Thalia Shamash (2)

Hello from the SACH house! This week has been another fun one, filled with art projects, dancing, and lots of excitement. Obama (3, Angola) went to the hospital, had his procedure, and came back the next day. Now he’s filled with lots of energy! Gracious (10 months, Uganda) is still at the hospital, but seems to be getting stronger each day. At this point, all of the kids in the house have had their surgeries, so everyone is really excited. This past week we said goodbye to four children at the house: Gabriel (9, Romania), Anelisa (14, Romania), Milembe (2, Tanzania), and Farhida (3, Tanzania). We wish them all happiness and health when they go back home, but we will miss them here at the house!

We did many exciting projects this past week. We colored a lot, and made fun masks. We also had a few dance parties, where we got to see Stephano (4, Tanzania) break out his awesome dance moves. We had a nail polish party, too, so now everyone has pretty pink nails (including Stephano…..) Everyone is looking forward to moving into the new house in Holon soon. Looking forward to another exciting week!

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Thalia Shamash

Hi! My name is Thalia Shamash, and I am the new full time volunteer at the SACH house. This has been an exciting week here in Azur! Anelisa (15, Romania), Guiomar (15, Angola), Gabriel (17, Angola), and Stephano (4, Tanzania) all came home from the hospital. It is so nice to have them home! Currently, all of the children in the house have had their surgeries, except for Obama (3, Angola), who is waiting for cathetarization. We’ve all got lots of energy!

We have had a few groups come to visit this house this week, and have had many volunteers come to spend time with the children and their moms. We’ve also done many exciting art projects! We made stick figures out of colorful shapes and wooden sticks, drew many beautiful pictures, and made big wall flowers to decorate the house. The older kids also designed snowflakes that we have hung on the wall (see the pictures!)

The children are also learning many new things while being in the house! Milembe (1.5, Tanzania) is learning how to wave and say hello and goodbye, Obama (3, Angola) gives big hugs and laughs when people tickle him, and Gavriel (8, Romania) is becoming an expert at putting together puzzles and taking pictures. Many of the pictures that you see are taken by him!

The new SACH house is Holon is almost ready to move into! We have started to bring various things into the new building, and are hoping to transition over there in the next few weeks. It is looking beautiful!

That is a quick update of the what’s been going on at SACH over the past week. Looking forward for exciting ones to come! Have a nice weekend!

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Naomi Ben-Danan

My name is Naomi Ben-Danan. I am 22 years old and live in Melbourne, Australia.
I am a student at Monash University in Melbourne studying arts/social work. 
Recently I took 6 months off my studies to travel. 
In that time I spent 3 weeks living in and volunteering at the SACH house. This was a truly special experience. I spent my days arranging activities for the children in the house, including paper mache, mask-making, necklace-making, baking and lots of drawing and colouring in! Though the language barrier proved challenging at times, the kids were always quick to catch on to the activities and we were able to establish beautiful relationships regardless. I also visited some of the kids while in hospital and helped whereever I was needed. I felt I was quickly accepted as part of the SACH team and was given plenty of responsibility as well as creative freedom in running activities for the kids. This made SACH an incredibly rewarding experience as I really felt I was making a valuable contribution with my time. 
I will always remember each child I had the privilege of working with and greatly appreciate my time with them as well as everyone on the SACH team. This organisation is doing beautiful work and is a wonderful place for volunteers. 

:) Naomi

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Maxwell Henry Rudolph

Dear Reader,

My name is Maxwell Henry Rudolph, but I prefer Max. Currently I have been volunteering 3 days a week for just over the past 2 months at Save A Childs Heart. Along with my friend Lisa Wilcox.

To describe my experience in one word would be folly. Just from being a volunteer at this organization I learned so much. For those of you who do not know Save a Childs Heart, in short, is an organization that takes kids with heart conditions from all over the world (particularly poorer countries) and provides free surgery.  The kids come from Moldova, Tanzania, Uganda, Haiti and Angola, just to name a few. The list is expansive.  Age varies.

At the house where they all stay, my objective is just to play with them. And this at first was quite harder than it seemed. At any time in the house there are at minimum 3 different languages, Portuguese, Hebrew, English and Swahili, again just to name a few. Communication at first was hard, but Lisa and I found ways. From soccer to music to drawings to puzzle’s, progress was slowly made in the first few weeks, but now I can say we are quite proficient.

The kids themselves do not stay at the house for long, because they do need to go back home to continue education. So with the new batch of kids that just arrived Lisa and I are very ready. Save a Childs Heart is an amazing organization that I am so happy to be apart of. And though my stint here will be done in the coming weeks, because I’m currently on a gap-year program.  I know I will keep in touch with all the staff, the kids, and anyone surrounding the organization.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Ashley Berns

“Ashley, if you weren’t here with me today I would have spent the day in the shower, crying.” These words, uttered through tears of relief, have remained with me during the last two years.

Four weeks after graduating from the University of Southern California, I was on an El Al flight to Tel Aviv, unaware of the impact the next five months would have on my life. While living in the heart of Tel Aviv as a participant in Masa Israel’s Oranim Tel Aviv Internship Experience, I spent my days volunteering with the Israeli charitable organization Save A Child’s Heart (SACH). SACH brings children, at no cost to the children’s family, from developing countries to Israel for life-saving heart surgery. Once they are brought to Israel—sometimes with a relative, other times alone—they live in the SACH house before and after surgery. This house is no ordinary house. It is filled with children and relatives of diverse cultures who speak various languages. During my first visit to the house, I watched as women who spoke all different languages stood side by side, cooking their children’s favorite meals. For the children, language was not a barrier. A little boy from Angola, who spoke Portuguese, played the board game ‘concentration’ with a boy his own age from Kenya, who spoke English. They talked to each other in their native tongue, without concern for the fact that the other one did not understand him.

In addition to helping out at the SACH house, I also visited Wolfson Medical Center to entertain the children who were both preparing for surgery and recovering. At the Wolfson Medical Center, doctors volunteer their time to save children who would not have a chance at living a full life without their help. But even more amazing is the fact that 49% of the children come from the West Bank and Gaza, Jordan and Iraq.

My life changed the day I met 11-year-old Ian and 8-month-old Brian, both from Kenya. Ian’s mother was pregnant and unable to travel so his Aunt Rose accompanied him to Israel. From the moment I entered this house, Ian and I instantly connected. We both missed our families and began sharing stories of our homes. In the weeks leading up to his surgery, Ian and I played games, ran around the playground and colored. He even taught me how to whistle. I spent days in the waiting room as he had two surgeries to correct his heart defect. I walked the colorful hallways of the hospital with him as he gained his strength back. And I was with him when he was given the news that he was healthy and strong enough to return home to Kenya. But I dreaded the day we would have to say goodbye. What do you say to someone who has come to mean so much to you, and who you may never see again? As my final visit came to an end, just days before his departure, I told him to take care of himself and that I was going to miss him. We hugged and I walked away, tears streaming down my face.

Another adorable little boy I got to know was Brian. Full of life, he was always smiling and laughing. I quickly became close with Brian’s mother, Meredith, who like me, was 22 years old. Meredith is a courageous woman who felt guilty that her son was born with a heart deformity. I spent 8 hours with her in the hospital the day of Brian’s surgery. We paced the waiting room, took short naps on each other’s shoulders and prayed for the best. We talked about the wonderful things that Brian would be able to do as a healthy little boy. Minutes after the surgery, we held each other as we visited Brian in the neonatal ICU. Practically speechless, Meredith thanked me the only way she could—by telling me that she would have spent the day crying in the shower had I not been there.

Over the next weeks, I was with Brian and Meredith through the ups and the downs as Brian’s body adjusted to the improvement. Meredith showed me an inner strength that I have never seen before. It was an unlikely friendship that taught me that one can get through any obstacle as long as there is someone by your side. To this day, Meredith and I still correspond by email.

Even though two years have passed since my time at Save A Child’s Heart, there is not a day that goes by that I don’t think about Ian, Brian and Meredith. I imagine how much they have grown and matured. I wonder what their futures hold; maybe one day they will become doctors who save the lives of others.

I am currently in my second year of rabbinical school at The Hebrew Union College in Los Angeles. The lessons I learned at the SACH house and my experiences in Tel Aviv prior to rabbinical school will undoubtedly have a positive impact on my rabbinate and the way in which I interact with others. My time at SACH taught me the power of one person—I have the ability to change the lives of others, just as my life has been changed by my interaction with these incredible children.

When I first walked into the SACH house, I had no idea what I was getting myself into. After my first visit, I realized that the SACH house was exactly where I was supposed to be. I went to Save A Child’s Heart with the intention of having an impact on others and in the end they impacted me.

November 16, 2011

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Jon Schwartz

Having been a longtime supporter of SACH through participation in community fundraising events back in Toronto, I had already made up my mind before coming to Israel to remain involved while here. Going bowling in Toronto with friends for the Bowl Your Heart Out SACH Fundraiser was a powerful experience in itself however; I lacked a strong connection to the cause.

I had sent out emails for the bowling tournament asking for support so I could participate with less thought put towards where the money was actually going. After having visited the house and interacted with the children, I take all the more pride in my efforts to raise money for this tremendous cause.

Life is of pinnacle importance in Judaism and when you can contribute to saving a life, it changes your own. My life began to change at the SACH house while attempting to entertain a group of young children suffering from a multitude of heart conditions. Their own knowledge of their situation was limited but their outlook on life was tremendous. This is an experience I will have with me to look back on as one of the defining moments of my Israel experience.

Breaking down cultural, linguistic and political barriers in the name of survival is just another part of my Jewish responsibility, which SACH helped me recognize. I cannot wait to visit again and strengthen the relationships I have made and see all of these children leave the hospital with a healthy and bright future ahead.

Jon Schwartz, Part Time volunteer from Canada.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Elliot Stein

The House is quiet, and from what I’ve heard, this is the first time it’s been so quiet. Many of the doctors and staff of the Wolfson Medical Center and Save a Child’s Heart are in Tanzania for the Climb Your Heart Out Campaign. Moreover, Laura, the House Mom, has been on vacation for the last few weeks. As Rachel Grosser and I leave the Home, there is only one child, Hayat, and her mom, Ganat remaining in the House.

While Rachel and I haven’t had our hands full with many kids, we have spent a significant amount of time with the pre-operative Hayat (pictures below). Hayat is a remarkable child of 8-months from Ethiopia. She has an unmistakable smile and is known to burst into dance when her favorite songs–Justin Bieber and Shakira’s Waka Waka–come on. This happiness and energy come seemingly unfettered by her pre-op status. We can’t imagine what she’ll be like after her operation!

We decided to take Ganat (Hayat’s mom), Hayat, and Kadijah (the House nurse) to the beach a few days ago. Hayat and Ganat had the best time by the water looking at the setting Tel Aviv sun. Ethiopia is landlocked, so both Hayat and Ganat had never seen a beach before, and Hayat loved splashing around in the Mediterranean Sea.

One of the most amazing things to discover has been how surprisingly easy it is to communicate with Hayat and Ganat despite their unfamiliarity with English and ours with Amharic. By far, the most useful Amharic word we encountered was “coo-la-la”, which means “nap”. This comes as no surprise because Hayat expends so much energy smiling, laughing, and playing that she frequently needs a coo-la-la.

I’ve witnessed the departure of two families from the House: Kevin’s family and Adrienne’s family. Both kids left the Home with successful operations and are now back in their home countries. We wish them the best as they continue to recover!

The House is also gearing up for its grand move to a new property in Holon, one that can comfortably house the children and their guardians and has central air-conditioning. We expect to occupy the new house sometime in September, and we’ll be sure to post pictures!

It has been an honor to volunteer in the SACH Children’s Home. SACH does amazing work–unlike any organization I’ve encountered–and I can’t wait to return for a visit and volunteer again.

B’Shalom,

Elliot Stein (full-time volunteer from the USA)

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment