AVI BINUR: MERCY GATE בָּרוּךְ הַשֵׁם
Memaparkan catatan dengan label עַם. Papar semua catatan
Memaparkan catatan dengan label עַם. Papar semua catatan



A post shared by Eliza Blank (@elizablank) on
ELIZA BLANK: My father is from Great Neck. My grandmother, is from Far Rockaway. She’s 93. My grandfather is from Bensonhurst. That’s the Jewish side of my family. My mother is from the Philippines, as are her parents. My mother came over when she was in her early twenties on a nurse exchange program. She had no intention of staying, so she went back home, but then she did a second tour inspired by a friend who signed her up for a program in Brooklyn. My parents met at Downstate Hospital in Brooklyn and they still think New York is super dangerous. It’s just me and my brother. That’s my family. My mother converted. Somewhere along the way, it was spoken that it was important. She grew up Catholic, but I don’t think it was ever something she felt very passionate about. She was happy to convert. I think there’s a very special bond between Asians and Jews as it is, religion aside.


ELIZA BLANK: I was 21 when I met Steve, so we’ve been together my entire adult life. It just feels natural to me. I know who’s going to take care of me when I get old, and I don’t have to worry about Tinder. When Steve and I met, I didn’t even have a text plan. I had a flip phone. He actually called me. It was back in the day when you’d be on the phone with someone and you’d talk for an hour, which was so fantastic. I don’t think anything about marriage has totally surprised me. We knew that we wanted the same things and had the same values and, interestingly enough, he has the same background where his father is Jewish and his mother converted. Everybody I know is like that. It’s been nice because Steve does identify with the same level of Judaism that I do. We didn’t have a rabbi marry us, but we signed a ketubah, which was very modern and contemporary and not traditional at all. We plan to raise our kids Jewish.




A post shared by Daniel Blank 🚀 (@danielblank) on



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CHESKA PINK ROSE: All Filipino's raise your hand
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AVIGAIL SARAH HASSON: I'm Asian Filipino following in the ways of Judaism and I am so blessed and I am so grateful that I have other Women like me that are similar to me because my soul and my heart is the Jewish way of life, but clearly I am Filipina... I'm Filipino and I love my Filipino food. Just because I've become Jewish doesn't mean that, like, I'm going to stay away from my Adobo and all of the good Filipino foods. Absolutely not. I'm still going to stick to that. I still value myself and I'm still proud of myself as a Filipina. I might not be as Filipino in terms of, like, the way that I speak and the language and things like that, but I definitely identify as Filipina and I think that's really important. I just want to say how grateful I am to have fellow Women who follow in my belief, but also share my cultural, om, You know, my cultural side, anyway...

LUIS VIKTOR DALISAY: They have a branch at SM North EDSA

Walang ligaya sa lupa na hindi dinilig ng luha.

Filipino Proverb: There is no earthly bliss not watered by tears.

Bnei Lot are of an ancient origin. In the migratory tradition of Ruth begun more than two millennia ago, a remnant of David and Solomon migrated into Maritime Southeast Asia which comprises what is now Brunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, The Philippines, and Singapore, as well as Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia, with a sizeable minority of Malays migrating back to their tribal allotments in Sephardic Judah, besides Terrestrial and Figurative Jordan.