Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Tisha B'Av

On this date 1 million people were killed and thousands sent into exile after the destruction of the first temple

On this date began the Spanish inquisition where 80 thousand Jews were forced out of spain, 40 thousand were forced to convert, and 5 thousands were brutally killed

On this date began the deportation of 300 thousand Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto the Treblinka Death Camp

On this date throughout history millions of Jews have been murdered, had their lives destroyed, simply for being Jewish

This evening marks the beginning of Tisha B’av, a Jewish day of mourning. Throughout history, as you have seen in the Ulam, a number of atrocities happened to the Jewish people on this day. Jews throughout the world spend Tisha B’av in a state of mourning. We, too, at Camp Solelim will recognize and respect the tragedies that happened on Tisha B’av.

Tisha B’av is traditionally observed by fasting, not listening to music, not playing sports, not cheering, and other rituals of mourning. At camp, in order to respect those who are observing Tisha B’av, as well as to help engage us and find meaning in Tisha B’av, we will not play basketball and we will not play music out of speakers or in the Mo.

Tisha B’av at camp is marked by a number of programs attempting to make this day relevant, meaningful and understandable for the campers and staff. While we understand that numerous discussion programs can be tiring, we hope that you will be able to stay engaged throughout the day, and recognize the importance of learning about Tisha B’av.

Many of these events happened hundreds and thousands of years ago. Many of the events of Tisha B’av were biblical, like the destruction of the two temples, and a number were more modern including the Spanish inquisition. While some events that occurred within the Holocaust happened on Tisha B’av, this day should not be confused for Yom Hashoah or Holocaust remembrance day.

One way of understanding the significance of Tisha B’av is recognizing that throughout history Jewish people have been murdered, raped and had their belongings destroyed. The motivation behind many of these atrocities was simply that the people were Jewish. Whether we find a connection with Judaism or not, we are the Jewish people. Had we been born at a different time, we could have been victims to these atrocities and been unable to live freely as Jewish people like we do in Canada today. For this reason, we asked you to write down your goals. The victims of the events of Tisha B’av were normal Jewish people like you and me. They too had normal goals. They too played sports with their friends. They too loved their families. And they too had dreams they wished to see fulfilled.

Because of these events, Jewish people like you and me, were unable to live out their dreams. Evil people have tried to wipe out the Jewish people but we are still here today. We will soon take a moment of silence. While we are silent we hope you realize that the goals you have written down have two meanings. One is a personal goal for yourself to fulfill, but another significance is for all the Jewish people who were unable to live out their goals.  By chasing your dream, you are continuing the Jewish people, and ensuring that while Jews have been persecuted for thousands of years, we will not disappear.

Please stand for a moment silence.



Sunday, 14 July 2013

Theme Song 2013 - Learn to Fly

Learn To Fly – Camp Solelim 2013

Run and yell all of your camp cheers, Get to the bus on time
Been thinking ‘bout that place where everything’s all right
I can’t wait much longer, I know that its time
For hangin’ out and laughing; early mornings and late nights

Chorus

Yeah, I’m lookin’ at the smiling faces
Lookin’ for a chance to shine
Lookin’ for memories to last me my whole life
I’m lookin’ for the posts to guide me
Lookin’ for a way of life
Make my way back home where I learn to fly

From the back row to the basement
Camp is full of life
Lovin’ sitting up on a migdal that’s too high
We live happily and together with no sense of time
I’d give it all up if you’d give me some more time

Chorus

Yeah, I’m lookin’ at the smiling faces
Lookin’ for a chance to shine
Lookin’ for memories to last me my whole life
I’m teachin’ all the rooks to love this
Lookin’ for a way of life
Make my way back home where I learn to fly
Solelim, the place where I learn to…

Fly along with me, I can’t quite make it alone
Camp will make my life my own
Fly along with me, I can’t quite make it alone
Camp’s what makes my life my own

Chorus

Yeah I’m lookin’ at the smiling faces
Lookin’ for a chance to shine
Lookin’ for memories to last me my whole life
I’m really beginnin’ to find me
Findin’ a new way of life
Make my way back home where I learn to…

Yeah I’m lookin’ at the smiling faces
Lookin’ for a chance to shine
Lookin’ for memories to last me my whole life
We’re buildin’ up an awesome chevra
Findin’ a new way of life
Make my way back home where I learn to fly
Make my way back home where I learn to fly
Solelim, the place where I learn to…





Friday, 5 July 2013

Camp 2013

We're back at Camp Solelim for yet another summer! Camp is at full capacity and it feels full and lively, with campers in every nook and cranny at all hours of the day!


Tuesday, 30 October 2012

"My Special Place"



There’s only one place that can make my heart skip a beat, one place that can bring me to tears, and only one place that can possess so much meaning and yet be something so simple - camp.

Outside the sprawling city of Sudbury lies a small piece of land that holds big dreams. Driving down the narrow road that leads to my favourite place is like the beginning of a new journey. I see the field with all the murals standing tall on their posts displaying so much history. Just a bit ahead, I see the dusty red Caboose, the small train car that is the headquarters for all things ‘tripping’ where you are told to ‘abandon all hope’. If you walk past the signpost that lies in the centre of camp and go by the staff tents all lined up with no entry to campers and then scramble up the steep rocks, you come to my special place within camp.

On top of the rock the air is crisp and the wind blows the beautiful smell of the cool lake water and the swaying trees into your face. It sends shivers all through your body making the hairs on the back of your neck stand on end. When everything becomes too crazy, standing up here makes me see how everything is so small and it’s really nothing to worry about. I could sit there for hours watching boats go by on the water or picking blueberries that grow in small bushes all over the rock. Here I am nowhere near my crazy city life. I am surrounded by nature, so peaceful and so serene.

On the last night of camp we all make the uneasy trip of climbing up just to spend a few hours soaking in the last bit of darkness before the sun comes up. Everything is quiet and the world seems calm. The only sounds are the birds and the animals all around not bothering to disturb us. Even in the darkness everything is beautiful. Looking down on the camp from above is a view that is ever engraved into my mind. Up here I can see the entire place where I have grown and found myself. On the way up, written on the rocks are the names of all the incredible staff going back to the 60’s when it all first started. Off to the side in an inconvenient place is my mother’s name. It is where I hope to one day paint my name after being staff for 4 years or maybe more, right on top of my special place.

Every time I’m up there, regardless of who I’m with, I always take a second to breathe very deeply and look out onto our little piece of land outside of the sprawling city of Sudbury that has made all my dreams come true.

- Marissa Kachuck, Post 2012

Tuesday, 25 September 2012

Six Weeks.


Six weeks consists of 42 days. That’s 1,008 hours. Or 60,480 minutes. 3,628,800 seconds - give or take a few. No matter how big the numbers get as you begin to consider six weeks in terms of small measurements of time, six weeks will always be too short, and go by too fast.

Six weeks ago our summer was just finishing, we were back in Toronto. We were sitting alone in our rooms, wondering how once again we were going to make it through the next ten months of our year. As solelimnicks, we stumble absentmindedly through home, school, and all the in between. We live ten months just to make it to those six weeks of camp.

As I sit here in my room, I am contemplating the notion of time. It has been six weeks since we got off the buses sad and scared of what the months to come would have in store for us. Terrified because we had just left our little bubble of safety, our heaven. We had spent six weeks forgetting what the real world was like, how to act in it, and now we were thrust back into it, attempting to adjust as though we had stepped out of the darkness into the bright light. We had gotten used to those little nuances that are Camp Solelim. We forgot what it was like to be alone. We never once had to shower by ourselves. A simple boring part of personal hygiene at home becomes a time filled with singing and talking at camp. We slept bed touching bed with some of our best friends. If we woke up in the middle of the night, we had but to simply roll over and find that there was no reason to be afraid, that a friend was there for you if you needed them. It was completely acceptable to wear pajama pants in public every day if you felt that’s what you wanted. Showing up at breakfast when you still hadn’t brushed your hair or your teeth didn’t make you any different from at least half the table you chose to sit with.

It has been six weeks since I can remember watching the sunrise for the first time in my four years at Solelim. Since stepping off the buses and watching everyone disperse as slowly as possible to find their parents, or as fast as they could for that shoulder to cry on. Six weeks since we loaded up the car with our trunks, drawers and duffels, bringing them home to be emptied. Camp sheets and towels packed back into the trunk that would not move from its spot in the basement for another ten months. Drawers filled with those netted laundry bags, the shoes I knew I wouldn’t wear until camp, my dry sack, and a couple of power-bars. My paddle has been hung up in its holder on the wall. From my bed, I can faintly see the scratches that I know most of which came from Killarney this past summer. My Iton is on the shelf with all the others I have from my camping career. The songs of the summer have been downloaded, played, and replayed on my iTunes and my iPod. My bracelets have slowly but surely been removed one at a time from my wrists, but a few still hang on. Any colour I might have had is fading, and freckles are beginning to disappear from their place on my skin.

Six weeks goes by fast, and a lot happens in such a short amount of time. Six weeks from now the weather will have changed. The temperature will be considerably lower than it is right now. The trees will be almost, if not completely through their process of shedding their leaves. Summer will truly be just a distant memory. But hey, there are only six-and-a-half more six week periods until camp… 

Sunday, 22 July 2012

Medium Canoe Trip

The participants of the Medium Canoe Trip of 2012 had an amazing time! From July 15th-17th, 11 campers and 4 staff spent three days and two nights of their precious summer break away from the camp they call home. On the morning of July 15th we packed our bags, and boarded a bus headed out of Sudbury. After a very bumpy ride, we arrived in Killarney Provincial Park, stunned by the majestic beauty of the park's lakes and mountains. We loaded up our canoes, and headed into the wilderness.

Over the next three days, we had the time of our lives. From crystal-clear lakes, to setting up tents, to back-breaking (but fun) portages, every moment spent on the canoe trip was one to remember. Although we were prohibited from making campfires, our group still managed to bond well together. All in all, everybody on the trip had a fantastic time, and both campers and staff had an experience they will never forget.

Looking forward to another great time next year!

Jacob Brown, Rookie 2012

Tuesday, 17 July 2012

July 16: Jets Vs. Panthers


Today during menucha, two rivals, the Carolina Panthers and the reigning SFL champions, the New York Jets faced off in an exciting game. Although the score was four to nothing in the Panthers favor, the game was still worthwhile. First of all, the rivalry between these two teams is steadily growing. Past outcomes have increased the importance of this game. Additionally, there were very key moments during the game that ultimately forced the final score. To add on, there were key players that drastically affected the outcome of the game. No matter the final score, this game was definitely a great one.
            This budding rivalry has roots going all the way back to the 2009 SFL season. In that year, the Carolina Panthers reigned supreme over the SFL as champions. However, last year, the New York Jets, led by active co-coaches Josh ‘Ziggy’ Zigler and Kyle Ungerman took the title of SFL champs. The speculation behind this game is enormous. Both teams felt like they had something to prove to the rest of the league. Panthers co-coach Jonathan Gottesman, a two-time SFL champion as a coach proclaimed “ It is good to have beat two great coaches and show that we can beat the defending champs”. He also declared that the two teams would meet again in the playoffs. Jets co-coach Josh ‘Ziggy’ Zigler agreed that there is a “Strong Possibility” that the two teams will play again. However, the Jet’s coach thinks that his team will be “Better prepared” for the ball game. Even though this is a regular season game, it means a lot to both teams and coaches.
            In every game, there are some key moments that ultimately change the fate of the game. In this game, there were a few crucial turning points that drastically affected how the game went. First, early in the game, the Jets were on the verge of scoring a touchdown and tying the game up at one. The Jets were a mere five yards from scoring, when they turned the ball over. Jets receiver Josh Aber caught the ball but was forced out of bounds only one yard short of the end zone. Additionally, the Panthers had two very key plays that gave them their victory. First, quarterback Jason Sacke threw a touchdown strike to receiver Josh Maker that gave them an early 1-0 lead. Shortly after, Jets quarterback Ethan Cohen threw his first interception of the game to Panthers defender Josh Maker (players can play offence and defense). This interception lead to the Panthers second touchdown. The Panthers never looked back from there. These plays proved to be the turning points in the game.
            In every game, the referees recruit a stat keeper. Obviously, their job is to record all of the major statistics during the game. In total, there were four touchdown passes thrown and two interceptions thrown. Panther’s receiver Josh Maker caught two touchdown passes along with his fellow teammates, Zach Brill and Ben Rabvogal each catching one touchdown pass. Panther’s defender Sam Baranek intercepted one of Jet’s quarterback Ethan Cohen’s passes as well as his teammate Josh Maker. Of course, everyone played great, but in each game there is also a player of the game. This player not only plays well statistically, but also takes on a leadership role and has great sportsmanship. This game’s P.O.G. (Player Of Game) was Panther’s quarterback Jason Sacke. Jason threw four touchdown passes and made key flag pulls on defense. This game was very full of statistics, sportsmanship and leadership.
            In all, this was a very fun game to watch as well as to play. Both teams played great and had a lot of fun doing it! Now that this game is over, the SFL can leap into week four! The season is young and very promising! The schedule is not yet revealed but we are in for another round of great games! Come back next time for another article on the next game being played. As Jets co-coach Josh ‘Ziggy’ Zigler exclaimed “The next time we face, it’s going to be a fight to the death!” Thanks for reading and look for our next article coming your way soon! Don’t forget, Visitors day is fast approaching, see you there!

By: Jesse Burrows, Solelim Sports Journalist, Rookie