Table To Table Updating a biblical concept, Israeli group gleans for the hungry. YOCHEVED MIRIAM RUSSO Jewish Telegraphic Agency Beersheva n Israeli organization devoted to feeding the needy is updat- ing a biblical concept as it goes about its mission. Joseph Gitler, founder of Table to Table, Israel's leading food rescue organization, said his group is "signing up new farms every day. "Yesterday, a farmer offered one tomato field now and said he'd have another soon. During the holidays — and Pesach in particular — there's always a huge demand for donated food." The concept is spelled out clearly in Deuteronomy 24:19-22, where the Israelites are ordered to leave unhar- vested food and grain in the field for "the stranger, the orphan and the widow, so that the Lord your God may bless you in all your undertakings." Through Table to Table, a nonprofit organization based in the city of Ra'anana, volunteer gleaners from all over the country come to designated farms and cull excess fruit or vegeta- bles. Drivers then pick up the food packages and deliver them to food service agencies that staff Israel's soup kitchens, school systems serving needy children, the elderly and agencies that distribute food boxes for the holidays. Table to Table added gleaning to its food rescue services just before Chanukah. Volunteer pickers have harvested more than 50 tons of clementines and 13 tons of persim- mons. Gleaned foods include citrus, pota- toes, carrots and other vegetables the volunteers regularly collect from ware- houses. A Using Leftovers The group's regular operations began three years ago, when Joseph Gitler, then a 28-year-old immigrant from New York, went to a bar mitzvah. He noticed that perfectly good leftover food was being thrown away, while at the same time, people in the streets outside were hungry. He realized that it would make sense to match the extra food with the hungry people. "Why not rescue the leftover untouched, unserved, food and bring it to soup kitchens so it can be used to feed the hungry?" he remembers thinking. There are organizations in other parts of the world — including an American organization called Table to Table, and Forgotten Harvest in the Detroit area — that also redistribute food to the needy. With his wife's encouragement, Gitler began to spend many evenings collecting excess food in his own car and delivering it to nearby food charities. As Gitler's nighttime activities became known, volunteers began pouring in. "Now over 500 people volunteer in our evening food pickups from locations all across Israel," Gitler says. Table to Table also employs three full-time and three part-time workers. The group picks up extra food from about 180 events a week, providing about 10,000 extra meals, according to Gitler. Gleaning started last fall, when a farmer in Kfar Chaim, outside Tel Aviv, called the organization and said he had extra persimmons that he couldn't sell. Later, the farmer invited the group to pick persimmons directly from his trees. Now, says gleaner Helene Mittman, who made aliyah from Brooklyn 13 years ago, "It's not just fruit. We pick vegetables, too. Every Tuesday morn- ing, I go to a packing shed and spend an hour picking potatoes, selecting the ones we can use from a huge bin." "Gleaning is great for someone like me," Mittman says. "I'm a stay-at- home mom with three teenagers and one younger kid, and I have time in the mornings. The physical labor is great — it helps me work off stress. And it's fulfilling to help feed people who are hungry." Table to Table's assistant director, Daniel Swartz, who is from Chicago, said, "We work to prevent waste of all kinds. Food rescue is one part, but we're concerned about maximizing human potential, too. "When we compose our gleaning teams, we work to mix all segments of Israeli society — religious and secular, TABLE TO TABLE on page 34 + Ant t' is t; Vif-1, I mu -nth', N'tinlit” tni Aini3;;1 1 if ) "WNW a LI JIAL MICHIGAN HERITAGE With Let us lend a hand www.rnih eri tage. com *Annual Percentage Yield Is effective as of March 21. 2005. Penalty for early withcinr.val. Brokered accounts not eliglble. Rates subject to change without notice. IVIininiurn deposit of $500.00 required. FDIC insured Farrninaon Hills 28300 Orchard Lk. Rd. (800) 914-3524 Livonia 18770 Farmington Rd. (248) 442-9630 Novi. 21211 Had'oerty Rd. (248) 380-6590 Troy 1917 E. Big Beaver (248) 619-0264 4/21 2005 957020 33