Colel Chabad ups the ante to help fight poverty in Israel
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Colel Chabad ups the ante to help fight poverty in Israel
As Passover approaches, the meaning of “all who are hungry come and eat” has more resonance than ever after a year of the global coronavirus pandemic.
OUR SOURCES “The lesson for us all is to focus more on what we can do and less on what we can’t do.” Volunteer Alex Katz “Together, we’re performing miracles. And the program’s only qualification is need, including 64,000 households in Arab villages during Ramadan.” Rabbi Sholom Duchman “The lesson for us all is to focus more on what we can do and less on what we can’t do.”
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The world has been turned upside down this past year by the Covid-19 virus causing a global pandemic. There is hope that things will be getting back to semi-normal, as more and more vaccines are getting to the market. In the United States, there are three vaccines out there and if AstraZeneca is approved, there will be a fourth. I looked up the definition of vaccine in Google, and it stated the following: “a substance used to stimulate the production of antibodies and provide immunity against one or several diseases.”