Soldiers in Iraq prepare to load a helicopter with Passover supplies.
For most Jewish families, Passover is a time to get together and share memories around the table, celebrating freedom in leisure.
Taking time off work or traveling the distance to be together is part and parcel of the annual Passover experience for most, but not for Jews in the U.S. Armed Forces.
Operation Enduring Traditions Gets Matzah to the Troops
For most Jewish families, Passover is a time to get together and share memories around the table, celebrating freedom in leisure.
Taking time off work or traveling the distance to be together is part and parcel of the annual Passover experience for most, but not for Jews in the U.S. Armed Forces.
With that in mind, the Aleph Institute – a Chabad-Lubavitch run project that caters to the needs of Jewish military personnel and prisoners – has once again partnered with chaplains and uniformed lay leaders to ensure that every soldier in need is taken care of on Passover.
Under the banner of “Operation Enduring Traditions,” the Aleph Institute is shipping Passover supplies such as hand-baked matzah, grape juice and Haggadahs to some 35 locations across the globe, including Afghanistan’s Bagram Air Base, as well as installations in the country’s other big cities, Kandahar and Kabul. Bases in Iraq and Kuwait are also on the list, as are locations in Germany and Kuwait, and, closer to home, Georgia, Texas, North Dakota and South Carolina.
Shipments, which represent the last step of a logistics puzzle that began in December, have already arrived in many places. The eight-day holiday of Passover, which recalls the Jewish people’s redemption from slavery in Egypt, begins March 29.
“We’re in contact with everyone,” says Rabbi Mordechai Katz, director of military and prison outreach for the Aleph Institute, of the program’s e-mail push weeks ago to finalize orders and assess needs across the military system.
In addition to enough matzah to last throughout the holiday, shipments include materials for a full-service Passover Seder, including special plates, hard-boiled eggs, yarmulkes, and assorted other items. Stored in a warehouse in New Jersey before shipping begins the day after the late winter holiday of Purim, the packages are sorted by workers in 13-hour shifts.
The effort officially supplements supplies provided by the Pentagon. Many military personnel are unable to get what they need through regular channels, while others need supplies at the last minute.
According to Katz, bases in war-zones tend to have better overall funding, and, by extension, more-comprehensive Passover programs; most of the Aleph Institute’s distributions, therefore, go to bases within the United States, where supplies can be scarce.
cher
so nice for the person that organized this!!!!!
go shay!!!!!!
and yossi!!!!!
aleph rocks
go mendy katz!!!!