Call to Action and Helping Israel + Jewish People
repost: Momentum

"If we change one life we change the world"
2 MINΒ
From Los Angeles, taking action for Israelis on the front lines
In the days after Oct. 7, Momentum sister Alissa Haroush felt called to help.
As the owner of an online Jewish jewelry store, the quickest thing she could do was harness her companyβs platform. By Monday, she was diverting 100 percent of the proceeds from the purchases of five different items to United Hatzalah, an Israeli emergency medical services organization.
βThat was the first call to action,β Alissa said. βWe did it right away with no knowledge of what was going on.β
As the gravity of the brutal attacks on Israel came into focus, it didnβt take long for her to realize she had an entire community ready and willing to take action for Israel β thatβs when she reached out to her Momentum sisters.
Building Jewish connections in Los Angeles
Alissa says growing up, she didnβt have much of a connection to Israel. She first visited as a high school student and, while there, she met the man who would become her husband.
βI would say that my love for Israel came through my husband,β she said. Although Alissa had returned to the country over the years to visit her husbandβs family, exploring Israel on a MOMentum Trip in 2021 changed her outlook.
βIt wasnβt me as a family member going,β Alissa said. βIt was more me as me.β
In 2022, she was invited to be a madricha, an alum who steps up to assist the Trip Leader and guide new participants. Then in May 2023, she took part in the Momentum Fellowship for Jewish women leaders in Orlando.
After that experience, Alissa was inspired to start a group for Jewish women in Los Angeles called Meet Me Where Youβre At. βIf youβre very religious, if youβre just beginning to explore Judaism, we donβt care,β she said. βAll we want is for you to meet other Jewish women β where youβre at, in your world.β
The group stays connected over WhatsApp and gathers for events like the one she hosted in the wake of the attacks in Israel, which combined Jewish learning with much-needed socializing. Together, theyβve developed a powerful community, which Alissa says wouldnβt have been possible without Momentum.
βBeing a madricha taught me leadership skills, and it taught me a different way of seeing and understanding Jewish women,β she said. βThen, taking part in the Momentum Fellowship sealed the deal. Iβm all in now.β
In times of crisis, community comes through
Alissaβs daughter lives in Tel Aviv, but was home in Los Angeles for Sukkot at the time of the attacks. She told Alissa that her friends in Israel were being deployed and didnβt know how theyβd stay in touch with their families β so Alissa stepped up once again.
Using WhatsApp, Alissa activated more than 100 Momentum sisters in Los Angeles and around the country. Her initial goal was to raise enough money to buy 500 portable phone chargers. βWithin an hour or two, we had $10,000,β she said. βJust from my Momentum sisters.β
She used the platform to send photos and thank-you videos from soldiers receiving their donations. And word spread: the donations kept coming in. When her husband decided he needed to return to Israel, determined to help in some way, she sent four suitcases of supplies with him to deliver to various army bases.
βJust like we learned, itβs not how much you give, itβs that you give with love and with meaning,β Alissa said.
Finding empowerment amidst fear
Her husband is back home in the U.S. now, and Alissa says she felt numb and could barely eat during his two-week absence. Fortunately, the grassroots community sheβd built with her Momentum sisters and the work they were doing for Israel kept her going.
βThese little things really make a huge difference,β she says. βWhat do they teach us? If you change one life, you change the world.β
Alissa says she wants to do more. She plans to keep donating to different organizations, sheβs still running her jewelry storeβs campaign to support United Hatzalah, sheβs working on future Meet Me Where Youβre At gatherings β and, despite any fear she may feel, she says sheβll continue speaking up.
She credits Momentum with transforming her life and making her a better, happier person β a change she says her family has noticed, too. βItβs not all or nothing: you do what you can. I did, and it worked.β
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