Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Yad Sarah volunteers help make cemeteries more accessible on Israel’s Memorial Day

“Volunteering was something Rabbi Avi truly believed in and embodied,” said Erez Hazom, a 12th-grader at Himmelfarb who participated in the initiative this year and last.

Yad Sarah Volunteers at Mount Herzl
Volunteers lend their assistance on Yom Hazikaron (Israel’s Memorial Day) ceremonies, held at Mount Herzl in Jerusalem and Kiryat Shaul in Tel Aviv, on April 30, 2025. Photo by Sara Alvarez.

Yad Sarah, Israel’s leading volunteer-staffed health-care and social-services organization, mobilized dozens of volunteers today to assist attendees at Yom Hazikaron (Israel’s Memorial Day) ceremonies held at Mount Herzl in Jerusalem and Kiryat Shaul in Tel Aviv.

Visitors were greeted by youth volunteers offering wheelchair transportation to the gravesites of their loved ones and physical assistance at the cemeteries, which have many stairs and other challenging terrain.

This year’s effort at Mount Herzl was led by students from Netiv Meir and Himmelfarb high schools in Jerusalem. They dedicated their contribution to the memory of Rabbi Avi Goldberg, a cherished high school teacher at Himmelfarb and a reservist in the Israel Defense Forces. He had coordinated Yad Sarah’s Himmelfarb’s Yom Hazikaron volunteer efforts for a number of years, including last year’s ceremony, and fell in battle in Lebanon later that year.

The loss of Maj. Goldberg, who was the first casualty from the military rabbinate to fall in combat since the Yom Kippur War, was felt deeply, particularly among the Jerusalem and Anglo-Jewish communities.

Yad Sarah Volunteers at Mount Herzl
Volunteers lend their assistance on Yom Hazikaron (Israel’s Memorial Day) ceremonies, held at Mount Herzl in Jerusalem and Kiryat Shaul in Tel Aviv, on April 30, 2025. Photo by Sara Alvarez.

“Volunteering was something Rabbi Avi truly believed in and embodied,” said Erez Hazom, a 12th-grader at Himmelfarb who participated in the initiative this year and last. “After he was killed, we took it upon ourselves to carry that forward and do even more good deeds in his memory.”

Avraham Lebel, the volunteer coordinator for the Himmelfarb students, said: “Wherever there’s a need, I show up with a smile. To me, that was Rabbi Avi’s spirit, and volunteering here today, we truly felt it.”

Moshe Cohen, CEO of Yad Sarah, said the agency works year-round to make Israeli society more accessible for all.

“As an organization with many members who have been directly impacted by the ongoing war, there is a particular meaning in supporting those who have lost their loved ones, who sacrificed so much for the nation, on Yom Hazikaron,” he said. “Everyone deserves the ability to mourn, commemorate and take part in our national day of remembrance with dignity.”

About & contact the publisher
<p dir="ltr">Yad Sarah, the leading volunteer-staffed organization in Israel, provides a vital array of compassionate health and home-care services for people of all ages. Founded in 1976, Yad Sarah has 126 branches throughout Israel staffed by more than 7,000 volunteers. Although the organization is best known for its extensive lending service for medical equipment, its volunteers also drive wheelchair-accessible vans, reach out to the homebound, advocate for the elderly at risk for abuse, provide in-home geriatric dental care, staff its play center and more.</p>
Children are being enrolled for checkpoint duty and logistics.
The campaign, named for slain farmer Omer Weinstein, aims to place protective shelters on agricultural land as “Operation Roaring Lion” continues.
The New York City mayor said that the accused attacker is an alleged member of a right-wing, violent Jewish group.
“I stood on a chair at the kitchen table, watching mom and Bubbe grate the apples for the charoset, and I would sneak little bits of fruit,” says a daughter who has since become a mother.
The U.S. vice president said the administration is seeking legal remedies and alleged that the anti-Israel congresswoman is “at the center” of fraud in the Somali community.
“As online hatred, harassment and vitriol become an increasingly pervasive part of the Jewish experience, we need scalable, effective solutions,” said Tal-Or Cohen Montemayor of CyberWell.