
The initiatives involved the Social Equality Ministry and the Advancement of the Status of Women, the Israel Association of Community Centers (IACC), Tzalir Fund, and Mifal HaPais.
Thousands of senior citizens in Israel are set to receive Passover support this year through two separate initiatives: one aimed at making sure older Israelis did not spend Seder night alone and another designed to move elderly residents and people with disabilities from northern confrontation-line communities to protected hotels ahead of the holiday.
The initiatives involved the Social Equality Ministry and the Advancement of the Status of Women, the Israel Association of Community Centers (IACC), Tzalir Fund, and Mifal HaPais.
In the first initiative, the ministry and IACC said dozens of community centers across the country would host public Seders for senior citizens as part of an effort to ensure that no elderly person was left alone on Seder night.
According to the release, participating communities included Katzrin, Yesud HaMa'ala, Karmiel, Mevo'ot Hermon, Ma'alot-Tarshiha, Acre, Rosh Pina, Nesher, Binyamina-Givat Ada, Even Yehuda, Holon, and Ofakim. Registration was being handled through the *8840 hotline.
Initiative transfers vulnerable people to hotels with protected spaces
The second initiative focused on physical safety. Tzalir Fund and Mifal HaPais announced that they were expanding the fund’s “Banu” emergency project, which transfers senior citizens and people with disabilities from confrontation-line communities to accessible hotels with protected spaces.
The move added one million shekels to the initiative and was expected to help about 300 additional residents, while the broader framework was projected to house more than 2,000 people by Passover.
According to the release, the project was aimed especially at residents over the age of 75 and others unable to reliably reach a protected space in time during alerts. Eligible residents were being moved to hotels in Haifa and Tiberias, where the program was to provide transportation, accessible rooms, daily assistance, and social support. Volunteers were also preparing communal Seders in the hotels so residents could celebrate the holiday together despite the security situation.
Mifal HaPais chairman Itzik Lari said the step continued the organization’s wartime effort to respond to urgent needs in cooperation with local authorities and professional bodies. The release also said Tzalir Fund was founded by Zilit and Meir Jakobsohn, owners of Medison Pharma, and that additional partners in the initiative included Milgam and Medison Pharma. Together, the two Passover projects addressed two central concerns for older Israelis this year: loneliness at the holiday table and vulnerability during rocket alerts.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Von der Leyen: Paris meeting sends signal of unity for Ukraine - 2
The Magnificence of Extraordinariness: Presenting Valuable Adornments and Gemstones - 3
23 Most Amusing Messages At any point Sent Among Youngsters and Their Folks - 4
Internet goes (cocoa) nuts: The funniest reactions to 12 tonne theft of KitKat bars - 5
UNICEF: More than 100 children killed in Gaza since ceasefire
Soldiers seize power in Guinea-Bissau and detain the president
Figure out How to Take part in Open Conversations Around 5G Pinnacles
Good ways to respond if your kid brings home less-than-ideal grades
Fossil analysis changes what paleontologists know about how long T. rex took to grow full size
Civilian toll mounts in Iran as war presses on
Manageable Living: Eco-Accommodating Decisions for Regular day to day existence
I was about to film a movie with Glen Powell when my hair started falling out in clumps. Alopecia has made me unrecognizable as an actor.
Purdue Pharma's deal means money for some victims, end of Purdue company name. Here's what to know
Scientists discover black hole flare with the light of 10 trillion suns













