Osnat Tzadok’s “Tree of Life” represents an inner journey through the artist’s creative subconscious that defines all of Tzadok’s work. Osnat was born and raised in Israel and now lives in Canada, where she relocated with her family 22 years ago.
A self-taught artist, Osnat creates abstract art with or without texture and with colorful or minimal color palettes. The ability to play with colors – without giving too much thought to the process – is at the core of her creations.
“I paint without planning ahead, without picking up favorite colors or paints,” she says. “Abstract style allows me to detach myself from the physical world and delve into my inner world where the real celebration is taking place.”
When Osnat first moved to Canada, she didn’t have a work permit to work outside the home, but she kept plenty busy raising two small children and running and managing the family’s home. Then, one day, a friend gave her a copy of the book, The Power of Your Subconscious Mind by Dr. Joseph Murphy, telling Osnat that it had changed her life.
Osnat began reading the book and soon found that she couldn’t put it down. The book mentions various mind-focusing techniques for removing obstacles in the subconscious that prevent someone from achieving the success they want. Inspired, Osnat created her own bedtime prayer that she repeated nightly.
“I prayed to find my purpose in life, with the conviction that the answer has already been given to me, and with the sincere feeling that I have already accomplished this goal,” she shares.
Two weeks went by, and another friend came over, asking Osnat if she would like to accompany her to an art supply store. At first, she refused, she needed to make dinner and it was getting late, but her friend insisted, and Osnat is forever grateful that she did.
“The moment I stepped into that store, I felt strange, ignited, exasperated and intrigued,” Osnat remembers. “I was staring at the canvases, brushes and paints with a strong attraction.”
She bought a few basic materials, and when she got back home, she cleared the kitchen table and started to paint. “I felt like I was in a state of flow with my own creation, and it felt awesome,” says Osnat. She filled the house with paintings, and within a month, all her walls were covered with new artwork.
She started to change her nightly prayer and imagined herself making sales and shipping those pieces to new customers. The following month, she started selling her works on eBay.
“At first, I sold them for minimal amounts, but as I started gathering feedback and a reputation, my sales grew stronger,” says Osnat. “ A few months after my first sale, I started reaping the fruits of my effort, as bidders were fighting over my artwork creating bidding wars.”
Creating the art, selling it online and receiving positive feedback was an exciting process that spurred Osnat into creating more art and reinventing herself over and over again. She continues to experiment with different painting techniques, and stays attune to market needs.
“As a spiritual person but especially as an artist – flow is my motto,” shares Osnat. “Flow is the art of letting things happen; it is where the subconscious is leading the conscious, and where the apparent is giving way to the hidden.”
Custom engagement ring designer offers a truly bespoke experience.
Susie Saltzman, owner and chief designer at Susie Saltzman Fine Jewelry, creates one-of-a kind engagement rings that are modern yet timeless.
The Manhattan jeweler helps couples source their center diamonds and custom design their ring. She also creates wedding bands, earrings, and necklaces.
Engagement rings are a significant financial and emotional purchase, which can be stressful without the right guidance, she says.
Saltzman, 39, strives to turn the designing of an engagement ring into “a stress-free process filled with thought, intention, love and joy.
“The majority of the clients that I work with, this is usually one of their most significant investments to date,” she says. “They can be overwhelmed and not know where to start.”
About half of her clients work together as a couple. “I like to think that we are removing the stress from the situation and functioning as a trusted knowledgeable friend who’s really guiding them through the process.”
The designer sees clients in person and virtually from around the world. “I like to think that the experience is so personalized that you hardly feel the distance.”
Covid had little impact on her business because she was already working virtually. “When Covid initially hit, there was a bit of trepidation. I think people were hesitant about making a big investment like this, but 2020 turned out to be my best year yet,” she said.
Susie Saltzman Photo by Magi Fisher
A single Jewish mother, Saltzman lives in Brooklyn with her three-year-old daughter, Isla.
Her job in product development at Tiffany’s was a springboard to her solo career that began 10 years ago.
Originally from northwest of Chicago, Saltzman went to the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City and studied fashion merchandizing. As graduation approached, she became more interested in 3-D product design than apparel. Her first job out of school was at a cosmetic and fragrance company. She helped them with product development and packaging design.
At night, she would bead jewelry while watching TV as a way to relax. “I liked working with my hands and the more I did it, I thought I wanted to learn how to make real jewelry.” So she went to school at night and developed the manual skills for working with different types of fine jewelry. Then she applied for the job at Tiffany’s on a whim, never thinking she would get it. “That set my path for hopefully what will be the better part of my life.”
The fine jewelry industry offered her the connections and opportunity to explore custom design and fabrication. “When family and friends (and eventually strangers) asked for help navigating their search for the perfect engagement ring, I was able to help them.”
She doesn’t deliver just a piece of physical jewelry. “I think the intangible and arguably more important part of what we’re delivering or creating with our clients is a memory and experience, an heirloom and a keepsake.”
She says she finds inspiration for her work in nature, architecture, watching her daughter grow up and in the small moments of each day. “I also find a lot of inspiration in the clients I take on, weaving their personal stories into the design.”
PHOTO COURTESY OF ELLIE BAYGULOV
Many of her clients come to her through word of mouth. Others see her creations on Instagram (@susiesaltzman) where she balances educational content with showcasing designs. “Many are underwhelmed by what they are seeing in retail stores. I think that we’re inspiring them and showing them beautiful design, helping them understand what the experience looks like. It’s like a peek behind the curtain.”
The price point starts at $425, but the majority of custom rings she designs are in the $15,000 to $40,000 range. All the materials used are sourced through environmentally responsible producers. The design process usually takes two to three months.
“Many couples want secret, intentional details infused in the ring, for example a small set diamonds underneath the center stone. The secret design details make it feel special,” Saltzman says.
A big trend disrupting the market is lab grown diamonds. “I’ve launched a separate company that specializes in luxury lab grown diamonds,” she says. “It’s a real diamond with the same composition as a natural diamond, but they are offered at a fraction of the price of a natural stone.
PHOT0 COURTESY OF MORGAN LAMKIN
“My goal first and foremost is to really understand the couple that I’m working with, what their values are, what is important to them in a ring. Then I like to advise them on how to maximize their budget.”
“For me, it’s really about the connection that makes it so special for me. It’s not just designing jewelry. I’m really helping people mark a moment in their lives. The bonuses they get are hopefully a gorgeous piece of jewelry that they’ll forever love and cherish. It feels like I’m helping them tell their story. It’s a real honor to me.”
To learn more about Susie Saltzman Fine Jewelry, go to susiesaltzman.com. Her lab grown diamond specialty store is reverencejewelry.com
The Jewish Future Pledge ensures funding for the Jewish Future
By Ilene Schneider
“We are working to ignite a surge in Jewish pride, secure funds to ensure the Jewish future, and spark critical intergenerational conversations about why the Jewish people matter.” ~Mike Leven
BUSINESS EXECUTIVE AND philanthropist Mike Leven grew up in a Jewish household, went to a Jewish camp, and worked at a Jewish camp. He went to college, became an attorney, got married, had children, and joined a synagogue in a variety of different places where he lived during the time between ages 24 and 48. At 48 Mike became president of a company in Atlanta, Georgia. He received a call from the head of the annual giving campaign for the Jewish Federation. “He said you’re going to give a $5,000 donation to the Federation, which put me in a young leadership program.” Leven got involved and has been involved ever since, discovering and returning to his roots and participating in many legacy Jewish organizations. As time went on and he had more resources, he became more involved, from a giving standpoint. His children saw what he was doing and began to do likewise. Leven currently serves on the boards of The Marcus Foundation; AEPi Fraternity Foundation; Birthright Israel Foundation; Board of Advisors of Prager University; HERSHA Hospitality Trust; Independent Women’s Voice; Turning Point USA Board of Advisors and SESTRA Group.
However, he sensed a problem. As he explained, “One of the big issues facing the Jewish community is engagement with the organized Jewish community – the legacy organizations. How do you get people involved if they don’t have any kind of background? About 30 percent of the Jewish population is involved in the Jewish community. What will happen to future generations?”
He added, “The Jewish community is at a crossroads. A rising percentage of young people are disconnecting from their Jewish identity and Israel. Jewish institutions are struggling to attract the next generation of donors. We are working to ignite a surge in Jewish pride, secure funds to ensure the Jewish future, and spark critical intergenerational conversations about why the Jewish people matter.”
Inspired by Warren Buffet’s and Bill Gates’ Giving Pledge, Mike co-founded the Jewish Future Pledge to carry on his family’s commitment to Judaism. Leven explained, “I got into the Jewish future pledge, because I want to make sure that 30 percent continue their involvement to the next generation and to the generation after the next generation. The problem is that so many Jewish organizations need support from the existing donors that they spend most of their time on the existing customers and forget the fact that they have to find new customers, so I set up the organization differently.”
The Jewish Future Pledge is a worldwide movement inspiring Jews to make a commitment that from the funds they leave to charity at their passing, at least half will be earmarked to support the Jewish people and/or the State of Israel. Taking the Pledge sends a signal to family, friends, and the community that the Jewish Future matters. The Pledge is not a fundraiser for a specific Jewish organization or a commitment for a specific amount of money. It is a moral commitment to the Jewish people, whether people plan to leave $10 or $10 million to charity.
Leven, who has served as the chairman and chief executive officer of the Georgia Aquarium, president and chief operating officer of the Las Vegas Sands Corporation, chairman and chief executive officer of US Franchise Systems, president and chief operating officer of Holiday Inn Worldwide, and president of Days Inn of America, said that $68 trillion will transfer to the next generation in the next 25 years. About 20 percent of these charitable dollars will be given by Jewish donors. The Jewish Future Pledge aims to ensure that half of the amount allocated to charity by these Jewish donors, more than $600 billion, is set aside for Jewish causes.
Leven explained, “The reason I did it was because I saw David Horowitz from the Times of Israel give a lecture a number of years ago. He said he’s worried about the wealth transfer and whether that portion of wealth will be delivered in the same way it’s being delivered today. So that’s the reason I started the Jewish Future Pledge, and then I came up with the Jewish Youth Pledge, because I think we have to start earlier than that. I’m not resting only on the people who are the parents and grandparents and great-grandparents. I want to see kids making sure that they pledge to commit themselves to the Jewish future and Israel’s future.”
He concluded, “One of the things I’m proud of is we have 12,500 signatures already. If you even take $25,000 a signature that’s going to be left Jewishly, which is a low average considering that we have some big donors and major foundations involved, we’re talking about a serious amount of money. We’re running at about 1000 signatures a month on each pledge at the moment. We even have a number of pledges from people who don’t appear to be Jews. We have signatures from all over the world, but the majority of the money that’s given is from the United States and Canada to Jewish causes and Israel.”
THE JEWISH YOUTH PLEDGE
Asking Jewish teens and young adults around the globe to commit to being active, contributing members of the Jewish community throughout their lives, the Jewish Youth Pledge attempts to spark Jewish pride to give Jewish youth, ages 13 to 24, the motivation and confidence to contribute to a strong Jewish future. A first-of-its-kind initiative, the Jewish Youth Pledge asks Jewish teens and young adults to commit to being active, contributing members of the Jewish community throughout their lives. There are three steps. Using a turnkey program, young people work with a pre-planned lesson, including videos and discussion prompts, to engage with their Jewish heritage and role in the Jewish community. After completing the Jewish Youth Pledge program, participants are asked to write a letter to their future selves answering questions such as, “If you could meet yourself in the future, what would you hope to hear that you had accomplished or contributed?” The letter is stored in a secure Digital Time Capsule and shared with participants at key junctures throughout the next two decades of their lives.
It’s been fourteen years since we lost our son Noah. A fourteen-year journey that has been both painful and enlightening. I’ve often thought that grief needs its own vocabulary. It’s like we’ve eaten the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge and know a world we were never meant to know. Nothing prepares you for the words “Your son Noah died last night.” That those words came just a week before his college graduation made everything that much more impossible to process. Instead of celebrating his graduation, we’d be planning Noah’s funeral. Ironically, the news of Noah’s death was delivered just moments after I had helped to open the annual American Cancer Society Relay for Life. I was a local elected official. This was my last official obligation before our planned trip to Santa Barbara. Somewhere there is an archive of photos from that day with me happy and smiling. A day that had started uneventfully, with no hint that the date would be forever seared in my consciousness, June 6th would cease to be just another date on the calendar. It’s now an emotional speed bump, endured annually, along with Noah’s birthday and Mother’s Day in May and graduation season and Father’s Day in June. For years I referred to May and June as my “rainy season,” the sequence of days that would hit wave upon wave as we attempted to navigate our way through the disorienting world of grief.
As I was driven to my parent’s house to tell them that their eldest grandson had died from an accidental fall from the Isla Vista cliffs, I remember looking out the window and seeing people going about their daily routines. I wondered how their lives could go on seemingly undisturbed by the shattered reality I had been cast into. It seemed so wrong. I feared the news of Noah’s death would kill my parents, that they would both drop dead on the doorstep and I’d be burying three people. Instead, despite the immense grief they felt, their parental instincts were to care for, worry about and support us. We were all angry and confused. My mind would not allow more to seep in than I could absorb. In those early hours, days and weeks, it felt like my spirit had died and things I might once have taken interest in, reacted to, or resisted, I no longer had the strength for. Friends stepped in to help. “Can you call the hotel and cancel our reservations?” I asked a friend who had called, unaware of what had occurred. My campaign manager, who was a longtime friend in my political world, posted people on our doorstep to receive flowers and cards, knowing we needed rest and space to just be numb. Another friend advised us that since Noah had completed all his work to earn his degree, he should be entitled to receive it posthumously. He was. The day after he died, Noah’s older sister and younger brother told us they wanted to walk for him at graduation. The night before they left, the fog lifted just enough for me to realize we had made no arrangements to get Noah’s belongings from his apartment. My sister and brother-in-law offered to travel to Santa Barbara with Abby and Hershel to handle that. In a week’s time, we had endured not just Noah’s death, but all that goes with a sudden loss, including dealing with those investigating his death. He had died Saturday night, but we were advised the autopsy could not be done until Tuesday. Even in death, there are people ahead of you in line. We encountered the necessary but unpleasant business of death. In many ways finding a plot at the cemetery is more like a real estate transaction. Noah’s body was not returned until Wednesday so we could not bury him until Thursday. As Jews, we handled everything as traditionally and ritually as possible. I would learn weeks after the funeral and burial that after everyone had placed a shovel of dirt on the casket and left the cemetery, Noah’s childhood friends — none of them Jewish — asked the workers to let them fill Noah’s grave, which they did. When I learned what they had done, I told one of his friends that in the Jewish faith, there is no greater honor. “Did you know it was a mitzvah?” I asked. “No,” he said. “We just knew we had to do that for Noah.” I still get choked up imagining what attending Noah’s funeral must have felt like for his friends. They were all around 22. Far too young to bury a friend.
Noah’s life was filled with chapters yet to be written. My mother said he was like a shooting star that burned bright but faded way too soon. My brother said he had a “great short life,” which he did. He had a joyful spirit, loved his friends and sports and was so bright. When Noah was around five years old I was quizzing him on states and which states were adjacent to other states. I had to rely on a map to confirm his answers, but he had memorized them and got all the answers right. He said, “Now give me the name of a country and ask me what country is next to it.” “I can’t, Noah,” I said, “I don’t have an atlas. I wouldn’t know if you were giving me the right answer.” To that he responded, “I will be.” Although smart, I didn’t always feel Noah was working up to his potential. After he died I remember thinking what a tragedy it would have been if he had spent his life with his nose in a book and never really got a chance to live. Noah always made time for friends and fun. He thoroughly enjoyed his semester abroad in Cordoba, Spain. The memories shared were the greatest gift we could have received. Each story confirmed that Noah was the person we knew him to be. Noah died at the very point in the arc of his life between college and what might come next. It was a clean break from this world. No girlfriend or wife. No employer or possessions of any consequence. What he left behind was a legacy of smiles and happy memories. Pieces of Noah are carried in so many hearts. One of his close college friends told me, “If this had happened to someone else, it’s Noah we would have gone to for advice and wisdom.” People who attended his memorial but had never met him said they felt like they knew him through what was shared. What I know to my core is that Noah’s life will never be defined by the circumstances of his death.
Noah Krom
When we learned Noah had fallen from a cliff, my first thought was, “Noah doesn’t hike.” What we learned from authorities is that he fell from a cliff near his apartment in Isla Vista. For those unfamiliar, Isla Vista is a densely populated student enclave adjacent to UC Santa Barbara. Think open-air student dorms with overcrowded apartments, most in marginal condition, but all of which rent for prices that rival the fanciest communities in California. At the time, Noah and his five roommates paid $4600 a month for a three-bedroom apartment at a property on Del Playa, the street that featured properties with ocean views overlooking 60’ cliffs. Noah was not the first to lose his life to those cliffs, and he wouldn’t be the last. At least six young people have died from cliff falls since we lost Noah. My repeated trips from Irvine to Santa Barbara to meet with public officials, university administrators, the Sheriff and others, advocating for better fencing and a comprehensive effort to improve safety in Isla Vista, never produced the results I had hoped for. I knew that for any effort to succeed, there would need to be buy-in from all stakeholders, including the students whose desire to fit in, sense of invincibility and as yet undeveloped capacity to think beyond the moment most certainly compounded the risks already inherent in college life. That UCSB consistently ranks in the upper echelon of party schools doesn’t help. I advocated for a holistic approach to protecting the health and safety of students. I wanted to see a culture change in Isla Vista. Some improvement to the fencing eventually occurred, but only after a May 2014 massacre by a deranged student who killed six people before taking his own life put Isla Vista in the national — and even international — headlines. Sadly, just weeks before, there had been yet another cliff fall. A young woman, and only child, fell to her death. We had been in Isla Vista the two days previous for meetings on safety in Isla Vista. One of Noah’s friends who was working at UCSB alerted me to the death. News of the massacre distracted anyone who might have cared about Sierra’s death, just as Michael Jackson’s death at the Neverland Ranch in Santa Barbara county just weeks after Noah died was the excuse used to explain the unreasonably long time it took the Sheriff to produce the report on Noah’s death. As is the case in many California counties, the Sheriff is also the Coroner. That never gave me any comfort.
Every accidental death seems senseless. You rewrite the story in your head and focus on the whys and what-ifs. You wonder how it might have ended differently, what actions by others may have contributed to or prevented the tragedy, and what you might possibly do to ensure no other parent has to suffer such a loss. Noah had finished his last final on what would be his last day on earth. We would learn that he and his friends had been celebrating at an “open bar” party hosted at a local bar owner as the “reward” for participating in a spring semester promotion known as “50 Club.” The bar owner had apparently been doing this for years, and despite it being a complete violation of his liquor license, nothing had been done to shut it down. The bar owner has two bars — one in Isla Vista called Study Hall and the other, O’Malley’s, in downtown Santa Barbara. 50 Club participants who purchased fifty drinks were promised a commemorative shot glass and admission to a private party with unlimited free alcohol. Noah’s friends said they would split a pitcher of beer at Study Hall and everyone would get a punch in their card. Authorities must have known this was going on. It was promoted through social media and word of mouth. There was a party bus called Bill’s Bus that transported the lucky winners to the night of excessive drinking that awaited them. One has to assume that alcohol distributors helped provide the alcohol dispensed at the party. Just imagine the economic clout those who distribute and dispense alcohol hold in a city known for the beauty of its coastline, that hosts a Top 10 party school, and whose primary industry is hospitality. Noah may have been the only fatality that night, but it’s not a leap to imagine others suffered alcohol poisoning, sexual assault or a at the very least a night with their head in the toilet. College students may look like adults, they may be defined as adults, and at times they may even act like adults, but neuroscience shows that the prefrontal cortex, which controls executive brain functions like impulse control and thinking beyond the moment, only fully develops around the age of 25. That’s what makes college students such a perfect market to exploit economically. It’s so much easier to sustain a system that ignores risks, turns a blind eye when economically or politically expedient and can so conveniently blame the victims if you ignore the risks and realities that claim lives every year. When you’re just a student, a transient with no perceived roots or familial connections in the place you’re attending college, it’s so much easier for people in the local community to not care about you. By dropping the line “drugs or alcohol may have been a contributing factor” in a press release or news report, you help absolve everyone else of responsibility — or even concern. The cyclical nature of college life guarantees that these tragedies will too soon be forgotten, erased from people’s memory as new classes of students, vulnerable to the same risks, are welcomed.
The Krom Family
I was a former mayor, current council member and congressional candidate when Noah died. I knew something about navigating bureaucracy. Irvine is a city recognized for its record on public safety. When people were injured because of faulty infrastructure, we didn’t blame the victim, we addressed the underlying problem. What became abundantly clear was that buck-passing and finger-pointing were the default approach in matters involving the health and safety of students in Isla Vista. Property owners were protected by outdated building codes and routinely allowed overcrowding in their units. The Isla Vista Foot Patrol, a division of the Sheriff’s Department had an unhealthy relationship with the student population, preferring enforcement to engagement. “Our biggest problem is residential burglaries,” a Sergeant overseeing the Foot Patrol told me. When I pointed out that landlords would give only three keys for a three-bedroom apartment that routinely had six or more students, requiring tenants to leave doors unlocked so their roommates could access the apartment, he claimed to be unaware. I learned a lot of things no parent ever wants to know about the environment their now deceased child was living in. Noah’s death has been a gateway to an education I wish I never had. Grief has been both painful and enlightening. I’m grateful for the growth, but the price of this wisdom and perspective is far too great.
The question of why Noah hopped a property fence between two properties near his apartment remains a mystery. The report on Noah’s death is short on facts and long on opinion, conjecture and innuendo. Authorities released a story to the press the day after Noah died suggesting he may have jumped out of a cab without paying the fare and was running from the cab driver at the time he hopped the fence. What became clear was that there was no evidence to support that claim. No incident report. No cab driver came forward. Just a story handed to the press by the Sheriff’s department. Needless to say, that allegation, along with the high blood alcohol level that an open bar party will produce, became fodder for certain press outlets. How do you protect a child’s reputation when they cannot speak for themselves and authorities are asserting facts not in evidence? Even before the official report was released it was clear there was no substance to that allegation. I called the Sheriff to ask how, given the lack of evidence, they were going to address the cab jumping story in the report. “We have to put it in,” he said. I pushed back, saying “I could understand if you said you have a theory you can’t prove, but if you put it in the report it will be viewed as fact.” I also pointed out it was a public document. His response enraged me. “Anyone who would use it against you politically, it would backfire,” he said. That he imagined my concern was political spoke volumes about where his priorities were. It would be a long time before I engaged the Sheriff again.
The Sheriff did refer the bar owner who ran the 50 Club promotion to ABC (Alcohol and Beverage Control), the state agency that regulates and licenses establishments that sell alcohol, for investigation. I was certain the bar owner would lose his license. In California, you can’t offer a free ham sandwich to induce people to buy alcohol, let alone an unlimited supply of free alcohol. A few days before the hearing, I was advised by one of the lawyers for ABC that they were working on a settlement. The bar owner got what his lawyers demanded. A mere fifteen-day suspension in each bar — but it’s worse. He got to take the suspension in Isla Vista during the last two weeks of December when all the students were away on break and the suspension at the bar downtown the last two weeks in February, undoubtedly the lowest volume of sales between the popular winter and spring holidays. It’s hard to imagine anything making the pain of losing Noah worse, but that did. What if those who turned a blind eye had acted to shut the promotion down years earlier? What if ABC had held the bar owner accountable? What if the county had taken actions to protect those living in aging properties protected under outdated codes and built fencing that delineated the point at which eroding cliffs posed a deadly risk? The hardest question to answer is, who was really being served and protected by their actions?
In hopes of moving efforts to address health and safety risks in Isla Vista, I set aside my resistance and met with the Sheriff to ask if he would convene all the relevant stakeholders. I knew that he had the platform to do so, but he declined. He made it clear that, in his mind, the problem was the students, not environmental risk factors. They just needed to consider the consequences of their actions before engaging in risky behavior. What he said next, in an effort to assure me that he was indeed concerned, was that he routinely warned his officers not to chase kids toward the cliffs. What he didn’t know was that I had feared that was what happened the night Noah died. Had Noah been chased by an officer rounding up kids who were drunk in public, which they surely would have been doing that night? He certainly was drunk after a night of celebration at an open bar party. My thought was that his officers had ignored the directive not to chase kids toward the cliffs. That he didn’t know — hadn’t put the pieces together that his officers were at the fence Noah jumped, acknowledged shining a flashlight over the fence and seeing a shoe in the foliage but choosing not to go down to the beach to see if someone had fallen. Instead, Noah was found by his friend’s girlfriend and two of her friends as they walked the beach at sunrise. The pieces had never added up. There was the story I was told by the lead investigator about Noah’s wallet falling out of the bag that held his personal effects after I discovered it was missing. After first claiming they may never have had his wallet, I reminded the investigator that they told me they had identified him from his driver’s license. Miraculously it was found the next day. When I asked how it could have fallen out of the bag, the investigator told me it’s like when you have a bag of groceries on the seat of your car and it tips over and the lettuce rolls onto the floor. Given the unsubstantiated story about Noah jumping out of a cab, I wondered whether they might have held on to his wallet and planned to plant it somewhere to lend credibility to that story. I’m not given to conspiratorial thinking, and I would like nothing better than to know exactly what led to Noah’s death, but it’s hard not to wonder what the truth is, and what facts might have been suppressed, to ensure that all accountability was buried with Noah.
We will never really know what happened that night. If there were witnesses, they never came forward. Your mind keeps rewriting the story in search of better conclusions that never come. I’m grateful to Noah for the lessons he continues to teach me. I’m grateful to my daughter, now a Marriage and Family Therapist, for her insistence that I get therapy. I had never gotten therapy, despite dealing with some traumas in my life. I thought it was a superpower to find another space to tuck the pain away in. I feared therapy, thinking I would be like a champagne bottle uncorked with everything I’d been holding inside unleashed. The truth is, therapy was my salvation. I was blessed with a great therapist who specializes in grief. At a very basic level, therapy was a safe place to cry — or to wail, as grief compelled me to do. I never understood what wailing was, but grief taught me. Therapy helped me accept and let go, but that was a long and complicated journey. I tell people the greatest lesson I have learned is just how little I control. I have no power to control what others think, do or say. The second greatest lesson is that all the stress I’ve endured throughout my life is because I didn’t understand lesson number one. I know Noah’s death was beyond my control to prevent, but of course, the guilt remains. What is a parent for if not to protect their children? Therapy provided a perspective I would not have gained on my own. Mostly it provided a platform to understand myself better, to be kinder to myself, and to see patterns that served me and those that did not. How I wish I could do life differently with the benefit of wisdom I acquired on this journey. All I can do is start where I am, apply the lessons I’ve learned and do the best I can to extend Noah’s legacy and impact.
By Jessica Halfin, Edited and repurposed by Debra Rich Gettleman
We all know the undeniable lure of “FREE FOOD.” But imagine the finest Mediterranean herbs aplenty only a few steps away from your kitchen or backyard.
A balcony-friendly herb garden brings you the freshest flavors to create gourmet Israeli cuisine with nothing more than the snip of a scissors. Plus with the skyrocketing cost of food these days, you can turn your outside into a cost-efficient herb garden that’ll allow you to make mortgage payments and keep your kids in college.
Here’s how you can make your balcony/indoor/backyard herb and vegetable garden happen right now, for you and your family.
Turn supermarket scraps into gold
After spending three hundred dollars at the grocery store and ending up with a refrigerator full of strawberries, eggplant and cottage cheese, you might be struggling to come up with delicious meal options for yourself and your family. Well, turn to the internet for videos that show you how to turn food scraps into plantings.
Videos like this one get into the nitty gritty of how to regrow plantings from food scraps ranging from lettuce to ginger to herbs.
Similarly, tiny seeds can be taken from items like tomatoes and strawberries, washed, dried, and planted to make flourishing patches of produce. How cool is that? The method in this video shows how to plant slices of strawberries directly into soil.
Order seeds online
The efficiency of online ordering is a 21st century marvel that speaks volumes to our immediate gratification needs. You want it. Your order it. And while it might take a few days to arrive, with a modicum of patience, you’ll be growing your own herbs before you can say “Lathyrus sativus” (the botanical name for the grass pea).
Websites like California based Morning Sun Herb Farm (US delivery only) have a surprisingly wide variety of herb seedlings that range from exotic Moroccan mint to the more rare minty and pungent white savory (zuta) that many Israelis enjoy in their herbal tea.
In Israel, companies like Nativity Seeds in Kfar Hess fulfill online orders (also to North America) of heirloom and organic seeds for modern and preserved biblical varieties of vegetables and herbs. It’s a goldmine of information on when and how to plant which seedlings in Israel year-round.
Zaatar is oregano’s Middle Eastern cousin. Photo by Jessica Halfin
Zaatar is oregano’s Middle Eastern cousin. Photo by Jessica Halfin
Bone up on the seasons of the garden
Whether you’re planting nine stories up or on ground level, in Israel or abroad, gardening calendars like Ilana Stein’s A Year in the Garden are valuable sources of insight into the Israeli garden.
While months may have to be shifted to accommodate the information for those who live in other parts of the world (for example, the Israeli winter is more like an American or European spring), the cute and quirky illustrations, wisdom – and bonus recipes – help focus your gardening goals from planting to harvesting to preserving your goods.
Curate a gourmet Israeli herb garden
Whether you decide to replant your scraps or order little envelopes of seeds, you’ll need to know what makes a killer Israeli herb garden.
Part of what makes Israeli food taste so fresh and seasonal is a farm-to-table approach (in your case it could also be balcony planter-to-table) and lots of freshly cut herbs. However, these go far beyond the obvious cilantro and parsley combo we see so often in Israeli dishes like shakshuka.
To make your Israeli dishes sing, you’ll need fresh basil (check out this video on how to get the most out of one grocery-store-bought basil plant), zaatar (oregano’s Middle Eastern cousin), rosemary (the kind that grows into tall bushes in Israeli parking lots), dill, chives and nana – the Mediterranean spearmint that gives tabbouleh its earthy irresistible taste.
While fennel is seldom used in Israeli dishes, fennel stocks grow wild, popping up like weeds each spring in the forests of the galilee. Plant a bulb of fennel, and your garden will smell, and even look, like the Holy Land.
Take it to the kitchen
With a little sun, herbs can grow indoors in a kitchen window, or any sunny spot, as shown here.
Or you could try a nifty countertop kit sold on Amazon. They use high-efficiency LED lights to give you a luscious indoor herb and greens garden that will brighten your day all year round.
Zuta, or white savory, is enjoyed in Israeli herbal tea. Photo by Jessica Halfin
Make a focused garden filled with herbs for soothing tea
Israelis have perfected the art of herbal tea infusions. Using herbs foraged from the side of the road, a desert bush, a nearby forest, or from a home garden, the scent of lemony herbs stewing in hot water is familiar.
Great for boosting immunity and giving you that feeling of a warm hug when we all need it most, these are the herbs that you’ll need to bring the flavor of Israel into your teacup.
Aside from the aforementioned nana, which is an absolute must, tea herbs range from sheba (wormwood, which should be used sparingly to avoid dizziness or other unpleasant side effects), to lemon verbena, lemon balm (melissa) and lemongrass, lavender, rosemary, zaatar, and common sage used to make dark-brewed Bedouin chai.
Add some new greens to your diet
Feeling like your in an vegetable rut? Why not step outside your comfort zone and explore the many flavors of greens popping up in restaurants around the globe?
Get your hands on some luscious chard, which is found in lots of Israeli dishes from meatball sauce to green shakshuka and has an even higher nutrition content than kale.
You’ll also need rocket for salads and sandwiches, and all kinds of lettuce, which grow exceptionally well in small planters. Have you tried homegrown lettuce lately? It is spectacularly fresh, and sure to boost your mood and morale.
Muster up hope for the future by planting a tree
Nothing could be more Israeli than having a backyard filled with fruit trees. If you have the space, spring is a great time to dig a few holes in your yard and get something going that will have you looking ahead to all the brilliant years to come.
Don’t have a yard? Put a super-cute dwarf kumquat or hot pepper tree on your balcony or even in your kitchen window (you might find one in the supermarket, but you can also order them online).
Bonus time: these plants can be bought already bearing fruit, so you can reap the benefits of your new addition ASAP. Imagine homemade zhug made from your own hot peppers. Awesome.
Drying herbs at home. Photo by Jessica Halfin
Preserve and dry your harvest — more experiments for the kiddos!
Once you’ve got a successful thing going, you’ll want to preserve it for future gobbling. Replenish your dried spice collection and feel like a gourmand in the process by drying your own homegrown herbs.
Bunches of herbs can be dried by hanging in paper bags, in the oven on a low heat, or even in the microwave! Pick one method, or try them all, and see which one suits you best.
Or go big: If you’re seeking a long-term project whose progress you can track and share over the several months that we all could be hunkered down, try growing cucumbers in a box on your balcony. See how here.
Nothing could be more Israeli than chowing down on a whole cucumber alongside your sandwich, but here’s the kicker: Growing your own cucumbers means you can also make your own pickles! Use recipes from Israeli-American expert forager and sustainable food systems educator Leda Meredith’s 2019 book, Pickling Everything.
Bonus points for getting the book sent straight to your electronic reader and sparing the delivery person a trip to your doorstep, and even more bonus points for posting the mouthwatering pics to Instagram and encouraging others.
Make your leaves into art
In every plant lies an inspirational art project, at least according to Israeli artist Suzanne Tamar Dekel, who uses foraged plants to make natural dyes for decorating luxurious textiles.
In a more basic form, however, leaf art is an excellent project for bored children who have already gone way over the recommended screen time. And if you’re in the entertaining mood, why not use homegrown plants and herbs as your decorating tools? Pinterest is full of ideas, like this one from The Imagination Tree blog.
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