Page 81 - issue
P. 81
“standing there laughing at the scene. When your child is struggling Rabbi Yaakov A
Ehud Barak was exiting his car and iWn shcheonoyl,oyuoru chanil’dt aisffostrdrutgogling MARSapebcbiail YEda
winasstcehporoecl,ioyuosutimcaenw’titahfford to
MA S
Liza’s three-year-old son, who was awmaastteeurps!recious time with Research Proven
amateurs! Reseaforrch
When your child is struggling Rabbi Yaakov AichenKRbIaAuHm, CHUMAS
oinn stchheoosli,dyeowu acalkn’,t afford to struRggMalibnAgbiSYpaeacikaolRvEadbAbuiiccYhaaetainokbonvauAim(cK4h4Re3nIA)b4aHu7,m5C-
riding his tricycle When your child is struggling
wastWe phreenciyoouusr tcihmilde iws istWthrhuegngyloinugr child is in school, you can’t afford to
waste precious time with
almost ran him overa. mSahtiweenausdsrctsehe!ospocrlre,icybiooeuusscatinm’teiwanwfasfsciottherhodporlte,ocyioouuscatinm’teaRwffeiotsrhdeatMorcAhamateurs!Special EMdAucSapteicoianl yEdauackaotivo@n yb
amateurs! Proven Technwiqwuwes.thekeyt(o4t
NoKwRRIAAecsHce,eaCprHcthiUnPgMrfoNoAfRKvroeRSeerwsIHnAea,HTSrG,ectChcuEHhPMdUnreoMiAfvqnoAeRurtnSsAeHTsF,eGowchErnMwTiqAhwyuReeaA.sat
amateurs! Now Accepting New Students For The
Spring, Summer & Fall
how she quickly caught up to
there was no one else to befriend – she appreciated the larg-her son and found everyone NwoKwwRIwySAaAp(.Hy4atrca,h(4kic4SaCneo3k4eHgpkv)o3,pUe@r4v)SyiMt7@4nutyi57noAbmwgy-5tg0mSb,wo-mH30mwySr.N8a3,eae(u..4at8G5edherhk4m5dEeu.o3w&ckuMv)moe@4FymA7Stya5eoRtbl-tur0mlAo3rd.&8ea5edhu.Fncoatmsll F
er class sizes in Israel. She also describes herself as easygo-
ing by nature, so her school experience in Israel was “smooth www.thekeytotorah.com
sailing.” Liza believes that her parents’ personalities also
played a key factor in the family’s integration. “My parents Now Accepting New Students For The
are friendly, happy-go-lucky, positive people, and are pretty Rabbi Yaakov Aichenbaum
open. There were always other people in our house, and this
made it much easier for us.” MA Special Education
When the Ferszts first moved to Israel, they lived in the Research Proven Techniques
Old City for six weeks, until Liza’s father realized that he for
”needed a more spacious environment. They moved to KRIAH, CHUMASH, GEMARA
(443) 475-0385
yaakov@ybm.edu
www.thekeytotorah.com
Now Accepting New StudSeprnintgs, FSuomr mTehre& Fall ©WWW
NowSApcrcinepg,tiSnugmNmewerSt&udFeanllts For The
by Bracha Shugarman Spring, Summer & Fall
Talbiyah and Katamon, but her parents were not satisfied;
they were searching for a community where they could be
active and feel part of something. They were told about a
neighborhood in Ramot, called Treiger, where there was a
friendly, mixed-religious Anglo community that had the
atmosphere of achdus they were seeking. (The community
has since shifted and become more Israeli chareidi with the
passage of time, says Liza.) Liza’s parents decided to buy a
house in Ramot and were extremely satisfied with their pick.
Liza and her siblings had a happy childhood in the neighbor-
hood with the many children their age.
◆◆◆
When Liza grew into adulthood and met her husband, an
Israeli from the German Colony neighborhood of
u 410 358 8509 u 73
Ehud Barak was exiting his car and iWn shcheonoyl,oyuoru chanil’dt aisffostrdrutgogling MARSapebcbiail YEda
winasstcehporoecl,ioyuosutimcaenw’titahfford to
MA S
Liza’s three-year-old son, who was awmaastteeurps!recious time with Research Proven
amateurs! Reseaforrch
When your child is struggling Rabbi Yaakov AichenKRbIaAuHm, CHUMAS
oinn stchheoosli,dyeowu acalkn’,t afford to struRggMalibnAgbiSYpaeacikaolRvEadbAbuiiccYhaaetainokbonvauAim(cK4h4Re3nIA)b4aHu7,m5C-
riding his tricycle When your child is struggling
wastWe phreenciyoouusr tcihmilde iws istWthrhuegngyloinugr child is in school, you can’t afford to
waste precious time with
almost ran him overa. mSahtiweenausdsrctsehe!ospocrlre,icybiooeuusscatinm’teiwanwfasfsciottherhodporlte,ocyioouuscatinm’teaRwffeiotsrhdeatMorcAhamateurs!Special EMdAucSapteicoianl yEdauackaotivo@n yb
amateurs! Proven Technwiqwuwes.thekeyt(o4t
NoKwRRIAAecsHce,eaCprHcthiUnPgMrfoNoAfRKvroeRSeerwsIHnAea,HTSrG,ectChcuEHhPMdUnreoMiAfvqnoAeRurtnSsAeHTsF,eGowchErnMwTiqAhwyuReeaA.sat
amateurs! Now Accepting New Students For The
Spring, Summer & Fall
how she quickly caught up to
there was no one else to befriend – she appreciated the larg-her son and found everyone NwoKwwRIwySAaAp(.Hy4atrca,h(4kic4SaCneo3k4eHgpkv)o3,pUe@r4v)SyiMt7@4nutyi57noAbmwgy-5tg0mSb,wo-mH30mwySr.N8a3,eae(u..4at8G5edherhk4m5dEeu.o3w&ckuMv)moe@4FymA7Stya5eoRtbl-tur0mlAo3rd.&8ea5edhu.Fncoatmsll F
er class sizes in Israel. She also describes herself as easygo-
ing by nature, so her school experience in Israel was “smooth www.thekeytotorah.com
sailing.” Liza believes that her parents’ personalities also
played a key factor in the family’s integration. “My parents Now Accepting New Students For The
are friendly, happy-go-lucky, positive people, and are pretty Rabbi Yaakov Aichenbaum
open. There were always other people in our house, and this
made it much easier for us.” MA Special Education
When the Ferszts first moved to Israel, they lived in the Research Proven Techniques
Old City for six weeks, until Liza’s father realized that he for
”needed a more spacious environment. They moved to KRIAH, CHUMASH, GEMARA
(443) 475-0385
yaakov@ybm.edu
www.thekeytotorah.com
Now Accepting New StudSeprnintgs, FSuomr mTehre& Fall ©WWW
NowSApcrcinepg,tiSnugmNmewerSt&udFeanllts For The
by Bracha Shugarman Spring, Summer & Fall
Talbiyah and Katamon, but her parents were not satisfied;
they were searching for a community where they could be
active and feel part of something. They were told about a
neighborhood in Ramot, called Treiger, where there was a
friendly, mixed-religious Anglo community that had the
atmosphere of achdus they were seeking. (The community
has since shifted and become more Israeli chareidi with the
passage of time, says Liza.) Liza’s parents decided to buy a
house in Ramot and were extremely satisfied with their pick.
Liza and her siblings had a happy childhood in the neighbor-
hood with the many children their age.
◆◆◆
When Liza grew into adulthood and met her husband, an
Israeli from the German Colony neighborhood of
u 410 358 8509 u 73