
InKredible Kids
A podcast with Kosher content geared toward empowering Jewish kids of all ages. We interview kids from around the world and have many interactive segments for all kids to enjoy. While having fun and learning new skills, kids will hear about responsibility, empathy, confidence, and more!
InKredible Kids
Across Time Zones: Growing Up Jewish in Australia
We explore what it's like to grow up Jewish in Melbourne, Australia through the eyes of 10-year-old Chaya, discovering both the differences and surprising similarities in Jewish life across the globe.
• Chaya introduces her life in Melbourne, Australia including her Jewish school and community
• Discussion about Australia's unique wildlife like kangaroos and koalas that are native only to Australia
• Exploration of the 14-hour time difference between America and Australia
• Chaya shares the story of her synagogue burning down in an anti-Semitic attack and the Prime Minister's visit afterward
• Conversation about Jewish community life in Melbourne with various denominations learning together
• Announcement about the Chai-a-thon fundraiser benefiting Chai Lifeline with new features including Chai Bucks and a stand-up kit
• Chaya's hope for the future that all Jewish people will be together in Israel with Moshiach
• Discussion about showing kindness to bring Moshiach closer, especially during the Three Weeks
.........................................................................
Join the Chai-a-thon at chaiathon.org to help children fighting serious illness while earning prizes and making a difference through kindness and tzedakah.
.........................................................................
Check out the Customix new Etsy shop and find the coolest custom airbrushed swag from Israel!
https://www.etsy.com/shop/CustomixArt?ref=shop_profile&listing_id=1861209251
.........................................................................
🎧Remember to send all responses, questions, comments, and ideas to ikidspodcast@gmail.com.
🎧Make sure to follow InKredible Kids on your favorite podcasting app, so you never miss an episode. Be sure to rate the podcast⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ and drop a review!
🎧Explore our website: https://inkrediblekids.org/
.........................................................................
You can be a sponsor too! If you are interested in sponsoring an episode as a zchus for something dear to you, email ikidspodcast@gmail.com.
Hey kids, welcome back to the next episode of the Incredible Kids Podcast. My name is Moritz Ciri and I will be your host. Through this incredible journey, we are going to meet many incredible kids. They are going to share with us their stories, some of them super cool and different like you've never heard before, and some you may say are just ordinary, but all of them incredible. If you have great ideas, email me today at ikidspodcasts at gmailcom. And now it's time for Incredible Kids. It's time for the joke of the day. Yay, today's joke is brought to you by Mayor S from Queens, new York.
Speaker 2:What did the football coach say to the broken vending machine? Give me my quarter back.
Speaker 1:Hi everyone, how you doing? I'm here, live from the Incredible Kids studio and I am so excited to give you an episode that features what it's like to live all the way over in Australia. So I really hope you enjoy this episode. You're going to be hearing about the Chai-a-thon. This is our third summer pushing all incredible kids and families out there to raise money for Chai Lifeline through the Chai-a-thon chaiathonorg brand new website Really really cool. I'll tell you more about it later because there are so many fun features and different elements to this year's campaign and it makes it super exciting to be part of it. I know I'm excited to be a part of it. I hope it's okay that I'm a little bit over the age limit perhaps, but I am so excited.
Speaker 1:Plus my friends at Customix from Israel, who are super involved in the upcoming film that's going to be released very shortly. If we still have Tish above this year, itai from Israel is now selling his super cool airbrushed baseball caps and more on a site that you can purchase from in America. Even so, all over the world, follow the link in the show notes and you can match me. I got the coolest hat that says Moritzian, airbrushed in Hebrew letters, mind you, I requested. You're supporting an Israeli-owned business and getting something so fun and cool in return. And now please enjoy my conversation with Chaya from Melbourne, australia. It's here after 11 o'clock at night, but for you it's bright and sunny. We're going to get into that in a second. Can you introduce yourself? Jump right in?
Speaker 2:Okay, so my name's Chaya. I like to read, sing and dance, dance, dance, dance, dance dance dance, I'm going to dance, dance, dance, my night away. I'm 10 years old. I live in Melbourne, Australia, I'm in grade 4 and I'm going to Adidas school. Hey amazing.
Speaker 1:First of all, I have a fascination with people from other places. I think a lot of people do. I think, like anytime you meet somebody who's from somewhere far away that you kind of only know about from storybooks, it's so fun to get to meet them in real life. So I know I'm so lucky to meet you, and, of course, all the kids listening are going to learn a lot. Today, for some reason, though, australia definitely gets like extra points, especially from America. You are super far. You have a huge time difference, just so far that I don't know that I'll ever go there. It's not even something that, like I think, most people ever get to, even visit or meet someone from there. So I have a lot of questions, and I also want you to just share what you are excited to share about what it's like to grow up in Melbourne, australia. So cool. What's the thing that you think is the coolest part of living?
Speaker 2:there. So I think that it's like not a lot of people see like kangaroos and koalas, like in america.
Speaker 1:People don't see that, and not even in the zoo. Yeah, kangaroos and koalas are native to australia. Is there any other place in the world where they have kangaroos and koala in the wild? I don't really know. I don't think so. You know how? I know that? How? From the cereal box. I once had a cereal box that said all different facts about marsupials. Marsupials is like the general term for like a family of animals that are native to Australia, which include kangaroos and koalas. Yes, so they have like different facts about them and there's like a lot of different species of animals that they only have in Australia. Those are the most famous. Do you see them all the time? Are they in your backyard? I'm looking.
Speaker 2:I'm looking because I could see your backyard, I'm looking for a kangaroo. No, they're not. They're more like the zoo and like in the forest. Maybe In the country you can find them.
Speaker 1:Have you ever been to those parts of Australia, or that's like for vacation or like for a rest? I've been on holidays Holidays, Holidays. Can you tell us what a holiday is, Because it's not like taboo?
Speaker 2:It's like vacation.
Speaker 1:Oh, it's a jolly holiday, like we just call it different words. I know, but we what I'm saying, but the people listening are going to be like I'm so confused. Like you go for Pesach to the kangaroos. No, you know, because, like for other people, they only say holiday when it has to do with like a hog or yontif. You know, yeah, but holiday is what you say in Australia.
Speaker 1:Okay, you also have an accent. It's different than English accent, but it's similar, right? Yeah, do you know why your accent is similar to English accent? Don't really know, you never thought about it. No, do you know that people from Australia many, many years ago were English people, meaning people from England or Great Britain or whatever they called it, settled in Australia and that's why they brought the accent with them. Same thing with South Africa. People from South Africa also have an accent. Here's the weird thing, guess what? In America? I don't know if you learned American history in Australia, but in America they also came from England and we don't have an English accent. So what happened there? I don't really know. That's so not fair. I mean, because we like English accents. So it like wait, how come all the other countries got it? Like it got lost in America that everyone else kept it because our accents couldn't be more different. Yeah, so how did your family get to Australia?
Speaker 2:So my great great grandmother, my great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great great grandmother I forget how many greats From my mother's side. After the war she came here to Australia because it's like a safe country, and she came here and she settled there and then she had two sons, and then one of them is my great-grandfather. They had my grandmother and then my grandmother had my mother and then my mother had me.
Speaker 1:Your family's really been in Australia for many generations, yeah she was 100 when she was Nifta. Who the two great-grandmother?
Speaker 2:No, my great-great-great-great. Five generations, Five generations not five greats.
Speaker 1:Yeah, okay, so you knew her. Yeah, wow, that's amazing. When was she Nftaris? When did she pass Last year of Yom Kippur? That's really special. Did you live near her? Was she living in Melbourne?
Speaker 2:Yeah, but she went to an age aid home a few years before.
Speaker 1:I don't think most kids can say that they had a relationship and really got to know their great-great-grandmother. So that's very interesting that people came to Australia for safety after the war. I guess they really went into all different countries around the world and that's where she ended up, so you've always lived there. Is your father from Australia also, I think. So you seem to know your family history very well, at least from your mother's side. Yeah, you said like at the time it was safer for jews to settle in australia. Do you feel safe as a jew in australia now?
Speaker 2:yeah, oh, Abba shalkulam.
Speaker 1:It's an interesting thing about Australia also that Australia is like completely surrounded by water. How far is Melbourne from the water? Very close, Do you go to the water often? Are there beaches?
Speaker 2:Yeah, there is like a five-minute drive From where, from my house, to go to the beach.
Speaker 1:Oh, so you're super close. Yeah, oh, so you know what this is time for. This is time for me to do my research and look at the map so I know what you're talking about, Because I didn't realize that it's a coastal city. First of all, melbourne is a beautiful city. Is it clean, like do they take good care of it?
Speaker 2:Yeah, very clean. Most people don't put rubbish on the floor Like they have a bag.
Speaker 1:They don't just dump it on the floor. Rubbish is how you say, garbage, yeah. So they don't put stuff on the floor like that. Why is that? Do they teach that to you in your schools?
Speaker 2:They also give out fines, so like you'll get like a hundred dollar bill like in your mailbox, really.
Speaker 1:Yeah, if they catch you throwing garbage on the floor. Yeah, who's watching the police? Um, we have cameras. Wow, that only happens like for a speeding ticket here, but they'll catch you throwing rubbish on the floor and give you a ticket, basically.
Speaker 1:Oh boy, that's going to be one way to get everybody to clean up. What do you think? Do you think I should start that practice in my house? Like you think I should start that practice in my house? Like, when people don't throw out their cereal bowl and like, dump you know, dump things on the floor. No, excuse me, that would be $100, missy. It definitely would work.
Speaker 2:They won't have the money like $100. Okay whatever.
Speaker 1:Let's say I knew that they had money, so I would say, okay, $5 every time you drop it. I don't think I would be a very popular mother anymore. Yeah, it's a bad idea, right? We'll be right back to my conversation with kaya after this very important announcement. Hey, incredible kids, guess what? We're back for our third year partnering with the kaya thon, and this year they've made it better than ever. Kaya thathonorg, take out a pen and paper and write this down.
Speaker 1:Chaiathon Just launched their brand new website and let me tell you it's incredible. You can earn prizes in a whole new way. You raise money for Chai Lifeline and in return, you get Chai Bucks, like real money that you can redeem for real prizes In a super cool online prize store. And instead of paying by credit card, you pay with your very own Chai Bucks that you raised. Every dollar that you raised goes directly to help kids fighting serious illness. You might remember we once actually did a whole episode featuring the important work of Chai Lifeline, and then you have a proper understanding of exactly what kind of special, holy organization you are raising money for. And this year there's even another new element when you raise your first $50, you can redeem those bucks for a stand-up kit. They send you a box to your house, a complete set to build your very own lemonade stand bake sale.
Speaker 1:Pop-up shop Comes with just like tons of custom swag, like the cutest lemonade cups that are like printed with lemons on them, and little High Lifeline logos and banners for whatever you decide you're making, and an apron and a baseball cap so you can make your very own iconic, high Lifeline pop-up sale of your kind, raising money in your way, with your own ideas and your own heart. And that's what this is all about Kids helping kids, kindness in action. Especially now it's the three weeks, there's nothing greater than giving tzedakah and increasing chesed, and this is a way to do it. So let's go Head to chayathanorg, sign up and let's change lives together, because at Incredible Kids we don't just talk about being great, we stand up and do it. Who's joining me? And now back to the episode. So what's your community like? Do you have a shul? And your school?
Speaker 2:We have like I'm on the same street as my shul Like Adas has their shul, like Adas shul, it's called Adas Israel shul and that's your shul.
Speaker 1:And your school. It's in different buildings but it's connected. Yeah, okay, and what kind of Jews go to your school?
Speaker 2:All types. We have Hasidus, Litvish Sephardi, Everybody together.
Speaker 1:You feel like you can be friends with anyone. Mm-hmm. A lot of times I wonder what the difference between life where you live and where other people live. But I'm wondering if you even know people from other countries. Like, do you have family or friends that live outside?
Speaker 2:Australia. Yeah, so my classmates went to America and I have family in London and America. Do you visit them? No, they come here.
Speaker 1:Have you ever left Australia? No, do you want to leave Australia to see other things? Yes, if you could take one ticket right now, somebody said you want a free ticket to one place in the world that you choose. Where would you pick?
Speaker 2:London. I have my mother's side, my mother's father, she has a great grandmother there and I have an auntie and I have no family.
Speaker 1:It's a good reason to pick a location that you've never been to. Yeah, especially if they've been to you, then it's kind of only fair to want to go see where they're living. Yeah, so much about knowing a person is getting to see where they're from, so maybe one day you'll get to do that. If you told me that you visited other places, then it would be easy to like say okay, so what do you think? How is it different, how is it the same? But honestly, you probably wouldn't really know so much unless somebody told you. So I'll just have to rely on your information and let everybody at home make that assessment. You know, like, oh, that's the same, oh, that's different. And and that's what I hope people learn when they hear from you Like, oh, I also have Sephardi kids and Hasidic kids in my class. Or maybe they'll say, oh, that's really different. Like we don't have such and such thing where we live. Yeah, do you go to shul on Shabbos?
Speaker 2:I want to go back into the shul conversation. Not really because the shul burned down so we can't really like there's not really a proper like place.
Speaker 1:That was your shul that famous shul that burned down? Yeah, wow, okay, how long ago was that? Already Six months around, pretty recent, yeah, what?
Speaker 2:exactly happened Four o'clock in the morning. People burst into the shul there were two men there and they ran out and then they put petrol around the shale and then it burnt.
Speaker 1:There was basically some very hateful people. It sounds like an act of anti-Semitism, like when they decide to do something nasty against the Jewish people. Yeah, was everyone okay.
Speaker 2:Yeah, everyone was okay, except the person that was inside the shale After the fire. He wanted to touch the sh, the shill, and he just burned his hand.
Speaker 1:Oh my gosh, just from the contact. Yeah, wow, that's scary, okay, but I guess a burned hand in the scheme of things could have been worse. That's terrible, though. What was he doing in the shill at 4 o'clock in the morning?
Speaker 2:Um learning. There was only two men.
Speaker 1:That's amazing, though, that people are learning at 4 o'clock in the morning. They go to shul every day at 3 o'clock these same two men. Yeah, wow, that's a very scary experience, and it's also scary to know that that happened to your shul. I'm happy that Baruch Hashem, everyone is pretty much okay. Are they rebuilding it now?
Speaker 2:Yeah, so it was pretty like terrified for me because I'm on the street. So when I got to shul, everyone was talking about it. It was really hectic because it was on my street. It was a bit terrifying.
Speaker 1:It sounds very terrifying. It really just shows us that we're still in galos and we're in a world without Moshiach, and so we just have to keep dominating. We only have a world filled with Yedias Hashem. These kind of things will not happen.
Speaker 2:There was like Sefer Torahs, that they weren't burnt. Actually, none of the Sefer Torahs were burnt because the way they were kept they were fireproof, except it was a bit burnt like the outside.
Speaker 1:The inside is what counts the most of a Sefer Torah, and so those were able to be preserved and those are still around. Yeah, Wow, that's amazing. Well, we keep going. Yes, we go on. Yes, we go on. There is nothing we can't overcome. That's the story of the Jewish people. Right, we pushed through, and it is scary. Did they come to talk to you in your school? Yeah, the prime minister came.
Speaker 2:The prime minister came Of the whole Australia. Yeah, he came into our classroom and what did he say? He said my name is Albanese. What was his message? Not really anything. He had to go to each class.
Speaker 1:He went around to every class? Yeah, was he coming to show that he supports the Jews? Yeah, we know what you went through and we're going to keep you safe. You probably needed that assurance. Yeah, that was nice of him. Obviously, we put our trust in Hashem over all else, but to know that there's people in the government who have compassion toward the Jews is always something we thank Hashem for you know, yeah, and thank them, for that's why we try our best to be respectful and thankful to our those in, you know, government positions.
Speaker 1:like you have a prime minister, we have a president. Yeah, some people might not know that in australia and in other countries they have prime ministers and in america we have a president, but they're essentially both in charge of the country. Yeah, very cool. What else is cool about your city that maybe other kids wouldn't know about, besides for the kangaroos, which are not really in your city?
Speaker 2:yeah, the goyim, they won't like be mean. They're very nice people. That's how you feel, like when you're in the street. A lot of them bike, like they're on bikes more and they do a lot of exercise. The people in Australia?
Speaker 1:Yeah, the Goyim, only the Goyim, not the Jews. Yeah, also the Jews, but mostly the Goyim. Okay, they're into biking. What else are they into? Exercise, going to gym? Does australia have a lower rate of obesity? Like you know? Like in america, there's people who are very overweight. Um, yes, like you see, people are more in shape there. Yes, is that from only exercise? Or they're also eating better, probably. But do they like, encourage, like, good eating habits in your schools?
Speaker 1:Yeah, what do you usually bring for lunch? Every day is different, because I wonder if there's anything that your friends eat for lunch that, like, we never heard. Because I wonder if there's anything that your friends eat for lunch that we never heard of before Corn thins and cheese. That sounds pretty typical. We do rice cakes a lot and cheese, which is very similar. You know what rice cakes are? No, they're very similar to corn thins. It's just made out of rice instead of corn. But we have both options here. But my kids happen to like the rice cakes better, so we eat that a lot. What's your favorite dinner? Schnitzel, the universal Jewish food.
Speaker 2:Yeah, schnitzel, mommy, mommy, I want a schnitzel.
Speaker 1:Everybody likes schnitzel. Tell me about your school. What makes your school special, besides for the obvious variety of different kinds of Jewish kids in your class?
Speaker 2:It's very close. We don't go on buses, we drive to school like two minutes for a drive.
Speaker 1:Does everybody in your area live kind of close together, like your classmates also? Yeah, you can like walk to all their houses, most of them. How many girls are in your class? 13 girls.
Speaker 2:Oh it's small. Okay yeah, most classes are more just like the smallest class in the school.
Speaker 1:Do you like that? Yeah, what kind of activities do you do with your friends after school?
Speaker 2:I don't really like spend time with them. That's the thing. I normally just run upstairs and listen to my 24-6. By the end of the day, you're like done with people?
Speaker 1:Yeah, do you ever hang out with your friends over Shabbos?
Speaker 2:Yeah, Do you ever hang out with your friends over Shabbos? Yeah, on Shabbos afternoon they come over and play games Red Light, green Light, we have Monopoly Day, we have Overnight Kickle, we have Uno, we have Spot it and Upside Down game what's that? You have like these upside down well, it's not really for Shabbos, but like upside down goggles and then there's like a paper and you have to try and draw something oh, okay, yeah, I once saw somebody wearing like I've never played the game, but I've seen people wearing the goggles and they're like everything's upside down.
Speaker 1:Yeah, they come with like those big. They're like red, no, they're blue, okay, whatever, maybe the ones I saw were red. Could we talk about our time difference for a minute, because this is so weird. I remember I had a teacher who told us that she had like family in Australia and she said it's so weird. When I talk to my family in Australia, I say afterwards I spoke to my nephew tomorrow. That's what she used to say. I spoke to my nephew tomorrow. Yeah, you got it. Yeah, well, you can't really say that because for you it's not tomorrow, for you it's yesterday. Yeah, yes, whatever. But for that, you understand, because Australia they're like already on the next day. So if I right now I'm speaking to you tomorrow, yeah, you're 14 hours ahead of me. 14 hours is crazy.
Speaker 1:So when I was thinking how I'm going to interview you, I'm like, wait, 14 hours is double Israel, for us Seven hours. I'm just like in Israel, seven hours ahead. Okay, so if I interview a kid from Israel, I could interview them when it's the daytime for me and it will be the nighttime for them or something Right For you. I'm like wait. In the daytime for me, it's like literally the middle of the night for you, and then in the nighttime for me, you're probably in school. Like everything gets so confusing. So that's why I was like wait, maybe if we do it right now it will work, cause you're home on a Sunday, yeah, even though it's really almost Shibuya. So it's like so weird. But yeah, it's strange. Does it feel weird being in like a place so far away from like so many people that you know like don't really think about it, you're?
Speaker 1:also used to it that you know, like, don't really think about it, you're also used to it. Yeah, do you know how long it would take if you would fly in a plane to America About a day? Yeah, it's like a super-duper-duper-duper long flight. I mean. I bet a lot of people take stopovers. Yeah, your parents might know You've never left.
Speaker 2:Yeah, so like, two stopovers, it's like a crazy long flight. Yeah, it depends.
Speaker 1:Like a whole day. Yeah, I cannot imagine how people do that, but I guess, like you said, if they break it up into a few flights, it's just a very long travel.
Speaker 2:If you leave Australia on Monday morning, then you arrive in America on Monday night.
Speaker 1:You're really ahead of the day. But I get what you're saying. It's a crazy, crazy long flight. One day when you meet other people, maybe you'll go to Israel or something. Or you're going to go, maybe one time to visit other people and you'll be like I'm from Australia and they're going to have so many questions for you, but it automatically is going to make you have so many fun things to talk about and then they'll realize that you're just like a fun, normal kid, you know, yeah, what do you want kids around the world to know from a girl like you living far away from them?
Speaker 2:but we're all here, right wherever you are, hashem loves you and and you know, even if you're in a weird place, like somewhere very far, then Hashem wants to love you.
Speaker 1:I love that that's such a good answer. I mean you're saying a weird place. Do you think I'm answer? I mean you're saying a weird place. Do you think I'm in a weird place or are you in a weird place?
Speaker 2:Like for you, me in a weird place.
Speaker 1:That's funny. It's all relative, right. We all think we're normal, right that's how people are. We're like no, I'm normal. Everyone else is like they're the ones who are interesting and crazy and different, but I'm normal. Yeah, like they live in weird places, but I live in a normal place. Yeah, that's what we all tend to think. What's your hope for the future for the Jewish people? What do you hope in your heart?
Speaker 2:That we'll all be in Israel soon, like in Eretz Yisrael when we're all going to be with Mashiach. What do you do to try to make that happen? Be nicer to people, help people more. Do more mitzvahs.
Speaker 1:That's all we can do, right? Yeah, I mean, it's a tall order. There's always what to work on. Sounds like you're in the right mindset. Yeah, what do you hope that you can learn more about?
Speaker 2:on Incredible Kids More stars just to come out like more people more interviews. What? Or it's just to come out like more people, more interviews. What do you listen to on your 24-6? Incredible.
Speaker 1:Kids and stories. Do you like music? I like music. Yeah, you mentioned it in the beginning. What's your favorite music?
Speaker 2:Benny Friedman girls' music Bacha Tchafi Shady Plotska.
Speaker 1:Haiku and it's so awesome that there's so many choices, right? Yeah, it's unbelievable. Jewish music comes out almost every single day. There's new stuff. There's always something interesting. You can understand why. When you run from school, you run upstairs to unplug a little bit or I guess, not unplug, but plug in a little bit in order to unwind. So lovely to speak to you. It's so fun to meet kids from other countries. It means so much to know that I have such darling people listening to Incredible Kids and feeling part of this from all over the place.
Speaker 2:Okay, so I want to give a shout out to my grade four class. When they, when I told them that I want to be interviewed, they were like, oh my goodness, you have to give a shout out to grade four. So shout out to grade four. Shout out to grade four. All 13 of you, my parents, my cousins.
Speaker 1:It's like the modern day version of saying hi, mom. In the olden days, when people would be on television, that's what they would say to the camera Hello, it's so lovely and refreshing to get to know you. Thanks, have a great day.
Speaker 2:Bye Bye, thank you, bye Bye.
Speaker 1:And now it's time for homework. Oh, come on, not that kind. As you heard, at the end of my conversation with Chaya, we touched upon how we can increase what we do, the good things that we're already doing, and maybe some new things, in order to bring Moshiach closer. And now it's the three weeks, and I think that all of us are well aware of what the three weeks is all about. It's the fact that we don't have a Bais HaMikdash, and thousands of years ago, yerushalayim was under attack and the Bais HaMikdash was destroyed. It happened twice, and now we are waiting for the third and final base on mcdush.
Speaker 1:So what are we going to do? Pick a kindness a kindness that's not so easy maybe something that has to do with someone who really gets on your nerves, somebody in your camp and your bunk. Remember, everyone has feelings, and sometimes it feels like ava sisrael is going out of her way to find, like, a new type of friend, a new type of Jew, a new type of thing, but sometimes it's the people right in front of us who need us to practice kindness with them the most, for their sake and for our very own sakes. For our sakes, and with that I hope we can bring Mashiach closer. Try to find a kindness that you can focus on during this time, because the chesed and the avos, yisrael and the giving is going to be what brings us back together so we can be zocha to geula, and I don't know about you. I really, really, really want Mashiach. So make sure to sign up for the chayathan chayathanorg. As you heard me say a couple times already, it's really cool and really fun and it's a great mitzvah to get yourself involved in.
Speaker 1:And you might want to also check out the newest Incredible Kids video featuring Incredible Kids flying on an airplane. So go check that out at incrediblekidsorg in the video section. Also, make sure to check the link in the show notes so that you can go over to the custom mix Etsy shop, which is now live for people around the world to order straight from Israel Custom airbrushed swag that makes gifting so much fun, your party even more fun. Check it out, you're going to love it. Plus, stay tuned because in the event that we can't say a Freilich and Tisha B'Av this year, as per one of Joey Newcomb's songs, if we can't do that, and it is another Tisha B'Av of sitting on the floor and crying Incredible Kids is looking to rebuild and Incredible Kids Rebuild the quest to bring Moshiach will be available for families around the world to watch and be inspired from on Tisha B'Av.
Speaker 1:But let's hope we have Moshiach before then. And if you're a big fan of Incredible Kids Podcast, please consider giving us a good rating. Wherever you're listening to this, whether it's spotify or apple podcast or whichever podcasting platform you're listening on, it goes a long way. I appreciate you for being here. Make sure to include as many friends as you can in the incredible kids community and remember how special you all truly are every single day. See.
Speaker 2:See you next time.