Israel's daily newsmagazine
   Israel's daily newsmagazine
| home | security | politics | diplomacy | anti-semitism | culture | travel | views | Shmooze! | today's weblog  
 
Culture > Israeli society

   



 
Sign up for free!

E-mail
 
         
       
         












Judy Lash Balint is a freelance writer based in Jerusalem. Her articles have appeared in numerous international publications. Balint is the author of Jerusalem Diaries: In Tense Times published by Gefen. Order her brand new Jerusalem Diaries II: What's really Happening in Israel online or call toll-free (US callers) at 1-866-909-BOOK (2665).
JudyB14868@aol.com
Previous views
Celebrating 40 years of unified Jerusalem
Olmert, go home!
Winds of Remembrance
Enough Ceremony
The festivities continue, Moroccan style
"We Overcame Pharaoh...."
Letter from Bethlehem: Christmas Day 2006
Benjy Hillman, Hero of Israel
Off to the south
Israel's literary leftists
Holy Work in the Holy City
Taking to the streets against disengagement
'Tis the season to be jolly in the Holy Land
A Brit who gets it about Islam
They're dreaming of a bright Christmas
Only in Jerusalem
You know it's Sukkot in Jerusalem When...
The day before
The Hope

Views: Israel Half Full
Views: Why was this night different? Reflections on Motzei Pesach 5767
Views: Back to the drawing board
Views: The festivities continue, Moroccan style
Israel has higher fertility rate than all of Europe
Tel Aviv is ranked 105th out of 215 cities worldwide in quality of living study
Views: In Israel, beautiful people are big fish in a small pond
Poll: Racism on the rise in the Jewish state
Beat on the Street - Tel Aviv: The Non-Jewish Jews

 
Comic Relief, Israel Style
By Judy Lash Balint   June 28, 2007


 Bookmark to del.icio.us

Many kids of English-speaking immigrants get into trouble in Jerusalem--just hang around Zion Square at the beginning of the Ben Yehuda Street pedestrian mall after dark any night of the week and you'll see them floating aimlessly, doing all the things that troubled teenagers do the world over.

Caryn Green, a young American-born social worker, has made it her mission to reach out to help the kids and provide a safe alternative to the drugs and violence of street life. Six years ago she founded Crossroads, a program that provides counseling, case management, a resource center and a way for the kids to take the GED and get on with life.

Funding has never come easy for projects that deal with problems the community would rather not acknowledge, so Green started to look around for innovative ways to raise money for her kids.

Five years ago, she recruited Avi Liberman, an old high school buddy and professional comedian to come over to raise the spirits of then-beleaguered Jerusalemites and to raise money for Crossroads.

This week, her friend Avi brought three professional American comedians (known as "standupistim" in Hebrew) over to perform at the fifth annual Crossroads comedy benefit.

At the Jerusalem show, it was standing room only as a few hundred American immigrants piled into the Yellow Submarine club eager to laugh both at themselves and the comedians who put on an outstanding show.

The two Jewish stand-up artists, both veterans of Comedy Central and HBO comedy specials, were so obviously comfortable and appreciative of playing before an all-Jewish audience who got all their jokes about Jewish holidays and their Jewish upbringing, while the show's two non-Jews, Dwight Slade and Craig Robinson (Daryl in The Office TV series) shared their hilarious impressions of the little pieces of Israel they've seen during their brief visit.

Both Slade and Robinson couldn't get over the fact that it's not so unusual here to find families with 10 or 12 kids and bantered with audience members who came from such large families. All four performers showed off the Hebrew they'd learned, with Robinson even making a successful rolling "chet" as he told the audience about the beautiful "Chana" he had met on a sherut to Tel Aviv.

The comedians who had never been in Israel before kept on proclaiming their awe of being in the Holy Land: "Today I stood in Jerusalem at the spot where Jesus spoke," said Robinson, "...right next to Coffee Bean on Jaffa Road!."

Nothing wrong with a bit of comic relief for a good cause on a day when a look at an Israeli newspaper could make you want to weep.

Views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect those of israelinsider.


 Talk Back! Respond to this view



Click on the blue headline to read a Talkback comment and respond to it. Click on the icon to send a private email to the talkback writer. The icon appears only if the writer has decided to be contacted. If no popup window appears, please make sure your popup blocker allows israelinsider.com.

 
  | about |   partners |   sponsor |   donate |   news |   subscribe |   contact |