Maariv journalist and 103FM broadcaster Ben Caspit, whose father Yitzhak Caspit passed away last week, today (Sunday) shared Yinon Magal on their program on 103FM during his difficult week: “I thought the corona would produce a very quiet seven, it was not exactly like that . We were very careful. “He added:” Do not make my mistake. If the parents are still alive, talk to them now. ”
Inon: “How are you son? You are in the middle of a mourning and a dramatic event, although your father was not young but a father is a father.”
Ben: “How old were you when yours went?”
Inon: “32”.
Ben: “We had a very intense week, I thought the corona would produce a very quiet seven, it was not exactly like that. We were very careful because we did not have more than five people in the house at one time but people came anyway. You came, the only one who came without coordination and brought something pretty Lovely, you explain. “
Yinon: I brought all kinds of Psalms and Mishnayot for the upliftment of your father’s soul, “Chabadnik from my friend prepared”.
Ben: “On my dad’s name, it’s not for nothing, and we’re also using and using it.”
Yinon: “I was moved that the burial was Jewish.”
Ben: “Are you normal? Did I really manage to convince you that I was not a Jew?”.
Inon: “There are people who do not circumcise today, the name will be saved and saved.”
Ben: “Do not make a tenth circumcision a blow to vaccine opponents, and I am not talking about corona vaccines. These are side effects, my father was born a Jew and studied in a room. We read his entire biography, I published two columns because I was crazy of course I could not not publish, and I got them All the craziest and craziest reactions I’ve gotten in my entire career, crazy connections, people who were his commanders in the brigade. My dad’s story is everyone’s story, I told him because it’s the story of the establishment of the state. Do not make my mistake and that of most of our generation. “Live and clear, talk to them now. I find myself picking up every stone and my father was, you could talk to him.”
Yinon: “The event of the shiva is dramatic and powerful, you work a big shake, put you in the frame, seven days that people come and you read and get to know things and laughs and cry.”
Ben: “You know my relationship to religion, it’s one of the amazing customs of Judaism. It keeps you going, you have everything to do all day and you hear things you did not know, the problem is after the shiva.”
Yinon: “My late father died very surprisingly at a relatively young age, and I was very strict about the laws of mourning. I felt it helped me a lot to recover in life. I was in a very big upheaval when it happened, and the customs seemed to heal my soul, then I could disconnect. ”