
The first verse (verse 35) is referring to the day that “G-d descended on Mount Sinai” in a unilateral revelation of His all-pervading truth. On that day, Moses reminds the assembled community of Israel forty years later, “you were shown to know that the L-rd is G-d, there is none else beside Him.” On that day you were raised above the arc of your subjective vision of self and existence, and accorded a glimpse of reality from His perspective.
The revelation at Sinai was a brief “foretaste” of a future world — a world in which all masks and superimposed “perceptions” will fall away. A world in which “your master shall no longer shroud Himself; your eyes shall behold your Master”; a world in which “the world shall be filled with the knowledge of G-d as the waters cover the sea” (Isaiah 30:20 and 11:9). The world of Moshiach, when, as the Zohar puts it, “G-d will take the sun out of its sheath” and obliterate the concealment that effects the perception of a reality outside of His.
Bracketed between the revelation at Sinai and the revelation of Moshiach, we live in a world in which our Master does shroud Himself — a world in which the sun remains sheathed and we are not “shown to know.” It is regarding this world that the Torah enjoins us, in the second verse cited above, to “know today, and take unto your heart” that “in the heavens above and the earth below, there is none else.” The knowledge is there, embodied in the heavens above and the earth below: in every blade of grass, in every sunset, in the depths of our minds, and in the sublimity of our hearts. In this world the onus is upon us to unearth this truth, comprehend it, and incorporate it into our hearts and lives.
This explains the difference between these two verses. When we are shown the Divine truth, there are no details, no mention of “the heavens above and the earth below.” As viewed from the supernal perspective, the particulars of creation fade to insignificance. One does not even see the distinction between the spiritual (”the heavens above”) and the material (”the earth below”) — only the singular truth that “there is none else beside Him.” But when our quest begins from the bottom up, it is precisely these details and distinctions that build our knowledge and appreciation of the Divine truth. The more we delve into creation’s components, the more we recognize them as rays of Divine luminescence. We recognize that creation is “light”: an existence defined not in term of self-being but as the bearer of a higher truth.