when two worlds collide.

It’s so hard not to smile when I walk into work.

Every day, I walk past the ONE Synagogue in Estonia, along the path that leads directly to the bright orange doors – the ones that guide me to the people who work tirelessly to keep the Estonian Jewish community vibrant.

Along the path I can see some of those people through their office windows; a wave hello from the outside keeps me smiling as I walk through the doors to the inside.

I step in, look to my left (where I can always find a cluster of people), and Russian greetings fall naturally from my lips.

  • “Privyet, kak deela?” (Hello, how are you?)
  • “Privyet, Jen, harisho, kak deela?” (Hello, Jen, good, how are you?)
  • “Atleechna, spasiba” (Great, thank you!)

And today I entered the building the exact same way – except this time I had been gone for a week. I was happily, yet urgently led to The Maker of All Beautiful Scarves in the community. The Maker, who I shall name BumbleBee, is in her young senior years, and buzzes with such zest around the community. Let us not forget the Swarovski crystal on her French manicured nails.

She pulls out a long, luscious, Tiffany blue/green scarf from her bag.

She forces me to take off my coat and current scarf. She wraps the one she knitted around my neck.

I’m pushed to look at myself in the mirror as another colleague follows me and translates the following to me in Hebrew, “Is it okay? Do you like it?” – Yes to all of the above.

“She cuts, you wash, you wear.”

Okay, she cuts, I wash, I wear.

Hugs, spasiba’s, and smiles follow me up to my desk.

I sit here, in front of you, happy to be back in Estonia and deeply inspired from the past week.

So, Jen, tell us, where have you been?

With 90 Jewish teens from Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania in Pedase, Estonia – about 60km from Tallinn. This is also why I have a cold today.  Sniff.

4 days at “Kadima” – a teen seminar devoted to leadership training and team building infused with inspirational Jewish learning. Pedase is a camp-style hotel; wooden bunk beds, shared bathrooms, shared sauna’s, shared laps (people sitting on top of other people), and oh yeah, shared germs.

And SO in my element. Camp counselor Jen came out to play those 4 days; being fun, light, positive and bubbly with teens. Pushing them to put their phones away and take advantage of the learning experience, giving them they eye when being too loud or too goofy. But most importantly, the part that fills my soul with purpose and reminds me of my favorite memories: having meaningful one-on-one conversations with younger generations. Talks of relationships, family life, social life, best friends, enemies, teachers at school; what is G-d? What is Judaism and why should I explore it? What do you believe in? Do you believe in anything? Etc.

Don’t imagine the conversations going completely fluidly; they were broken, absolutely. Words translated by others, and frustration had by the teens when they couldn’t find the word in English. And in my head? Well, in my head, I saw my pieces of my world connect with other pieces; creating clearer images of my life’s puzzle. I realize that sounds absolutely obscure and “out there”; but I felt purposeful. Blessed.

I wrote on the bus, “I feel: Purposeful. Blessed. To be a member of the involved Jewish world. To care about our tribe and its’ future – I feel like a tiny piece of the puzzle who’s just finding connecting pieces ALL.OVER.THE.WORLD.”

And then I wrote a reminder as I walked away from the weekend, “and don’t forget: you, yourself, need be inspired to inspire others.”

A collision of two worlds:

A 5-hour bus ride south took me to Riga, Latvia. The largest city of the Baltic’s. My first trip to connect me to the larger Baltic picture.

Monday, November 12, 2012:

“Sitting at breakfast in the Albert Einstein Hotel in Riga, Latvia. Beatles playing in the background, the view of Riga’s cobble-stones streets and colorful architecture beyond the window. Just saw a dog carrying his/her own leash. Whisper words of wisdom, let it be. E=mc^2”

A little taste of my Catcher in the Rye/stream-of-consciousness journal styling’s.

That evening I was surprised by the JDC Entwine Steering Committee. Without hesitation, I threw my arms around the JDC Staff I knew. Staff, by the way, who interviewed me for this very position. A very surreal, full-circle feeling – a collision of two worlds, if you will.

Rachel, who is a former JDC JSC Fellow and who now works for JDC-New York, was my first connection to this current chapter of my life. Rachel interviewed me via Skype in April; I remember it vividly. Sitting in my apartment in Lawrence, Kansas, rocking my business professional attire, just 2 months shy of graduating. The moment that literally led me to this overwhelmingly connected hug with her in Riga, Latvia. Where my current Baltic life exists, with my Baltic colleagues and friends, rocking my more trendy-euro-hipster attire, just shy of 2 months since landing in Estonia. All in one room together.

Hello surrealism.

And I spent the next day with the JDC Entwine Steering Committee on their tour of Jewish Riga. Incredibly educational and necessary for me to better understand past and current Jewish life – clarity was gained, and feelings were undoubtedly felt. We walked through Jewish ghetto’s, where Jews were forced to live during ww2; we saw cemeteries, memorials, Jewish museums, and artifacts that left us with emotions too hard to put into words.

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Anger, sadness, confusion, optimism, belief, and even greater motivation for the future.

“what the eyes can’t see, the heart can’t feel”

I was told this 3 months ago as I prepared for my new life in the Baltic’s. It resonated in my heart exponentially as I drifted from images too difficult to grasp.

But now I saw.

And I feel more than ever.

And I understand so much more.

 And I’m grateful I get 10 more months to put that better understanding, that motivation for the future, into my work here. I don’t just walk away and sit in Dallas, Texas with the memory of a destroyed Jewish community in my head – I get to help in their revival, their renewal.

“You’re one of us now”,said the President of the Jewish Community of Riga. I am. Without question. I am so a part of this community it baffles me at times. When people ask me how I am, how I’m doing, I point to the people and say, “Just look at them. Look how funny, how beautiful they are. That’s how I’m doing”

Thanksgiving is in a week so hurry up and send me recipes! If you’d like to send me a turkey, that’s totally okay too.

Lats of Love,

Jenstonia – Feelin’ so Baltic. 

 

privet [hello] to new faces, new friends

Ah, my first week in Tallinn has come to a close and the second is just beginning. An incredibly touching week, indeed, but tonight I’m forgoing the words and showing you through blueberry eyes [and a Canon PowerShot] – please enjoy!

potselui [kisses], Jenstonia

P.S. Play my song of the week below if you want to hug the photo’s with some tunes.

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Dallas to Tallinn – in snow boots, parka, and a cloud of melatonin

I had a feeling I’d love it here.

And now I can finally say it out loud, physically walking the streets – not just clicking arrows on street view of Google Maps. I LOVE IT HERE! 

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Flashback to early morning on Thursday, September 20th: ‘Twas the day I planned weeks in advance to wear my heaviest clothes (snow boots, parka, scarf,), 2 backpacks and a Costco-sized purse (Costco = mega). Yeah, you counted 3 carry-on’s. So did the airline employee’s.

I won’t focus too much on the bumpy departure – I knew it was trivial then and I know it’s even more so now.  In short, my passport was found after running through the DFW airport in my heaviest winter gear, backpack, and all the vicious curse words I know. Where, where, where? The ground of the airport parking garage of course. I literally looked up – eyes teary and legs trembling – and thanked whoever lives in the sky. Passport found, ran into a bit of a ‘visa issue’, solved it 16 phone-calls later, and made it to the gate with 3 minutes to spare. The connection to the International Terminal at Chicago O’hare took 2 hours; 12-minutes to spare. The bumpy ride ended when a Polish woman yelled at me for having too big of a backpack in the overhead bin and too big of boots on my feet. Shoes off, Bon Iver in my ears, Tallinn on my mind.

Connecting in Warsaw was pleasant and organized. I met my first local Estonian at the gate! His name was Vaiko, a truly genuine, witty, down-to-earth guy and he spoke great English. He insisted on carrying my bags so I didn’t look like a donkey. Estonian men: A+ first impression!

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Landing and physically connecting: Tears rolled down my face when I felt the small, propeller plane weaving through the rain clouds into the bright blue sky, showing me an aerial view of the pristine forests covering Estonia. Reminded me of autumn in Colorado times a bajillion and three.

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The airport is small-ish, but orange and blue on the outside, and chic as can be on the inside.Trendy restaurants one after the other, clever advertisements, and truly gorgeous people consumed the place. I was greeted by Ira, Sasha, and a mini-van (see, mom! They have big cars here too). All of whom/which work at the local JCC here – including the van. I shamelessly showed them how much time I spent on Google Maps by mentioning which streets we were turning on, where the liquor stores were, and the parks I had plans to run through. They must think my skills lay in drinking then running through parks. Sweet. As we drove through one of the major ‘highways’, ‘Tartu Mantee’, I couldn’t help but notice how together this city is; cars, bikers, walkers, a tram running through the middle of the street, and buses –  all sharing the road. Complete streets.

That’s when we stopped at my apartment, where I met the owner of the complex -a gorgeous woman who speaks fantabulous English and has some killer style. Then Ira opened the front door to my place… GASP! IN LOVE! I was confronted with 2 paintings of John Lennon and Twiggy. THIS WAS HOME! The heated wooden floors, blue suede couches, huge bathtub, queen-sized bed and super modern shelving also make it extra cozy. I still can’t believe this is my home for the next year. It’s more than enough and I know I’ll be extremely comfortable.

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Ira and I went to the JCC, Beit Bella (local synagogue), the Jewish Day School, and the JDC Office. The staff all very welcoming and full of smiles! I remember reading and hearing that “most” Estonians are a bit reserved and timid at first, but I was totally proved wrong today. Deliciously warm people.

The night ended with Ira and Ilja, also a JCC employee, joining me on my first grocery run ($20 for a weeks worth, thank you very much) and coming over to set up my internet and chat over some coffee and gouda. Shared lots of laughs – and may I add, it is a huge relief to see that my quirky/weird humor in combo with sleep deprivation is well received and, on average, results in laughter from the other party. Woof. Now sitting in my blue plaid PJ’s on my blue suede couches, rocking Sara Bareilles and smirking peacefully by the sense of home I feel.

I am: HAPPY, COMFORTABLE, EXCITED, ALL THE POSITIVE ADJECTIVES

I can’t: WAIT TO WAKE UP IN THE MORNING AND GO ON A RUN THROUGH KADRIORIG PARK AND STROLL THROUGH THE OLD TOWN

Peace, love, & Tallinn,

Jenstonia – finally in Estonia.