Tuesday, May 1, 2007
Major event at Gillette Stadium (home of the New England Patriots).
Come ride a camel! Enjoy an Israeli music festival with Ziv Eitan, Smadar Levi and ESTA. Sample some fine Israeli wine. Eat a few falafel. Watch a professional Israeli Flag Football game.
This free event has something for everyone – archaeological digs and a mini-Maccabi for kids, opportunities for teens to learn the new self-defense craze Krav Maga, a great Shop Israel, and Israeli dancing for all.
Celebrate the best that Israel has to offer, from technology to tourism.
Not sure how to get to Gillette? Visit www.celebrateisrael.org for directions (parking is free), to sign up for free bus service (rsvp’s are required), and to check out the day’s activities.
I look forward to seeing you there.
AND…. PLEASE FORWARD THIS EMAIL ON TO YOUR FRIENDS! HELP SPREAD THE WORD ABOUT THIS FABULOUS EVENT!
CJP welcomes those who would like to connect with the Jewish community and encourages the participation of interfaith families, couples and significant others in all its activities. Dietary laws observed. Kosher food prepared and sold by Gillette in cooperation with Catering By Andrew under the supervision of the VAAD
Presented by
Combined Jewish Philanthropies
Gillette Stadium
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: May 20 -- New England Celebrates Israel.
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.solomonia.com/cgi-bin/mt4/mt-renamedtb.cgi/7589
1 Comment
Leave a comment to: May 20 -- New England Celebrates Israel
Comment Info and Policy:
1) You must have Javascript enabled in your browser in order to comment (blame the spammers). If you don't know what that is, you're probably fine.
2) HTML is on, so basic html should work. Raw links will be made auto-clickable, too, so even if you don't know html you can just paste in the link and it should work fine. Keep the "http://" in it.
3) Comments are generally unmoderated, which means I don't necessarily agree with the tone and tenor of everything posted. In fact, sometimes people post things they don't really mean just to make other people look bad. The internet is an anonymous place for the most part. That said...
4) I welcome you to post here. I'd love to have your input, agree, disagree or just offer a different data point, really. If I didn't want any participation, I'd turn off comments. Be aware, however, that this blog and the comments section exist for my entertainment. Therefore, I reserve ALL RIGHTS here, including the right to remove any or all comments on nothing more than a whim. Please don't even bother complaining. I'm the one providing the space and the free news and thought buffet. I don't owe anyone anything.
Anyone who posts here will be treated as my guest. That means I'm happy to be polite as a default, but if anyone is rude to the host they'll be unceremoniously shown the door.
It may pay to recall a famous line from the Tom Selleck magnum opus, Mr. Baseball: "Jack-san, you want Yoji's advice about the babes, you come to Yoji with respect."
5) Enjoy your stay!





In the past, this event has variously been on Boston Common, at the Hatch Shell, on Harvard Street in Brookline, and at the Newton JCC. Why move it to a remote location so far from where most Jews live?