Monday 16 December 2013

MAKING SENSE OF ES-SENSE

The Story Behind the Company 

By Petra van der Zande

“A hundred years from now it will not matter what my bank account was, the sort of house I lived in, or the kind of car I drove... but the world may be different because I was important in the life of a child.”  Forest E. Witcraft (1894-1967) Teacher, Scholar



THE ES-SENSE OF HOW IT ALL BEGAN 

Aurit and Shai Ya’akov are an Israeli couple with three children, two of them autistic. The couple believes that every person has the right to be treated properly and that everyone should donate to society. Even people with physical and mental disabilities. When given the right tools, and guided by people with lots of patience, those with special needs could also contribute to society.


In 2009, Es-Sense began in one room with two autistic adults and four local high school
students. Today (2013) they work with 18 autistic adults and 200 students from the Agricultural High school Ein Kerem per week. From Sunday-Thursday, students are taught in 2-hour workshops by a core group of 7-8 high functioning autistic adults.


Es-Sense also reaches out to Kitot Tikshoret students from Jerusalem. The communications-based classrooms are designed to give extra support to children with Autistic Spectrum Disorders. A class can have 2-3 children, with a maximum of 7.

Providing work for autistic adults is a challenge. At Es-Sense, each worker receives a job that fits his or her level of functioning. From soap production to packaging, each stage is developed with their potential in mind.
If necessary, a specific job is created for a worker with limited possibilities. This is the reason why Es-Sense uses so many different types of boxes for their products.

Working with autistics makes it necessary to work without poison – everything is 'safe'.

All Es-Sense products are natural and based on home-grown herbs and plants. Es-Sense creams only contain natural preservatives like essence of myrrh or frankincense.

Presently, Es-Sense produces over 200 types of soap and body products. (More than 30 kinds of olive soaps.) They can  manufacture whatever shape or scent a customer wants: from 3D company logos to custom made scents. 




DID YOU KNOW?

· 99.96% of the soap and body products are organic. 0.04 % are natural preservatives.
· Our products are not tested on animals; they are paraben free and SLS free.
· Es-Sense is also a research institute. They have joint projects with the Jerusalem Botanical Garden and Machon Volcani.
· Es-Sense exports to Canada, Singapore, Ukraine, Russia, Finland, South-Africa, Hong Kong, USA and Taiwan.
· If Es-Sense receives more long-term orders, they can provide another 50 jobs for autistic adults.



How You Can Help

·        Share this article with others
·        Buy or order products from Es-Sense
·        Bring a (small) group of friends to visit the Es-Sense workshop in Ein Kerem. (Big groups are too stressful for the workers. They are not for show.)
·        Volunteer your time: a few hours, a day, a week or a month. You can help weeding the field, work with the animals or make soap. People don't have to speak Hebrew. The aim is to interact with the autistic workers and the students.
·        Take part in the Es-Sense Experience: see the workshop and interact with the autistic workers and the high school students.


If you would like to read more about autism, click on this link: 

CONTACT INFORMATION


WORKSHOP (Sabonya) EIN KEREM

Visits by appointment only
Phone:
052– 6008899
050- 2430060
Final stop Bus 28 alef to Ein Kerem
Agricultural School



JERUSALEM STORE:

Rachel Imenu 6, German Colony,
Jerusalem.

HOURS:

Sunday—Thursday: 10:00 am - 9:00 pm
Friday: 9.00 am—2.30 pm
Closed on Shabbat.

Phone: (972) 2-6274772





Facebook: Es Sense
Twitter: @ Es_Sense

A Tale of Two Projects

Planting trees in memory of Na’il Burkan.
January 24, 2013

                          By Petra van der Zande


On February 4, 2009, the Lord called our beloved Na’il Home at the age of 14. To keep the memory of this special child alive, I wrote the book Just do It! - the story of his life and about the twelve years we had the privilege taking care of him.

For the Jewish people, planting a tree is a sign of hope, a sign of life. In memory of Na'il, American friends had two trees planted in Israel in 2009 through the Jewish National Fund.

People plant trees for many different reasons and help green the land of Israel while sending a special gift to a friend or loved one. Over the last 100 years, the JNF has planted over 240 million (!) trees. (This year on Tu b’Shvat, over 600,000 saplings were planted throughout Israel.) Wim and I decided to collect funds for a garden in honour of Na'il. A garden contained 100 trees, and people could fund one or more trees.

However, as time went by, we decided to give the money to ICEJ-Aid, the social assistance department of the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem. Our friend Yudit was asked to look for a suitable project in Israel. We wanted to bless an organisation with trees which at the same time would be a memorial to Na’il.

Through Offer, an Israeli friend, Yudit learned about two special projects in the most northern part of Israel - near Kiryat Shmona. One was a special education school for special needs children in the region. Staff and children came from Jewish, Muslim Arab, Christian Arab and Druze backgrounds. The other project was a rehabilitative day center where special needs adults came to work. My heart rejoiced! It was so fitting! It felt so right!
Located within the boundaries of the Mevo’ot Hermon Regional Council, the Shechafim Regional Special Education School has a student body of about 60 students with medium to high levels of cognitive impairment. Most of them have motor and sensory limitations, like Cerebral Palsy, physical handicaps and impaired vision. Six days a week, children between 6 and 21 years of age, attend school from 8 AM to 6 PM. (Fridays until 2 PM).

In Israel, when you donate something, you are expected to also bring a plaque (when you want to be remembered). We wanted everyone to know these trees were in honour of Na’il, so we had two beautiful plaques made.

On January 24, 2013, Wim and I left Jerusalem at 6.30 a.m. for the long journey to Kiryat Shmona. Yudit and Estera, who was to write an article for the Word From Jerusalem magazine about this event, drove their own car. Planning to stay a few days in Tiberias, our Dutch friends drove their rented car.

Tu B’Shvat - the birthday of the trees, was the next day, so the two events were very timely. The spring weather was beautiful - a sunny sky, and no rain expected. (A week later, the weather was cold and rainy, which would have made it impossible to plant trees, so we were doubly blessed!)
We enjoyed the trip but were also a bit tense, and wondered if we would make it in time for the first project. The ceremony was scheduled for 10 a.m.!

At Tsomet Koach (Koach Junction), Offer Michaeli, our Israeli contact, was already waiting for us. Our line of cars followed him to the school.
We longed for a cup of coffee after the long, three hour ride, but found there was no time for that. Ishai Adler, the principal of the Shechafim School was in a hurry.
We received a warm welcome in Hebrew, translated by Yudit into English, at the parking lot. After a short detour to the toilets, Ishai gave us a quick tour of the school.

The moment we entered the special education facility, I immediately felt at home. When our foster children were small, they attended similar schools in Jerusalem. However, the difference between this school and the ones in Jerusalem was enormous: this regional school was blessed with so much space, inside and outside!

Thanks to a contribution of the KKL/JNF, a beautifully landscaped schoolyard with a roofed playground was created. There is plenty of fun playground equipment, a greenhouse where children learn to feel, touch and even taste, a herb garden and a petting zoo.  
To protect the children’s privacy, we were not allowed to take pictures; therefore, there are no pictorial reminders of the ‘choir’ which sang in honour of the event.
After a short speech, Ishai handed us a certificate of honour, together with some presents the children had made. It was so precious! I (Petra) was then invited to say a few words in Hebrew. Offer read a moving text he had written for both occasions. I realized he was a ‘kindred’ spirit, a man with a deep love for these special children and a desire to help them wherever he could. 
A big area had been cleared of bushes and prepared to plant part of the 40 citrus trees we donated to the school. When they had cleared the rest of the area, the other trees would also be planted.
Helped by the staff, some of the children took part in this moving event.

Deeply inhaling the fresh air, I enjoyed the beautiful view: the school is surrounded by high mountains and lies near a river bed. A staff member of the school proudly showed me a short video on his I-phone. When it rains, a thundering stream runs down the mountain.

A forested area had been transformed into a park to enjoyed by the children and the staff. Wind chimes, winding paths suitable for wheelchairs and strollers, drinking fountains hewn from rock were equipped with special handles - it was beautiful. Strewn alongside the path were boulders and rocks, which were now being transformed by volunteer artist into animal shapes. There was an elephant, a whale, and more to come.
We were introduced to an artist couple (both teachers) who came here to work on these stones on a volunteer basis. Peter, our Dutch artist friend, was immediately drawn to the work they were doing. The artists happily exchanged business cards. I’m always amazed by these unexpected, surprising turns of events. This often happens in Israel!

It was time to say good-bye to Ishai and head for the next event. There still had been no time for coffee! In Israel, mainly cold drinks are served to guests, so we quickly drank some water before heading towards the cars.
While driving the short distance to Kiryat Shmona, Wim and I managed to gulp down some instant coffee.

The rehabilitative center comprised of a low building which was surrounded by a garden. The spacious courtyard was full of people, guests, children from a local high school who volunteered at the center, and the adults who worked there. Offer introduced us to the director of the program, Sigal Kabas, so I extended by hand.

  “I don’t want a hand,” Sigal exclaimed. “You are such special people! I want a hug!” We were welcomed like old friends.
While preparing for the project, Sigal wanted to have our background information, so Yudit suggested she take a look on our website. She had done her homework well, as we later were to find out.
  
Because of the uniqueness of the event, the mayor of Kiryat Shmona had been invited. Wim and I had the honour to meet and shake hands with Rabbi Nissim Malka. Sigal asked him how Judaism views people like us: non-Jews, Christians, taking care of four very special needs children. The mayor explained that we belong to the group of righteous people - tzadikim.

Seated in honoured places at a long table laden with cakes and plates with dried fruit (in honour of Tu b’Shvat), Wim and I were again blessed with handmade presents. Looking at the framed certificate, my eye fell on a picture of a brightly coloured umbrella. “Na’il would have loved that,” I told Sigal.
  “I know,” she said. “I read the story on the website.”
Also the quote at the end of this article, Sigal put on the certificate. It showed her love and care and painstaking research. We were touched!

 Offer’s Speech  (Free translation from Hebrew )
 Today, we plant fruit trees in memory of a little boy, Na’il  Burkan, who died prematurely. With us, his family, the couple  that fostered him: Wim and Petra van der Zande. We are happy  to welcome you here in the Shechafim School, which is a school  for children with developmental problems, and from the       different religions we have here in the North.
A child is like a sapling; a sapling is like a child - in every circumstance and occasion he makes people happy, and a benefactor to his world. Both child and sapling need cultivation, love and care - and then they grow. They deserve to be beneficial/profitable, bearing fruit, giving shade and be pretty. But also a child that does not reach the summit, or does not pass his final exams, and departs from our world, sometimes leaves his own little mark in this world.
Look, this little child continues to be remembered for many, many years.
The saplings we planted today will grow into big fruit trees - they will be beautiful and give shade. Everyone enjoying these trees, will remember for a second, or a minute, the little child: Na’il Burkan, who died before his time; and also the wonderful family who donated these trees to the children and people with special needs. And thus, the little child will leave his soul with us, in the Galilee, for ever.  Offer Michaeli   24-01-2013

30 trees were to be planted around this Rehabilitative Center. We were invited to plant a tree together with mayor rabbi Nissim Malka.
The students holding the shesek tree belong to a regional high school. About four hours a week they volunteer at the Center. This mandatory part of the school curriculum is a wonderful way to teach pupils community service.


While the rest of the trees were planted, (different varieties) we were invited to enjoy the cakes and goodies that were on the table. Wim and I also felt at home at this Center - which reminded me of Nadia’s work place at Elwyn in Jerusalem.

By now it was almost 1 p.m. Treated like V.I.P’s in Sigal’s office, we finally enjoyed a cup of freshly brewed coffee. Offer shared how he had come into contact with the I.C.E.J, over 20 years ago.

We thanked Sigal for the wonderful celebration, and the opportunity to help them with trees for the Center. It was such a blessing to finally meet Offer in person. I had heard so many good things about this special man, and thanks to his efforts, Na’il’s tree project had become a double blessing.


Only the next day, the experiences of the previous day begin to sink in. Looking at the pictures, we realized how special everything had been.

Dear Wim and Petra van der Zanda,
In this appreciation certificate, we wish to cherish your kind and  noble donation to the Rehabilitative Center in Kiryat Shmona.
A donation that plants strength and deep love in our hearts, which helps being happy, grow and  not get tired. Just as the roots of the trees will get stronger and deeper by the day, this is how we will plant the memory of your son, Na'il, deep in  our hearts. With deep gratitude and appreciation, The Rehabilitative Center in Kiryat Shmona.

Both projects were linked to Na’il’s life: it had been cut short while he was still at the Ilanot School in Jerusalem. He didn’t live long enough to work at a Rehabilitive center, but Nadia does. Our 25 year-old (ex) foster daughter works in a similar Center in Jerusalem. Both places were blessed with trees, to be enjoyed by generations to come.

Through our special needs children, we met many precious people - those working for the well-being of the weak in society. The children and people which are close to God’s heart.





Wim and I came to Israel to bless God’s people. In return, we were blessed; and continue to be abundantly blessed, as you can read in this TALE OF TWO PROJECTS.


Wednesday 13 November 2013

Eliyahu’s (Organic) Fields in the “Valley of Springs”

Kibbutz Sde* Eliyahu was founded in 1939 by German Youth Aliyah members. Back then, the Beit Shean Valley was full of malaria swamps and oppressively hot in summer (over 450 C in the shade). Instead of draining the swamps, the pioneers used the saline water to breed fish. Their drinking water came from the many (32) natural springs in the area. 

New immigrants from Italy, France and later also Holocaust survivors joined the small religious community. Today, Sde Eliyahu is only one of approximately 50 kibbutzim and Moshavim that still functions on the collective model - the rest are either partially or totally privatized. Three times a day, the 260 members (160 households, with an average of 5.5 children per family), take their meals in the communal dining room. Being the ‘heart’ of the community, ‘all roads lead to the dining room’. Believing that spiritual food is more important, the modern orthodox synagogue is built higher than the dining room. 
Sarah, our wonderful guide

 The kibbutz provides what the workers need - housing, food, clothing, medical care and education. The CEO of the factory and the girl washing dishes both receive the same allowance. 


 Before joining the kibbutz in 1941, Mario Levy studied agriculture at the Mikveh Israel School near Holon. Upon arrival, the ‘expert’ was instantly put in charge of the field crops. Mario wanted to work the land and guard nature as the Lord created it (Genesis 2:15). He found it difficult to be forced to use the conventional methods of that time. Chemicals and poison destroyed nature and made people sick. In 1974, Mario became a pioneer in organic farming by creating a chemical free zone of vegetables around the kibbutz. After a long, uphill battle, eventually other farmers and the Ministry of agriculture realized that organic farming was the answer to the never ending cycle of stronger pesticides. Mario taught them to work with nature, instead of against it. Even weeds helped the farmer - not only by preventing evaporation, but often the bugs ate the weeds instead of the vegetables.

Mario founded the Israel Organic Organization, which today supervises and certifies all Israeli organic produce. Certain rodents managed to damage 35% of the crops and in order to fight them, farmers were forced to use stronger poison. It didn’t solve the problem, and in addition affected the ground water, plant roots and killed migrating birds eating the rodents. Sde Eliyahu’s Shauli Aviel became the project leader of a bio-friendly way to win the war on rodents. 
In 1983 he offered barn-owls 14 nesting boxes in the fields and nearby orchards. Research showed that one owl couple killed an average of 2,000 to 5,000 rodents (mice and rats) a year. Shauli also installed nesting boxes for the lesser kestrel. Both birds ensured a 24/7 solution to fight (and win) the war against rodents. This small project grew into a national and eventually regional project. Of the 3,000 nesting boxes across the country, 50 are in Sde Eliyahu. 
Together with Dr. Yossi Leshem from Tel Aviv University, Shauli launched a regional cooperation project between farmers from areas under Palestinian Area control and Jordanian farmers. Barn owl and lesser kestrel replaced the dove as ambassador of peace in the Middle East. Swarms of starlings damaged many a winter wheat crop, until a kibbutz member suggested to combat them with kites. This bird of prey was lured to the fields by a pile of chickenfeed. Its presence kept the starlings and sparrows away - another bio-friendly way to protect a crop. 

Sde Eliyahu is the only kibbutz that continues to makes a living from agriculture. Even their industry is related: Bio-Bee, Bio-Fly and SDA-Spice. Since 1983, Bio-Bee Biological Systems is a growing, unique company which mass produces natural enemies for biological pest control and bumblebees for natural pollination in greenhouses and open field crops. Bio-Bee staff consists of specialists in biology, entomology and plant protection. An earth bumblebee community consists of the founder queen, worker bees, pupae, larva and eggs. The queen can live for one year, but the worker bees usually die after 5-10 weeks. As most green house flowers lack nectar, sugar water and pollen are provided as food. 

Unlike honeybees, bumblebees are not aggressive, and don’t swarm. This makes it possible to work ‘alongside ‘people. Conditions deemed ‘unworkable’ for honeybees, such as clouds, wind, cold or drizzle, don’t bother the bumblebees. An established hive of 100-150 bumblebees is sold to the farmer who uses it during the pollination season. Ever since Israeli tomato growers began to use bumblebees for pollination, the yield of their crop increased by more than 25%. Today, all Israeli tomato farmer uses this method.

Strawberries bearing the Bio-Tut sticker are pollinated by Bio-Bee bumblebees. Farmers using bees for pollination can no longer use pesticides; at least during the pollination season - they have to revert to biological pest control, which can also be bought through Bio-Bee. 

In 1973, Ya’akov, a (French) entomologist and kibbutz member, began researching and developing predatory and parasitic insects in the kibbutz bomb shelters. Today, different insects are mass produced in green houses and sold as biological pest control or IPM. Most organic farmers implement Integrated Pest Management (IPM). Some still use chemical fertilizer and/or weed killers, but switch to biological control the moment the fruit and vegetables appear. This pesticide reduced crop is more healthy and cheaper. 

Daughter company Bio-Fly (established in 2004) mass produces sterile males of the Medfly (Mediterranean Fruit fly) - a major regional pest. Using S.I.T. (Sterile Insect Technique) the males are released, mate with the female, who continue to lay eggs inside the fruit. However, because the eggs don’t develop, the fruit doesn’t rot. Used as another joint Israeli-Jordanian project in the Arava, both sides profit. Bio-Fly is the only privately owned S.I.T. company of the world - all S.I.T. projects are government owned. The I.A.E.A. (Atomic Agency) located in Vienna, Austria, assists companies worldwide. 

In the organic date orchards, nine varieties (of the 200) are grown. A herd of semi-wild donkeys keeps the weeds at bay. 

 The founding members succeeded in growing the Seven Species mentioned in the Bible (except for the barley). For more than 40 years, these pioneers of organic farming continue to grow wheat, grapes, figs, pomegranates, olives and dates.
We had the privilege to meet Mario in the dining room - such a lovely man!
And 89 year old Mario continues to tend his organic vegetable plots on the fields of Eliyahu. *Sde (Hebrew) means ‘field’. 

 Sde Eliyahu organizes Bio-Tours for individuals and groups in English, French and Hebrew - an amazing two-hour experience. 

Website: www.bio-tour.com 

email: bio-tour@sde.org.il