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Moving Stories

As part of our community blog content at ON THE MOVE, we present our interview ​series, where we invite movers to bring their thoughts not only on the physical move but on the intensely personal experience of moving house. Here we explore the spirituality and psychology of Home and why where we live means so much to us. We want to hear your story, please share it with us.​
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April 19th, 2017

4/19/2017

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​Traveling Veterinarian Makes Housecalls in Jerusalem
Interview with Dr. Mollie Lawee
Does your rabbit need his teeth trimmed? Your rather obese and loveable cat have diabetes? Your dog have bad dandruff? Your ostrich need an opthamologist? This is a job for a Dr. Mollie Lawee,  a traveling veterinarian  who makes house calls in Jerusalem!
Born in Miami, Dr Mollie graduated from Cornell University, and received  her graduate degree veterinary medicine at the University of Minnesota in 1990. She  happily  vaccinated the cougar cubs in vet school,  and looked forward to bigger things. Along came the obstreperous ostrich with the eye problem.  Since then she’s been treating animals in the USA  and Canada, until she came to Jerusalem 5 years ago  with her family.
Onthemovers.com  ferreted out Dr. Mollie and asked, “How is being a vet in Jerusalem different than in North America?”
“It took a fair amount of adjusting to  get used to the veterinary practice here in Israel. I was accustomed to working in a large office,  with a whole team of technicians and receptionists. The office had two or three veterinarians every  day. The technicians did many of the procedures on the animals, while the doctors diagnosed, suggested treatment options and interacted with the owners.

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“Here, based on the economics, there is usually only one vet per clinic who does most everything. In Tel Aviv there are bigger clinics with more doctors. Another difference seems to be the level of service that vets provide to their clients. North Americans expected more time, interaction and explanation.”
What made you decide to do housecalls? That’s pretty unususal for a vet, right?
“After it took me a whole year to get my Israeli license- it was a whole process-  I thought I would open my own practice. But I learned that the demographics in Jerusalem show there is not a large underserved client base for a vet to draw upon. For example, the Aravi (Arabs), don’t have as many pets and only occasionally call a vet. This is also true among the Charedim, although you’d be surprised.  I have been to visit pets in very religious neighborhoods. Jerusalem is not a rich city. I researched  all the various neighborhoods  and suburbs and  discovered no area is underserved by vets, in fact the market was saturated.
“I have some mentors in the field, old friends and new friends here in Israel, vets who have housecall practices. They help me build my practice. There is a need for this type of service, especially among the elderly and people with less mobility.  Also many people simply don’t have either the time  or a car to take their pet to the vet.  So I found my niche.
 “Here’s a typical story. I started treating an elderly lady’s beloved, but big  fat cat who was known to have diabetes. It was difficult for her to bring the cat to a vet. She couldn’t pick the cat up and get it into a carrier, much less lift the  carrier into a car.  She always had to find someone to go with her to the vet. When she discovered blood in the cat’s water dish, she called me. The cat actually had a tumor in its mouth which I treated. The cat didn’t have to be shlepped when it was ill and could be treated at home. A fairly long while later, the cat’s quality of life deteriorated.  I was able to euthanize it at home, which was much easier  for both the cat and its owner.
“Another family in Givat Ze’ev  had a little dog who was pregnant. Their teenage son was the one who would call me, ususally in the evenings to ask questions about his dog. One night the dog seemed to be in labor, and he called me  asking what to do and where to go. Unfortunately he didn’t follow my advice. The next morning he called again  and said  that the dog still hadn’t given birth and she seemed to be in distress.  We met at a clinic run by a certain colleague of mine, and we performed an emergency C-section. We managed to save all the puppies! My colleague still teases me about that. A couple of the puppies didn’t look so good, and I tucked them under my lab coat on my skin in order to warm and recusitate them. It worked!”
So you basically created  your own start up company!
“I’ve never been drawn to the business end of having my own business. I had to learn to do it. I’m not passionate about business. I’m passionate about being a vet and taking care of animals. MATI (Jerusalem Business Development Center) helps entrepreneurs and new olim with information and classes about starting and maintaining a small business. New olim are entitled to certain loans too.  My Hebrew is adequate but they offer many things in Hebrew and some things in English.  MATI is a great resource for your readers to know about, and their website is www.israelbusiness.org.il/startingyourbusiness/assistingcenters/MATI “
 
Besides cats and dogs, what other kinds of animals have you treated here in Israel?
 
“One thing they have here in Israel, which I never saw back in North America, is a Pinat Chai (Animal Corner). You’ll find these in many public institutions like community centers, tourism sites, and even old age homes. Quite often people are allowed to pet the animals, and interact with them. Sometimes the animals are for looking only, like the exotic aquariums in the Beilinson Hospital (Rabin Medical Center’s) children’s ward.
 
“One time during a school vacation, the babysitters for the Pinat Chai missed taking care of a family’s rabbit properly. Her teeth had not been trimmed. A rabbit has continually growing teeth, and some pet rabbits need to have their teeth trimmed.  Otherwise they will grow over the mouth, preventing them from eating or drinking.  When the family called me, the rabbit was literally at death’s door. She was starving and so weak that she couldn’t stand. On top of that she had become bald, and had a ton of fleas, poor thing. I trimmed her teeth, and fed her sugar water with a syringe until she was able to eat by herself by the time I left.
 
“One Motzie Shabbos it was raining hard and I went to treat a hamster with an inverted cheek pouch. Hamsters have pouches on both sides inside their mouth. These pouches extend all the way from their mouth to as far back as their shoulders! The hamster uses his cheek pouches for transporting nesting material or food to his storage area. Sometimes one of the pouches may turn inside out, and the hamster ends up with a pink glob coming out of the corner of its mouth. I managed to get it back to its normal position.
 
“I have a favorite story of a hamster that had dislocated its elbow.  I fiddled with it until it popped back into place and the hamster went scampering across the table on all four legs again.  I used to see ferrets routinely in North America, but not here.  Nothing super exotic lately.”
What do you like most about being a traveling vet?
 
“I get to set my own hours, which are tailored around my family. My two youngest children are still in school, though my oldest have finished university and are here in Israel in yeshiva. I work a lot in the evenings.  My husband is very supportive and flexible, for example when I need the car. I’m Dati, so I don’t work or answer calls on Shabbat or the holidays.”
 
What would your clients say is the best thing about your house call service?
 
“Often I will bring treats to the animals to help them relax. That way even little puppies or kittens won’t cry, and may not even notice that I gave them a shot. The next time I come, they are happy to see me, we’re friends, and instead of trying to eat me, they’ll look for a treat.
Another thing is that I provide  a high level of service that North Americans are used to, like answering calls, follow through, and a personal interest in their pet. We share the same language, style, and cultural values. It may cost a little more for the house call, but it is a value added service. Finally there are halachic issues involved in owning pets, and the religious owners appreciate that I am familiar with them. For example there is a problem spaying or neutering pets.”
What areas do you serve, and how can people contact you?
 
“My main areas are all over Jerusalem, also Mevasseret, Gush Etzion, Givat Ze’ev, Beit Zayit, and Maale Adumim.  I have traveled farther on occasion. People can reach me at my website www.drmollie.co.il  or email me at info@drmollie.co.il  or find me on Facebook (at Dr. Mollie Lawee Jerusalem Business.) Of course they can just call 054-266-2406.”
 
My final question, do you own any pets?
 
“Less than you’d expect. Our cat was 20 years old and died of old age before we made aliyah. Now we have a rabbit.”
 
 

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Building Hope: OTM Interview with Charitable Organization Tenufa Bakehila

3/9/2016

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by Sherrill Layton
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OTM donates its moving services to worthy causes, and the most recent group was gracious enough to continue sharing their vision with us.

Helping a Jerusalem family with 4 kids was the outcome when Building Hope was heartbroken to discover the 7-year-old had no bed and had been sleeping in a broken crib. Their social worker found an anonymous donation of a bed, and OTM offered to move the bed to the family.
 
The Tenufa Bakehila team also treated and fixed the peeling and moldy walls and repaired dysfunctional light figures and dangerous electrical sockets and switches. They were so glad to leave the family with a fresh, clean, and healthy home. Kol HaKavod!

​We want to thank Sarah Heiman, Social Media Manager for Tenufa Bakehila, for taking the time to answer our questions and letting us share in the world of charity, at its best.


What problem is Tenufa solving for citizens?


Tenufa Bakehila: Building Hope is an Israeli non-profit organization that helps change the lives of Israelis living in poverty in 8 cities across Israel. It began because of the dire need for basic home repairs among thousands of impoverished families living in dilapidated and decaying houses. We help populations like the elderly, Holocaust survivors, physically or mentally disabled, single-parent families, new immigrants, terror victims and their families, and poverty-stricken soldiers. So we make these very necessary and urgent home repairs, and also bring in a social worker to see how we can help improve the family’s situation.

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Purim How-To Guide

3/4/2016

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by Chabad.org

Editor’s Note
Purim begins this year on Wednesday evening, March 23, 2016, and continues through Thursday night, March 24. What follows is a brief step-by-step guide to Purim observance. We have also included links to additional Purim resources.

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​Your 2016 Purim guide contains the story of Purim and all you need to know about the 4 mitzvahs of Purim and the other observances of the day.



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Exploring the Jewish Communities of Bahrain and Tahiti

3/2/2016

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by MARNIE WINSTON-MACAULEY
PictureA Jewish cemetery in Manama, Bahrain’s capital. King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa has taken unprecedented steps for an Arab leader to demonstrate support for the nation’s Jewish population.
When the average person thinks “Jewish” a few places pop up. Israel, Miami Beach, Los Angeles and of course, New York City. In the words of the late comic Lenny Bruce: “If you’re from New York and you’re Catholic, you’re still Jewish. If you’re from Butte Montana and you’re Jewish, you’re still goyish.”

Growing up in New York, I did believe that most of the world—my world—was Jewish.
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In fact, in many ways it was. With over two million Jews in New York, second only to Israel in Jewish population, my friends, neighbors, and of course the deli man, was Jewish. Little did I know then, that We Jews comprise a tiny percentage of the world’s population (13.9 million or a little over 0.2%).


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Have a Peaceful and Loving Shabbat, All

2/28/2016

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We All Have a Story to Tell—One Piece at a Time

2/25/2016

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Sara Jacobovici
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Part One:

Our identities are shaped by the accounts of our lives found in our stories or narratives. The word “narrative” reflects the multi-storied nature of our identities and related meanings. A common metaphor that threads its way into and across our stories is that of a journey. And these journeys are both internally and externally experienced. “Lech lecha,” God’s instruction to Abraham, symbolizes that relationship; we are constantly going somewhere and in turn we are going to “ourselves.”

Fast forward to an “Only in Israel” moment: 
I am sitting on a patch of beach in Tel Aviv with a handful of ulpan students. It is the end of an intensive course and we all prepared (in Hebrew) a story for our last gathering. One of the students is a young man of East Asian origin who spoke a beautiful Hebrew and was the envy of all. “Tell them what you studied at Berkeley,” encourages his instructor. “Yiddish, responds the young man. “Go ahead”, says his instructor, “sing the song you learned.” This young man of East Asian descent, who grew up in the US, having studied Yiddish in Berkeley, attending ulpan in Tel Aviv, begins to sing Oyfn Pripetshik (Yiddish/Hebrew: אויפן פריפעטשיק) (English: translation: On the Cooking Stove) a song written in Yiddish by M.M. Warshawsky (1848–1907). What a journey! What a story!

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A Tree-Hugging Furniture Designer Goes Heavy Metal

2/22/2016

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by Jessica Steinberg
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It was the end of Hilla Shamia’s four years at the Holon Institute of Technology and she had to choose a final project. It was intended to be a thesis of sorts for her degree in industrial design, but an even better outcome for her would be the creation of a masterpiece that could lead her out of academia and into the real world.

“I kept on thinking about how I find joy in nature,” said Shamia, sitting in a bustling cafe in Jaffa’s Shuk Hapishpushim quarter. “Nature has paths and things get stuck along the way. I wanted to do the same with wood, to take it and do something to it that’s never been done.”
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What Shamia ended up designing was furniture created by wood casting. She took entire tree trunks of cypress and eucalyptus — purchased at a lumber yard up north — and poured molten aluminum directly into their wooden surface. The exterior was burned by the process, and the entire plank of wood was then cut lengthwise and inserted into a metal frame to create the final structure.


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A Moving Story from Our Readership

2/17/2016

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​We're thrilled to receive our very first Moving Story at OTM!

This blog belongs to our readers, so comment, share, and submit the stories you find here to inspire others with the support that a few knowing words can bring. 

Eileen writes:

After living abroad alone for several years, I suddenly found myself at the age of 63, returning to my family and community. I knew the largish house I owned would be expensive to heat and to care for, and, since I was alone, I preferred something smaller and more intimate. I also knew I needed wood underneath my feet, so I opted for a small cabin near my children. Just enough privacy and just enough closeness for being "grandma."

I was very lucky to have both my children and their spouses to move me and the jeep and wagon that they used to place all of the big appliances and furniture on. The weather was in our favor, and the former tenant moved out just in time for the painter to put a fresh coat of cream colored paint on the white walls, giving it a warmer glow and feel.

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    Interviews and Culture Page

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  • Home
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