Friday, July 9, 2010

Galil heads to Camel Beach

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Yesterday morning, the sleepy chanichim (campers) were woken up by the ram kol (loud speaker) announcing that it was Yom Yisrael (Israel Day), and that we were going to meet in the city Eliat, aka the chadar ochel (dining hall), for a celebration. Yet, as everyone finished breakfast, our Merakez Techni (Technical Director) Josh, announced that it was not actually Yom Yisrael, but the Kupa Trip instead.
Every session we take our chanchim on one very special outing that we call the Kupa Trip, which is easily one of the most anticipated days of each
session. The nature of the trip changes from year to year, from the classic dinner and a movie to a day in an adventure park. Yesterday was much closer to the latter-- we loaded all of
Machaneh (Camp) Galil on to the buses, and sent them up to Camel Beach, a water park in the Poconos.

As the chanichim entered the park and saw literally a mountain full of water rides and slides, they were more than over-joyed, considering the sweltering heat we went through over the past week.
There we spent the day just going with the flow on rides like the lazy river, or sliding down and a round at full speed on rides like The Vortex, which can be best explained like the flushing of a toilet. Bathroom humor aside,
The Vortex was definitely the fan favorite.
And to all of you concerned friends an family out there, everyone was adequately sun-screened.

Upon arrival back to machaneh yesterday evening, everyone enjoyed a shower, baked ziti, and a machaneh-wide movie night. Now we await shabbat, the rain and another exciting week to come.






...Check out and Shabbat Shalom

M.C. SHMOLLY

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Making the Rounds in Sadnaot

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Tzevet (staff) at Galil is broken down into a few parts. The bulk of our tzevet is comprised of madrichim (counselors), then tzevet mitbach (kitchen staff), tzevet techni (tech staff), the Mazkirut (directors), and last, but certainly not least, our specialists. The specialists do
things like open the melechet yad (our art room) and water the gan (garden); but they also have roles as vital resources for a lot of things at machaneh (camp) that regular tzevet just can't provide. Because of this, we have a block each day designated specifically for the specialists called sadnaot (workshops). Each sadna is visited by a different kvutzah on a
schedule that rotates every two days; so throughout the course of the session, our chanichim get the opportunity to connect to mediums that they may not have been exposed to by choice.

Duirng sadnaot, chanichim who do not consider themselves to be "out doorsy" do leadership training on our low ropes course, or get their
hands a little muddy in the gan, or some of our chanichim who spend a lot of time on the migrash kadorsal (basketball court) get a chance to work on their visual arts and
expression in the melechet yad. Also, though we make a concerted effort to incorporate
ivrit (hebrew) into our day-to-day activities, we have a special z'man Yisrael (Israel Time) with our Israeli Mishlachat (ambassadors/counselors) to teach the chanichim a little more ivrit and what's up in Eretz Yisrael (The Land of Israel).



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M.C. SHMOLLY

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Dude, You Must Chill!

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Even though today was the hottest day that good ol' Ottsville, PA has seen since the summer of 2001, we are managing to get along just fine. How you may ask? Well essentially we turn yom hamsin (hot days) into yom mayim (water day).
We drink outrageous amounts of water, we play in the pool, with the hoses and sprinklers, and in our beloved creek. Everybody has to stay cool
somehow, so we have spent most of the day just...splashing around. We understand that plans need to change from time to time, and nobody really minds spending the hottest days in and around the water.

Along those lines, water bottles are the new hot commodity at Machaneh (Camp) Galil.
Everybody, literally, just has to have one. For those who don't, three tzevet (staff) members have been making the rounds all day, dropping off cool water bottles so everyone has the opportunity to get in on the newest Galil fad: hydration.
For a place that puts heavy emphasis on equality throughout our community, we couldn't deprive our tzevet and chanichim (campers) of getting in on the action! A group of people sitting together at lunch got so excited about hydration that they collectively drank over 600 ounces of water! Pretty refreshing, huh?






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M.C. SHMOLLY

Monday, July 5, 2010

Mifgash: A Very Mosh Invasion

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One of our beloved chadar ochel (dining hall) songs called 'Separation Blues' has a verse that says, "Mosh in Maryland, Galil in Penn. We're gonna get together again, because we got the separation blues." Machaneh (camp) Moshavah is the
Habonim Dror camp from Maryland (just like the song says). Being only a few hours away, Mosh and Galil meet every summer on what we call Mifgash (meeting). Decades of mifgashim have also lead to decades of rivalry between the two machanhot. It's not a real rivalry of course, we just tease them because clearly we are better. So today as our Madatzim packed up to head to Mosh of a Mifgash of their own, our Bogrim (14-15 year olds) greeted Mosh's Bogrim in the best way they knew how; with song and dance.

It's important to note the great thing about Mifgash, despite the teasing. A lot of these Bogrim, from both machanot, have been involved in their machaneh for at least a few years and have had pretty similar experiences to one another. There are common chants, common values, common games, and many other, well, commonalities. So unlike when our chanichim meet new friends
outside of machaneh and need to explain how they spend their summer, chanichim from Habonim Dror machanot share a frame of reference that makes bonding occur just slightly slower than the speed of light. It's not quite a phenomenon because it makes total sense, but the experience for everyone is still pretty extraordinary.

So while the Bogrim approached one another like Sharks and Jets in front of the chadar ochel, the Amelim (9-10 year olds) sat inside of the chadar ochel and made cakes. These weren't
just ordinary cakes though. The Amelim were split up into three groups and given a cake, candy, and icing, and asked to create a map of Israel. They used hard candies for major cities, blue icing for the Mediterranean, and Graham Crackers for the Negev Desert. As they built their states, their madrichim (counselors) asked them questions about Israel's history and people.

Yesterday, Galil celebrated America's independence with a Yom Meuchad (special day). The day was framed as if the chanichim woke up and it was Independence Day in the year 2510 where nearly everything was run by fast food and video games. Though initially a lot of the chanichim were excited about some new virtuality in their machaneh lives, they soon grew bored and unchallenged by a culture that America had become. As the day went on, we reconnected with the freedom and independence we have today and had a dance party that couldn't be beaten.

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M.C. SHMOLLY