Joan Rimmon of ProjectMOT is asking for people to vote for Project MOT to have a chance to be awarded up to $100,000.

As many of you know, ProjectMOT sends holiday care packages to our deployed U.S. military Jewish men and women.

Vote now and tell your friends:

http://www.thenextbigjewishidea.com/ideas/entry/ProjectMOT/

And here is info on what this is about:

The Jewish Federation of Los Angeles is looking for the next big idea to help mobilize the Jewish community. To find it, we launched the search for the Next Big Jewish Idea, a unique opportunity for individuals, businesses, nonprofits, and organizations to submit their innovative ideas for programs that will strengthen and benefit the greater Los Angeles Jewish community.


The Federation will award up to $100,000 in funding and in-kind services to the individual or organization with the best idea, and help them turn it into a reality.

Vote now! It only takes a second.

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Daniel Needlestone in the U.K. just sent me the link to the Jewish Chronicle Online to watch the two-minute holiday message video by Rabbi Arnold Saunders, the Jewish chaplain for the U.K. armed forces.

Watch this heartfelt video now.

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Here is an email from the USO:

Imagine for a moment you’re far away from your loved ones at this special time of year. You might know when you will be home again, but that date is so distant it’s hard to picture. You’re cold, tired and really miss the simple things — like talking to your kids on the phone.

That’s what it is like for our troops spending this holiday season in Afghanistan, Iraq and at outposts around the world.

But through the USO’s At Home In Our Hearts holiday campaign, supporters like you have the chance to give our troops something really special: the opportunity to make a phone call home.

Whether it’s the sound of your daughter’s voice, hearing your son talk about his football game, or the opportunity to tell your parents you’re alright — when you’re deployed during the holidays, it’s a phone call you’ll treasure.

Will you join me in giving our troops the chance to phone home for the holidays?

Give our troops a phone call home this holiday: make your tax-deductible donation today.

Operation Phone Home goes the extra mile to connect our troops with their families, and it’s a vital part of the USO’s At Home In Our Hearts campaign. At centers across the world, staff and volunteers are going all-out to give our troops invaluable moments with their families that bridge the miles.

There’s nothing we can ever really do to thank our troops enough for the sacrifices they make. But we owe it to them to try and right now that means helping them make personal connections with loved ones to brighten their holiday.

Every dollar you give to “Operation Phone Home” can provide twenty minutes of talk time for our troops. With your help, we can bring them all a few minutes of holiday warmth with family.

You can make sure that this holiday, home is just a phone call away for our troops.

No matter where they’re stationed or deployed, our troops are spending this time of year At Home In Our Hearts. Please help them bridge the distance by making a special gift today.

Thanks for all you do,

Kelli Seely
USO Chief Development Officer

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Here’s an email from Joan Rimmon:

Thought you might enjoy seeing some of the human conveyor belt that put the boxes in the car. Enjoy.

Thank you for your service to our great nation and your kind attention to our mitzvah,

Joan

Project MOT, sending care packages to deployed Jewish troops
Joan Rimmon —- ProjectMOT@aol.com
Marsha Roseman —- MRose13432@aol.com
www.rimmon.com/ProjectMOT.htm

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Show Support for Our Troops Now

by Phyllis Zimbler Miller

While any time is a good time to show gratitude for our troops, this month is an especially good time to remember our troops.

Here are a few of my recommendations:

Vietnam Veterans of America:

This organization needs donations, especially clothing, and will pick up from your home or office. You can schedule a pickup through the website at http://www.pickupplease.org/

Cell Phones for Soldiers:

This organization’s goal is to help deployed military personnel call home. Learn how you can help now at www.cellphonesforsoldiers.com/

Operation Gratitude:

This organization sends care packages to soldiers and needs your help – see http://www.opgratitude.com/

USA Together:

This organization bills itself the Craigslist for wounded warriors – check out the site now at http://usatogether.org/

And for help with recognizing and treating Post Traumatic Stress Disorder:

Here’s info at my site www.FilmsThatSupportOurTroops.com –
http://www.insupportofourtroops.com/ptsd-info/

And here’s a FREE ebook written while Ken Jones was recovering from his own combat-induced PTSD – bit.ly/c3gQDr
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Phyllis Zimbler Miller is the author of the novel MRS. LIEUTENANT and her social media marketing company Miller Mosaic Power Marketing works with clients to use social media to attract more business. Read her social media marketing blog.

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Thanks to Penny Sansevieri’s www.amarketingexpert.com ezine, I learned about Reach Out and Read’s military initiative.

To support the program you can donate a book or sponsor a child — one of the 90,000 children on 44 U.S. military bases served by the program:

“In addition to promoting school readiness, Reach Out and Read also helps build routines and strengthens bonds, which are especially important for military families who are tested by separation and deployment.”

Go here now to say thanks to our troops by supporting this program.

And now read the chapter on Hanukkah from the Jewish holiday book Seasons for Celebration.

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This is a guest post by Ken Jones, PhD, that appeared on my blog MrsLieutenant.blogspot.com . Because the topic is so important, with Ken’s permission I am re-publishing his guest post here:

Photo of When Our Troops Come HomeNations go to war. Human beings go into combat. War is a media event. Combat is savagely personal.

War will eventually recede. The media will move on. The memories of combat will remain with our troops for a lifetime.

The families and loved ones of those now returning from combat want desperately to understand what has happened to their returning warriors.

Why are the warriors that they waited, longed, and prayed for now so seemingly distant and unapproachable?

It was the same for me 40 years ago. In January of 1968 I turned 20. I had been in Vietnam for 10 months. My unit of the 11th Cavalry was operating on the Cambodian border.

In March of 1968 I returned to the world; I felt 100 years old. I quickly learned never to talk about Vietnam, or admit that I had been there.

There was no such thing as post-traumatic stress back then, and I never heard of traumatic brain injury.

The anguish of what I had seen and done and heard and smelled played over and over in my nightmares and intrusive thoughts. Combat survivors do not remember their experience. They relive it.

For 13 years I sucked up the pain. I got married, had a family, and went into business.

On the outside I was successful. On the inside I had only two alternatives left – insanity or suicide.

I began to write, first on 3×5 note cards and then on yellow tablets.

I also got very lucky. On a business trip to Anchorage, Alaska, I stopped by the Vet Center.

There I found someone who understood what I said, and assured me that I was not going insane. He was a former combat Marine who had also been in Vietnam. Now he was the Vet Center team leader.

Finally, there was someone I could talk to.

The notes I had scribbled to myself became the book WHEN OUR TROOPS CAME HOME.

Working with other combat vets we found that there was a very similar pattern of experiences that resulted in our combat-induced post-traumatic stress.

This pattern, this progression to becoming combat survivors, is described in a second book, LIFE AFTER COMBAT.

Both of these e-books are offered FREE, as a gift to the families and friends who desperately want to understand what has happened to their returning warriors.

These e-books are also offered FREE to our warriors as one more voice reminding them that they are not alone.

Get WHEN OUR TROOPS CAME HOME.

Get LIFE AFTER COMBAT.
___

Phyllis Zimbler Miller is the author of the novel MRS. LIEUTENANT and her social media marketing company Miller Mosaic Power Marketing works with clients to use social media to attract more business. Read her social media marketing blog.

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(From www.mrslieutenant.blogspot.com — keep reading and you’ll come to the Jewish parts.)

For those of you who regularly read my blog www.mrslieutenant.blogspot.com, you may remember that I started out writing posts related to my 2008 novel MRS. LIEUTENANT that takes place in the spring of 1970 during the Vietnam War. But in the past two years I’ve almost written entirely on topics supporting our troops now.

Now I’m reading David Meerman Scott’s 2007 nonfiction book THE NEW RULES OF MARKETING & PR” and he talks about how he “blogged the book, section by section.”

Suddenly I realized that this could be the commitment I need to finish MRS. LIEUTENANT IN EUROPE, the sequel to MRS. LT.

Here is my dilemma:

The story of MRS. LT IN EUROPE is missing a compelling element that is provided in MRS. LT by the point of view of four different women. In MRS. LT IN EUROPE there is only one viewpoint.

A few days ago I read Joseph Kanon’s 1998 novel THE PRODIGAL SPY that takes place mainly in Prague and Washington D.C. The book begins in 1950 during the U.S. government’s Communist witch hunts.

Then the book quickly moves on to April of 1969, when I was a few months away from marrying Mitch, who had orders to report to Fort Benning, Georgia, in October for Infantry Officers Basic training before having an “unaccompanied” tour to Vietnam.

Kanon’s novel harps on the theme that people do not remember history, and I know this to be true.

After all, less than 20 years after the Germans had suffered heavy losses during the trench warfare of World War I, they were eagerly gearing up to start another world war, albeit one this time they intended on winning.

Because of the outcome of that Second World War, in September 1970 Mitch and I arrived in Munich to be part of the American occupying forces in West Germany.

This was only 25 years after the end of the war, and we came in contact with army personnel and army civilians who had their own experiences of this war.

It happens that here are the other books connected to WWII that I read during the last few weeks:

Alan Furst’s 2008 novel THE SPIES OF WARSAW that takes place in 1937, mainly in Warsaw and Paris.

Helen MacInnes’ 1941 novel ABOVE SUSPICION that takes place in 1939 mainly in England, Germany and Austria.

• Alan Furst’s 1991 novel DARK STAR that takes place in 1937 and 1938 in Prague, Berlin, Paris and other European locations.

Tatiana de Rosnay’s 2007 novel SARAH’S KEY that takes place mainly in Paris in two parallel stories – in 1942 starting with the French police roundup and subsequent deportation to their deaths at Auschwitz of Parisian Jews and in 2002 and 2005.

And I also read two Young Adult novels that in their own ways are very connected to my reading about WWII:

Eric P. Kelly’s 1928 novel THE TRUMPETER OF KRAKOW that (except for the first chapter in the year 1241) takes place in 1461 in the city we know today as Cracow, Poland.

(The marauding bands that threatened Cracow in these early years are paralleled by the forces of destruction amassed on the border of Poland in the years leading up to WWII.)

David Kherdian’s 1979 novel THE ROAD FROM HOME: THE STORY OF AN ARMENIAN GIRL that takes place in 1907-1924, focusing on the years including the First World War during which the Armenians living in Turkey were subject to massacres and then forced on a horrendous death march.

(The Germans had a hand in what happened to the Armenians and, from hindsight of what happened, this should have been a HUGE warning to the future Allies that the Nazis meant to carry out their announced intention to slaughter all Jews, Gypsies, homosexuals, undesirable clerics, Communists, and anyone else the Nazis could get their hands on who they considered untermenschen.)

What I plan to do now on this blog:

A lot of recent news events – including the re-discovery of the original copies of the 1935 Nuremberg Laws – connect to the story I’m telling in MRS. LT IN EUROPE.

Therefore, I plan to write blog posts about these news events that are happening now in 2010 and connect them to the first-hand experiences of people during WWII and the time that Mitch and I were stationed in Munich in the early ‘70s.

I will still use the fictional character of Sharon Gold, although she may be closer to me in these 2010 chapters than she is in MRS. LT. Then I’ll revise the posts and see if I can fit them into the mostly completed first draft of MRS. LT IN EUROPE.

My goal is to help prevent history from being forgotten, and there are many true stories that live within me.

These include:

• The first-hand accounts written by Holocaust survivors I published in the 1970s as editor of the literary supplement of a weekly Jewish newspaper in Philadelphia.

• The story of the dangerous work behind enemy lines in WWII that my husband’s civilian boss at the 18th had done for the Americans after his release as a German political prisoner from Dachau.

• Meeting Tuviah Friedman here in Beverly Hills, California – the Nazi hunter whose obsession lead to the capture of Adolph Eichmann, the architect of the Final Solution.

• Knowing here in Los Angeles the Czech Jew who incredibly survived WWII through a series of incidents of which action movies are made, entered Prague on the first tank to reach the liberated city, and only a few years later was warned by a righteous gentile that the Communists were coming for him and once more he had to escape.

I hope you will read the coming blog posts (now I just have to write them) and do give me feedback in the blog post comments section.

The history I plan to share belongs to all of us.
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Phyllis Zimbler Miller is the author of the novel MRS. LIEUTENANT and her social media marketing company Miller Mosaic Power Marketing works with clients to use social media to attract more business. Read her social media marketing blog.

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Photo from http://www.jcca.org/JWB/ Answering the Call: Commencement exercises at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York, NY included two graduates entering service in the U.S. Armed Forces. Steve Rein, left, is accepting a commission in the USAF (reserve component) and will serve as assistant rabbi at Park Avenue Synagogue. Josh Sherwin, right, is accepting a commission in the USN (active component) beginning in the fall. JWB Jewish Chaplains Council Director, Rabbi Harold L. Robinson (RADM CHC USN Ret.), center, attended to welcome them as rabbinic colleagues.

On the BlogTalkRadio show YourMilitaryLife.com that I co-host with Nancy Brown of YourMilitary.com we interviewed Rabbi Barry Baron, deputy director of the Jewish Welfare Board’s Jewish Chaplains Council.

Rabbi Baron is also a chaplain and a LTC in the U.S Army reserves, and he talked about the outreach undertaken by national organization the Jewish Welfare Board to support Jewish servicemen and women in the U.S. armed forces.

In his U.S. Army chaplain role Rabbi Baron has been to Iraq once and Afghanistan twice for important Jewish holiday periods.

He described to us that after 9/11 there has been an upsurge in Jews volunteering to serve in the U.S. military, and now there is a shortage of Jewish chaplains for the Jewish men and women who serve in numerous military capacities.

Listen to Rabbi Baron’s interview to learn more about Jews serving in the U.S. armed forces today.
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Phyllis Zimbler Miller is the author of MRS. LIEUTENANT: A SHARON GOLD NOVEL and the co-author of the Jewish holiday book SEASONS FOR CELEBRATION. She also blogs as a National Internet Business Examiner and at Operation Support Jews in the Military and Fiction Marketing, and she is the co-host of the BlogTalkRadio show Your Military Life. Her newest military-related project is the book/website project In Support of Our Troops.

Phyllis’ company Miller Mosaic LLC provides internet marketing information to help people promote their brand, book or business. On July 1st the company launched the Miller Mosaic Internet Marketing Program.

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Dear Friend,

We are writing to you because of your past support of ProjectMOT. As you may know we sent almost 100 holiday care packages to our deployed Jewish troops last year. This year for Passover we sent 114. All were well received and enjoyed by our brave heroes in their various parts of the world.

If you have a deployed serviceman or woman who will be away during the holidays, please send us their military address so we can send them a care package.

We are now preparing the High Holiday packages which we will be sending at the end of August, and have orders for 80 at this point. We already have blank greeting cards for them to send home, some candy and cookies, but we really want to make these boxes special.

We have a web page with information about what we are doing and our wish list and invite you to have a visit: www.rimmon.com/ProjectMOT.htm

Our Rosh Hashanah Wish List: (Items must fit into boxes 8 ½ x 11 inches)

Elite/Osem/Streits cookies and cakes

All kosher food and snack items such as candies , bags of dried apple slices or snacks; small plastic jars of honey; individual bags of coffee, teas, hot chocolate

Any small Judaica items

Bentchers and small Jewish calendars

Personal-sized hygiene items

Small games and game books

Books, CDs and DVDs of holiday music and Jewish interest

Pre-paid phone cards

Letters of thanks to the troops

We will welcome your participation in helping us package the boxes at the end of August. Please email us (see address below) if you want to be part of this exciting experience.

If you wish to donate items for the boxes, they can be delivered to Marsha Roseman in Van Nuys. Email for a drop-off time at MRose13432@aol.com .

And if you wish to donate money for the postage of our packages, please also email Marsha at MRose13432@aol.com .

With warmest wishes and thanks,
Joan Rimmon and Marsha Roseman, Los Angeles
Co-Facilitators Project MOT

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