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Twice weekly for the duration of IST 2004 Daniel Bennett, CAJE Executive Director will share IST information and commentary with you. Daniel has been to Israel 13 times, led the IST trip three times over the last twenty years, and enjoys sharing his reflections with you. All of his entries will be preserved on this web-link, with the most recent appearing first. Index to Updates:
Monday, July 26, 2004Six weeks ago I shared with you that the day our teenagers began their sojourn in Israel was one of the two most exciting days for us. Yesterday, with G-d’s help, they returned safely – and that’s our other favorite day! On reunification day at DIA the parents headed home with their exuberant, exhausted teenagers whose lives have been changed, forever. Yesterday for CAJE means we have completed the task of introducing these Jewish teenagers to their homeland, to their Judaism and to themselves in a brand new way, that we've equipped them with a very important toolbox that will serve them throughout their lives as adults and as Jews. We are proud of their families and of them for choosing this experience, and we are proud to have provided it again to the community. As we stood in front of the DIA fountain and witnessed the faces of each young man or women as they emerged, witnessed the hugs the teenagers had both for friends and parents and for each other, heard their tales, felt their excitement - we knew that these were souls who had taken a sacred step. (Their bodies, on the other hand, took each step only with the aide of adrenaline – and I know that they slept well and long last night and may still be sleeping this afternoon as I write these words!) As each individual entered the loving embrace of friends and family, each was returning to a world they left six weeks ago that will never look quite the same to them. Most will begin the long reunion schedule of formal and informal post-IST events; most will voluntarily return to CAJE Hebrew High, despite demanding senior-year schedules – some will return for the academics, all for the connections. And we will smile and weep with them at their CAJE Hebrew High graduation ceremony next spring because we will know that thanks in part to the journey of CAJE IST 2004 the Jewish world will be in loving, committed, confident, and capable hands in this next generation. CAJE is honored to run the Israel Study Tour, made strong in part because of the ongoing partnership with the synagogues and the Allied Jewish Federation of Colorado. I've very much enjoyed writing to you these last two months, and I hope I've helped you feel closer to the experiences of our teenagers. Please call us or e-mail me (dbennett@caje-co.org) with questions or feedback. I hope to see you at CAJE’s 6th annual dinner celebration on August 31st, 2004. We are honoring Diane Hochstadt, Trudy Dock, Bryan Hay, Diane Samet, and Jackie Wong – whose efforts help to make Jewish education stronger in Colorado. Your support for CAJE means that CAJE will be able to continue providing experiences like CAJE IST 2004. May the remainder of your summer (which is going far too quickly!) be filled with love, blessings and growth. B’shalom – with peace and wholeness, Daniel Friday, July 23, 2004Shalom – With joy and tears I write my final communiqué before the kids return to us on Sunday. (I always write an additional one after they return, but for now the excitement of Israel in the present tense remains!) What a week! It began with the annual Dead Sea experience (read a paper, try to swim, keep the water out of your eyes, and take pictures!) and a magnificent hike in Nahal David, an experience filled with stories from King David’s time and great waterfalls, too. Then after a few hours’ sleep Wednesday evening at the mountain's base, our teens climbed the Roman ramp - an artificial mountain built to conquer Masada - and watched the sun rise over the Dead Sea. I've found few views in my life more spectacular, peaceful, holy. Looking down from Masada’s summit fuses our Jewish past with Israel’s present reality in a way few other moments can capture. "Masada shall not fall again,” became the informal slogan of the Jewish State by the 1960's. The barren mesa in the Dead Sea Region had been fortified by King Herod in the first century to protect him from enemies both real and imagined. And when Jerusalem fell to the Romans in 70 C.E., a small band of zealots retreated to the fortress and taunted the Romans from the top. Josephus, the historian tells us that they poured water over the side to taunt the soldiers who were dehydrated in the sun below. But the Romans used slave labor - mostly Jewish slave labor - over the next three years to build their infamous “ramp,” to bring their war machines to the palace walls. What they found were corpses, Jews who chose to die by their own hand rather than submit to torture and slavery. Ask the teenagers when they return what, “Masada shall not fall again,” means to them in light of the last five decades of Israeli history and in light of the last four years of intifada and terrorism. We are all grateful that there have been few terrorist incidents in Israel during our visit, but what does the future hold? Continue trying to negotiate? Refuse to give up any land? Learn to live together? Take risks? Hope to remain united and strong? IST challenges our young people to ask the hard questions, and the answers are never clear. All Israelis agree that Masada must not fall again, and they wonder - as do we - what path today will best achieve that result. Much of the tour of the Masada’s ruins was completed before the sun was overhead – the Dead Sea region is beyond scorching in the summer time. Our teenagers visited the massive ruins of Herod's palaces, spent time in the remains of one of the first synagogues ever built, relaxed in a cistern the size of our Federation building(!!), and processed to integrate the history of that transformative period of Jewish history twenty centuries ago. When they descended from the summit, they still had the whole day in front of them. What a great culmination to a wonderful, emotional summer. The final few
days for CAJE IST 2004 will include many ISTers becoming B'nai Mitzvah in
Jerusalem, some reaffirming their ceremony of four years earlier. And the
final Jerusalem shopping expedition, visits to the Kotel one last time, and
the final banquet will seem surreal to CAJE ISTers before they board the bus
to head to Ben Gurion airport. Shabbat Shalom, Daniel Tuesday, July 20, 2004The Republic of the Negev doesn’t exist, but in many ways Israel's south seems like a different county, a land far away from the Israel we read about in our newspapers and hear about on CNN, a place filled with sea and sand and sun. Not that our teenagers need a special invitation to enjoy things like snorkeling, sunbathing, and free time shopping on Eilat's seaside promenade. Since for security reasons CAJE does not allow our teenagers too much free time in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, this opportunity to shpatzir and shop was a welcome one for our group. I can predict with confidence that many of you will receive gifts from your children purchased in Eilat. CAJE ISTers work hard learning, touring, growing, even shopping - but they play hard, too! Eilat offers our teenagers para-sailing, swimming and snorkeling in the Red Sea, and an evening disco boat cruise in the gulf. All in all, Eilat earned its reputation as Israel's favorite port-of-call. And now, a cautious disclaimer: You know all this already. With teenagers it is important to set limits - but not too many. So IST has a clear expectation about really important things, like rules concerning alcohol and other drugs and regulations concerning safety and group dynamics. I am proud to tell you that our staff reports very few concerns in any of these areas - this is a very good group! I also must tell you that although we strongly discourage the practice of tattooing and piercing, we do not set rules in this area, and some see this as an IST rite of passage. So, while most of your children were mere spectators, we understand that the body-artists in Eilat are counting their profits this evening. As a step-dad of two young men who are both former CAJE ISTers, I’m available to commiserate… CAJE IST’s Eilat visit always culminates with the Mt. Zefahot hike. We fully expected the teenagers to complain loudly as we awoke them before sunrise to climb it. But they gasped as they watched the sun rise in the east over Saudi Arabia, gazed on Egypt to the west and Jordan to the north. The Gulf of Eilat stretched out to the south, its waters flowing past Sinai’s shores to the Red Sea. After appreciating not only on the beauty and the majesty - but how much Israel is truly bound by her geography: our neighbors are really very near by! – we descended to bid farewell to the Negev and have some breakfast. So, for us in Colorado, let’s ask ourselves, “what did we do before breakfast today?” Tomorrow IST will leave the south and head toward the Dead Sea Region, the world’s lowest geographic location. No trip to Israel is complete without the Dead Sea, Masada, and Ein Gedi. For many of our summer trips these next few days are one of the highlights. So although we’ll be thrilled to see them at DIA in less than a week, they still have much to do – including b’nai mitzvah ceremonies on Friday and a last visit to Jerusalem. Stay tuned! Daniel Friday, July 16, 2004Shalom! What a treat at Ma’alot this week when Allied Jewish Federation CEO Doug Seserman and CAJE Board member Debra Weinstein left their mission to meet up with our teens and their staff. Debra and Doug asked a few leading questions, and then held on for all of the answers! Our kids could not have been more enthusiastic or articulate as they shared their insights, passion and knowledge of Israel. It was a perfect debriefing for each of the three Options Week groups, and the Gadna kids even sang their army song for Doug and Debra. We love visits from dignitaries and we love to show off! This Shabbat CAJE IST is staying at Nitzana, a youth village close to the Egyptian border. As you know from my previous communiqués, each summer CAJE and ISI work hard to give our teenagers chances to interact with Israeli teens, to help Colorado kids experience Israel through the eyes and hearts of their peers and contemporaries. Nitzana, part of the Ramat HaNegev region – with special ties to Colorado’s Federation and community – provided our teens to meet with the shinshinim, a group of Israeli youth who defer their army service for a year to serve their country in other important ways before joining the army. Visiting this region is also a portal to Israel’s most expansive region, its south, The Negev. Many Israelis today do not fully appreciate the importance of Israel’s largest and most sparsely-settled area. Our group explored the history of this region from its biblical origins to its importance as part of the age-old silk and spice trade, from its military importance during the War for Independence, to its significance in the ongoing development of Israel. Israel is a tiny country with a growing population, and future generations of Israelis will find development in the Negev critical in the nation’s future. A textbook I taught when my career as a Jewish educator was just beginning (please don’t remind me how long ago that was…) called this Israeli frontier, “Israel’s Wild West!” The Negev is actually Israel’s southern portion…but you get the idea. I’ll have much more to tell you about CAJE IST’s Negev experience next week – our last in Israel! In the meantime, please continue to check updates on the web site for students’ journal entries and digital photographs; they are each spectacular and bring us closer to our children this Shabbat. Enjoy your Shabbat; Shabbat Shalom. Daniel Tuesday, July 13, 2004Shalom! Welcome to CAJE IST 2004 Options Week! I’ve mentioned to you that we’ve been successful this summer giving our teens chances to interact with Israeli teens, to experience Israel through the eyes and hearts of their contemporaries. With excitement I report to you that on Options Week one of our IST options is a Sea-to-Sea hike, from the Mediterranean to the Sea of Galilee. This is a beautiful and difficult trek across the breadth of Israel with Ethiopian Israeli teenagers representing the Society for Preservation of Nature in Israel. What a wonderful thing to see teenagers from different cultures bonding; the cultural and language boundaries disappear as they work, eat, and support one another while hiking the land together. They teach each other Hebrew and English slang, and we usually find out that that Caucasian hair looks great in corn-rolls, too. A second group chose community service, a chance to give back to Israeli society directly. ISTers have been busy meeting, playing, and planning programs for the children at Neve Michael, an extraordinary childrens’ village formed to provide safety to kids from abusive homes. We often forget that the ills of society – domestic violence, substance abuse, mental illness – do not escape Jewish communities; and it’s important to work hard to affirm that these problems exist among us in order to help those in need of intervention. Ben Gurion dreamed of a normal society for the Jews, one where even the garbage collectors and prostitutes were Jewish. For all its good and bad, such a society we now have. And as partners with G-d in Tikkun Olam our teenagers have not only worked and played with the children, but have also performed several clean-up projects in the village! And so we repair the world one act at a time. The Gadna option is always popular among our teenagers. Their motto may have been, "never attempt this at home," but while participating in Israel Defense Force training they gladly rose with the dawn, exercised hard every day, and learned to accept even arbitrary discipline. Honest! We hear that they "really got into being soldiers." This year CAJE IST’s Gadna experience was shared with other teens from USY and from Great Britain. Among them, our Colorado kids are building a reputation for their enthusiasm. Their commanders say that they are maxim. Monday they had kitchen duty and they won praise as the fastest group. Tonight they've been on a long hike looking very army-like in their fatigues – we’ll see how they look tomorrow morning after their army overnight. For many the experience was a way to come to know what their peers in Israel will experience when they graduate high school in just one short year. For others it is a chance to try on a foreign way of life, and struggle with the question, "could I ever do this?" May the day come soon when military realities are no longer a major part of Israeli society, when "nation shall not lift up sword against nation." Our three options groups will rejoin each other on Thursday at Maleh Ha'hamisha. They'll catch up on stories and get a good night's sleep (defined as more that 4 hours!) before traveling south to Nitzana for Shabbat. Our partnership community there will provide yet another opportunity for encounter with Israeli youth. More about that later… Daniel
Friday, July 9, 2004I remember when I was a teenager on an Israel Study Tour and I snapped a picture with my old instamatic (no, it wasn’t a box camera!) of a camel standing next to an Israeli bus. I remember the contrast in cultures, being struck by the coexistence of antiquity and modernity in one place at one time. And that became the lens through which I’ve come to see Israel ever since. This week our ISTers returned to Jerusalem, Israel’s showcase for the convergence of ancient and modern. With an extremely large black-hat orthodox population, Jerusalem is also the country’s capital city and home to modern businesses, theater, suburbs and traffic jams. From planting trees in Jerusalem’s JNF forest (remember sending nickels and dimes to Sunday school? did you know that it costs more to plant one yourself than it does to have JNF plant one for you?), to visiting Mt. Herzl and remembering Israel’s fallen soldiers, our teenagers experienced the diversity that is Jerusalem. Jewish teenagers worldwide struggle with Jewish identity, and one might be surprised to realize that Israeli teens are no exception! Already generations removed from the pioneer days when frontier ideology and clarity of Jewish destiny was a given, and more than half a century after the Holocaust Israeli teenagers find themselves uncertain of what their own Jewish identities are. Add to that the difficult reality of security, an internal war against terror that seems to never end, and the constant struggles of the nation to define its own Jewish character – well, you get the drift. We are so fortunate that this week our ISTers and their counterparts in Israel are sharing time, projects, and questions together, pushing each other to think in new paradigms, to re-evaluate old conceptions, to stretch and grow. Finally, I’ve mentioned the wonderful job ISI and our Israeli staff do year after year – I truly doubt we’d be in Israel this summer without them. But perhaps even more important is the work CAJE’s staff does on this side of the ocean – not just over the summer, but for the entire two-year IST process. Risa Buckstein and Roni Ogin and the rest of the CAJE youth staff perform a critical job coordinating the IST program with a love and professionalism that is unmatched in any Jewish teen experience anywhere in the country. Only those who send their children to Israel with CAJE each summer can grasp the diversity of skills needed to select and supervise an outstanding staff, nurture families, balance difficult finances and provide for teenagers this high level of Jewish educational experience. I don't get the opportunity too often to acknowledge publicly their dedication, or to praise their commitment to a very special group of teenagers. On behalf of our community: thank you. As our kids settle in for Shabbat, and we do the same, I wish to all of us at least a fraction of the spiritual connection our kids feel each Shabbat they spend in Israel. They will need the rest, as next week they embark upon the ever-exciting Options Week – which I will tell you about in more detail in my next communiqué on Tuesday, July 13. Until then, Shabbat Shalom, and as always please contact us for any reason. Daniel Friday, July 2I’m amazed to realize that this week CAJE IST reaches its half way point! We spend an entire year recruiting, worrying, working with over one hundred families and their teenagers, planning. We spend countless hours counseling individual families, securing the best staff available, and working with our Israeli partners. But now as the teenagers leave the north of Israel time seems to accelerate. It won’t be long before the teens greet us at DIA as different young men and women than those who departed on June 14th. Each group, each CAJE IST trip, has its own unique personality: some groups we describe as curious, searching, others as dynamic, determined. This year’s group is one described by our staff as seeking, willing to push themselves beyond their former ways of seeing themselves and the world, and anxious to push each other to grow. All of this makes them fantastic ambassadors for Colorado and North America in Israel. Roni Ogin and Steve Glickman have now both returned to CAJE, leaving the
teenagers in the highly capable hand of our trip leaders and staff –
American and Israeli. The American staff is assembled by CAJE, and our
Israeli staff by former Denverite and Jerusalem resident Steve Zerobnick. We
all owe a debt of gratitude to Steve Zerobnick, CAJE's Israeli partner, the
founder and director of Israel Studies Institute (ISI) in Jerusalem. Steve
is truly our partner, worrying about sick teens as much as we do, concerned
about security as much as we all are. Year after year ISI's staff is the
best assembled for any teen tour, and Steve's intuition and programmatic
skills are invaluable. ISI staff love our children and feel the
responsibility for their safety as strongly as we do. Indeed, without a
partner like ISI on the ground in Israel I'm not sure CAJE IST would be
successful year after year. Discussions, lectures, a tour of the fence, a program on anti-Semitism,
and meetings with Israeli Arabs and West Bank settlers allow our teenagers
to struggle with issues that have no easy solutions. ISTers learned that the
peace movement remains strong in Israel – strongly committed to Zionism and
to finding a path to peace and security. Daniel Tuesday, June 29, 2004In this fast-paced world of ours, many of us yearn to discover truly spiritual experiences, ones that propel us to transcend our normal daily existence. Being in the northern Israeli city of Tzefat and watching the sun set over the ancient hills ranks up there among the best. Centuries ago those hills were filled with the spirit that brought Judaism Kabbalah, our mystical tradition. And as Shabbat descended on our IST teenagers this past Friday night, they were all a part of that tradition, together singing L’cha Dodi as they looked out over the ancient stone city. Winding north from the Sea of Galilee toward Tsfat (also called Zefat or Safed), driving through groves of mountain pines, feeling the crisp mountain air, one can almost taste Colorado. But there the similarities end. Our teenagers toured ancient synagogues, visited modern art galleries and a candle factory, worshipped in synagogues in continuous use for centuries. It’s hard to visit any site in Israel without feeling like you are part of our people’s history. In Colorado, a two hundred year-old building is preserved as historic; many of the six hundred year-old buildings in Tsfat are still in use. Water is a constant theme in Israel: there is so little, and with the building boom and population increase its importance is magnified. Sound familiar? But the days are hot and the tour days are long, so we get the teens to water as often as possible. Traveling in Israel’s north is a marked contrast to the teens’ wilderness experience of a few short days ago. This small country is amazingly diverse in its topography, its climate. The hikes in the north are green and lush – we call them water hikes – and they follow the Jordan River’s tributaries. They include some natural pools for swimming (can’t pass those up), a refreshing waterfall (can’t pass up getting really wet there, either), and a lookout point worth a few photographs. This week has been a perfect example of how the CAJE American and Israeli staffs work hard to blend action (hikes, a bike ride to raise over $1200 for the Alyn Hospital in Israel, kayaking down the Jordan River – which was knee-deep and very full measured against the recent drought) with learning and reflection (a visit to Tel Hai and a re-enactment of the fight for Jewish sovereignty in the early pioneer days of Israel’s formation, with ISTers playing cameo roles dressed in the costumes of the historical periods.) The group this year flows so easily from deep philosophical discussion to being teens and having fun. A perfect blend. I’ll look forward to sharing with you IST’s additional northern adventures in my next message this coming Shabbat. Daniel Thursday, June 24Dear Friends: If you've ever stood on a windswept rock ledge in the Negev wilderness with the sun setting behind you as you looked down on the hills of Jordan to the east - perhaps you can picture what our ISTers saw this week. If your adventure followed a dawn to dusk uphill hike during a three-day wilderness experience -you might know what they were thinking. But you'd have to be a seventeen year old Colorado ISTer standing on that ledge with 43 friends to have any understanding of what they felt. For those of you who were lucky enough in your youth to attend summer camp or go on a teen tour, you know that the pace is packed and intense, that each day seems like a week, each week a month. Friendships are created quickly, and deep bonds with physical places are made quickly and usually sustained. Add to that a challenging desert experience that we've found to be the best medium for group building and personal accomplishment, and you begin to appreciate the magic of IST. We've now finished the most psychologically demanding part of CAJE IST
(Poland) and the most physically demanding part of the tour (the Northern
Negev.) One highlight was a hike through terrain that included dry river bed
or wadis and barren hills. Israelis call the hills “mountains,” but that's
because they've never seen Pike's Peak... Israel’s Negev is a wonderful wilderness, seemingly barren but filled with plant and animal life. It is dry, but look out for flash floods during the winter months. And all signs of civilization disappear five minutes from the road. What better place to explore one's spirituality than the Israeli wilderness? What better place to do some serious group building than the very place where 3200 years ago Joshua and Caleb told Moses and the community that with G-d's help we can do anything? Our teenagers may have asked themselves the same questions Moses’ twelve scouts asked as they set out to do a reconnaissance of the land: is the journey going to be safe? what are the people who live there really like? is this place really the land for me? will I really be able to call Israel "home?" After the wilderness and as a splash in the ocean (you’ve got to love a country where the beach is a short bus ride away from the desert), our group headed north. As we approach Shabbat we prepare to settle in to the northern mystical city of Tsfat, a place filled with history and wonder, and for our travelers – sheets and showers! Tsfat is so special on so many levels…but let’s leave that for my next communiqué. Daniel Tuesday, June 22With the dreary skies of Poland in our rear view mirror, our 44 ISTers and staff arrived in Israel tired, reflective, and mostly excited. We are grateful to the Colorado community that supports our teens’ Poland experience, and equally grateful to leave that experience behind. Despite a wonderful Shabbat worship experience in Krakow’s oldest synagogue and deep reflections following Havdalah on how visiting Poland had changed them forever, our teenagers literally kissed the ground when the plane landed at Ben Gurion airport! Our teenagers are beginning a journey as Abraham and Sarah did almost four thousand years ago. Our sages taught us that there are two Jerusalems: a heavenly Jerusalem in our hearts and souls, one that represents our fondest dreams and aspirations; and an earthly Jerusalem where our work is to bring healing and blessing to our world, where the daily work of repairing the world is formidable. That dichotomy will repeat itself throughout this summer. Overlooking the city of gold our teenagers gazed into the valleys surrounded by the Judean hills, upon the sacred stones where for four millennia the history of our people has been forged. Then our talented Israeli educators told them that like Abraham and Sarah’s journey, the value of their trip would be a result of their own personal choices this summer. Steve Zerobnick, an ex-Denverite runs Israel Studies Institute (ISI), has been our tour provider and partner in Israel for as many summers as we can remember. When I’m asked to explain why CAJE IST is once again the largest community-based teenage group from North America in Israel this summer, I always include in my answer our relationship with ISI and with Steve. We joke that his staff is really CAJE’s eastern branch, and in many ways it is true: not only are they among the finest educators and role models in Israel, but they love our children and value their safety as much as we do. I hope many of you will have an opportunity to meet them in Denver this fall. Our group is really beginning to come together, from providing comfort to one another in Poland to sharing excitement as they read their Kotel letters – the words of wisdom their loved-ones wrote for them weeks ago. Then, after saying l’hitraot (see you again soon) to Jerusalem, they embarked upon their Judean wilderness experience, a combination of physical and spiritual challenges likely to bring them growth and greater group cohesion. Like Abraham and Sarah’s sojourn, ours holds the possibility of new discovery and spiritual awakening. Shalom, shalom, Daniel Friday, June 18After last summer’s media-filled send-off at DIA, this year’s Monday morning CAJE IST 2004 departure seemed very ordinary: tearful and expectant goodbyes, wise words and prayers from our rabbis and synagogue representatives, a long but orderly line for baggage screening. But there is never anything ordinary about taking Jewish teenagers on an adventure sure to change them as young men and women, connect them with one another and themselves, and cement their lifelong ties to Israel and the Jewish People. The flights on United and Lot (Poland’s national airline) were uneventful, and our group of 44 (the largest community-based teen tour from North America in Israel this summer!) is half way through its Poland experience – a physically and psychologically difficult way to begin a six-week journey. But there is great wisdom in beginning by experiencing a land that gave birth and death to so much of the 20th century Jewish vision. Soon our weary kids will be settling in for Shabbat in Krakow, Poland’s largest southern city. Unlike Warsaw, Krakow’s pre-war architecture is beautiful and intact. And our kids report that the countryside is green and lush – which makes sense because it has been overcast and rainy – which is usual for this time of year. But our ISTers don’t forget that this is Poland, the site of such horror sixty years ago. Visits earlier this week to Warsaw’s ghetto sites, to the killing camps of Majdenek, Aushwitz and Birkenau remind us that human cruelty can be unsurpassed. We are also reminded that each of us has the capacity to bring healing to the world or - given the right set of circumstances – to become monsters and succumb to our darkest inclinations. The real message of the Holocaust, perhaps, is that our job is to flood that dark part of us with light so that it never becomes empowered. The American and Israeli staff speaks highly of our teenagers – already.
The bond between the counselors and the kids is a vital part of the trip’s
success, and Poland provides an important opportunity for bonding and
mentorship. CAJE IST Poland is a deeply emotional experience marked by
sadness, anger, and finally resolve. How can one visit the remains of what
sixty years ago was the world’s greatest Jewish community, visit its camps
of destruction and chronicle its virtual disappearance without being
changed? Staff reports that many teens spoke openly about their feelings as
they processed each evening this week; others expressed their feelings
through writing. CAJE feels so honored every year to provide this life-changing Jewish experience for our community’s teenagers. May we all smile at their transformation, kvell and worry together until they return home – when we’ll sleep a little bit better, too… |
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