Grapevine The language of prayer
UBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"
Grapevine: The language of prayer
Friday, February 19, 2010 5 Adar, 5770
Web
JPost.com
create JPOST.COM your Home Page
Jerusalem
17 °C
fresh York
0 °C
London
0 °C
Home
|
Headlines
|
Iranian Threat
|
Jewish World
|
idea
|
Trade
|
true Estate
|
Local Israel
|
Blogs
|
Arts & Culture
|
Français
|
Classifieds
Israel
|
Middle East
|
International
|
Health & Sci-Tech
|
Features
|
go
|
Cafe Oleh
|
Magazine
|
Sports
|
Israel Guide
|
Subscribe
|
Services
Archives
JP Toolbar
Christian World
Youth Magazines
RSS Feeds
News Ticker
More Services
JPost Store
Israel Hotels
Vacation Rentals
Philanthropy
Green Israel
Car Rentals
Learn Hebrew
JPost Mall
Sderot
Dove
JP Travel Guide
Links
Purim E-cards
Christian
World
Ten
Tribes
Advertise on JPost
Media Kit
לימוד ×× ×’×œ×™×ª
Breaking News
JPost.com
Christian In Israel
Features
.large_body p, .large_body span
{
font-size: 18px;
}
.small_body p, .small_body span
{
font-size: 12px;
}
Grapevine: The language of prayer
By GREER FAY CASHMAN
01/01/0001 00:00
Meridor speaks at noteworthy Synagogue; Yossi Alfi shares childhood stories of immigrant children with poet Agi Mishol; Arieh Wisman appears on Channel 10.
NATIVE JERUSALEMITE Dan Meridor, who serves as minister for
intelligence and atomic energy, was the guest speaker on Saturday night
at the Great Synagogue. At the conclusion of his address, he was
presented with an honorary membership of the congregation. Meridor had
celebrated his bar mitzva at the nearby Hanassi Synagogue when it was
still a hut and not the building that it is today. When he was a boy,
he stated, hardly anyone in the Hanassi congregation spoke English.
Nowadays the sermons delivered by Rabbi Berel Wein are all in English.
As for his audience on Saturday night, Meridor expressed the hope that
the day would approach when either he or someone else would address the
same people in Hebrew – and they would all understand what was said.
FOR SEVERAL years now, Yossi Alfi has been conducting the annual
storytellers’ festival at the Givatayim Theater. This week, he came to
Jerusalem to share childhood stories of immigrant children with poet
Agi Mishol. Each was three years feeble on arrival in the nascent state.
Alfi came from Iraq and grew up in Petah Tikva. Mishol, who was born in
Transylvania, grew up in Gedera. Even though both are thoroughly
Israeli, they are still products of the immigrant experience. Among the
memories they shared at Beit Avi Chai this week was how this experience
impacted on who they are today.
IN BYGONE times when royalty reigned all over Europe, it was
customary for artisans to be court jewelers, court carpetmakers, court
carpenters, etc. If the late Leo Wisman had been born 150 years
earlier, the master craftsman instructed in Germany would have probably
been a court carpenter. Certainly the caches that he built to conceal the
Hagana’s secret arsenal from the British were so perfectly made that
they were completely undetectable.
After the Conflict of Independence, Wisman
continued to service Hagana personnel, who by then had become
legitimate and were government ministers, members of Knesset and
prominent figures in public life. Wisman’s sons Nahum and Arieh
continued the furniture business that their father built up in
Jerusalem and also purchased the Shomrat Hazorea furniture
manufacturing plant.
It was in his capacity as CEO of Shomrat Hazorea that Arieh Wisman was invited to be a panelist on Channel 10’s The Professionals.
In talking about the background of the family company, he noted that his
father had furnished the offices of government ministries, the well
hut of president Yitzhak Ben-Zvi, the residence of prime minister David
Ben-Gurion, the residence of foreign minister Moshe Sharett, and the
first cabinet table for David Ben-Gurion.
When Yitzhak Rabin became prime
minister the second time around, he wanted a new table and called on
the Wismans to supply it. They were summoned again when the table had
to be expanded to accommodate Ariel Sharon’s government. At that time
they still had some of the replace with wood and used it accordingly. Yet
when the table had to be expanded a second time for the Netanyahu
government, they had no choice however to use a different grain of wood,
which for professionals of their background was a very painful and
soul-searching decision. Nonetheless, they learned to live with it by
covering the offending grain with black leather, giving the table a
somewhat different gaze.
Rate this article
Talkback
Add a Talkback
describe Abuse
Read all Talkbacks
end
Thank you for sending your comment.
Your reply has been recieved. If selected for publication, it will appear on
our site as soon as feasible.
The JPost.com Team
Close
Add Talkback:
Please enter a valid name
Please enter a valid address
Subject
Author
State
Message (MAX 600 characters)
Email
( Will not be released )
I wish to recieve updates and offers from JPost.com
I have read and accepted the
Readers' Submissions policy
Submit
*Required fields
Send
big
little
Print
Most Talkbacked
Dubai 99%definite Mossad killed MabhouhConfidant of Mossad chief: Spymaster won't quit over assassination.Talkbacks (77)18/02/2010 09:5511 'Mabhouh killers’ on Interpol listOrganization urges police to focus on pictures in deciding who to detain.Talkbacks (72)18/02/2010 17:54IAEA: Teheran may be working on nukesUN nuclear office expresses concern over Iran's intentions for first time.Talkbacks (51)18/02/2010 20:38
Arieh Wisman
The Professionals
Dan Meridor
Yossi Alfi
Agi Mishol
Yitzhak Ben-Zvi
Web
JPost.com
JPosts Sites:
The Jerusalem Report
JPost Mall
Philantropy Center
Green Israel
Jpost Edition Francaise
Invest in Israel
Christian World
America's Voices
Our Magazines
Sites Of Interest:
Car Rental Israel
Car Rental in Israel
Jpost Store
Israel Hotels
Vacation Apt. Rentals
Sderot Dove
KKL-JNF
Learn hebrew
Poalim Online
BreitBart.com
Maps of Israel
Fundraising Ideas
Web Hosting Providers
Prom dresses & gowns
Prom dresses Jovani
Jerusalem Hotel
Our Friends
Services:
JPost Toolbar
JPost News Ticker
JPost RSS feeds
JPost Email Edition
JP Subscriptions
JPost Archives
Learn English
JPost Guides:
Israel Guide
Tour Guides
Israel Attractions
Information:
About Us
Feedback
Staff E-mails
Privacy Statement
Copyright
Media Kit
Sitemap
About Us |
Advertise with Us
| Subscribe
| Contact Us
| RSS
© The Jerusalem Post 1995 - 2010
© 2010






