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The Starter Pack Β· From Foreigner to an Israeli

M'Zar L'Israeli

מ‌Χ–Χ¨ ל‌Χ™Χ©Χ¨ΧΧœΧ™

Everything they don't put in the absorption brochure β€” the food, the markets, the pickup games, the running crews, and the small unwritten rules that turn "I live here" into "I'm from here."

🎁 A gift for our Hebrew course students
00 / Read this first

How to use this pack

This isn't a bureaucracy guide β€” the government's Ministry of Aliyah & Integration and Nefesh B'Nefesh do that well already. This is the cultural layer: the stuff Israelis assume you'll just absorb.

One honest note Phone numbers, bus routes and contact lists go stale fast in Israel. Wherever something changes often, this pack sends you to a live source (an app, an official page) instead of freezing a number that'll be wrong in three months. Treat every link as the real answer; treat the text as orientation.
Mindset

Directness β‰  rudeness

Israelis interrupt, push back, and skip small talk. It reads as aggressive at first. It's actually a sign you've been accepted into the conversation. Push back too β€” they'll respect it.

Apps to install today

Your survival kit

Moovit (transit), Bit or Paybox (paying friends back), Wolt (delivery), Google Maps, and a Rav-Kav card or the Rav-Kav app for buses and trains.

The rhythm

The week ends Friday

The Israeli weekend is Friday–Saturday. Thursday night is the big going-out night. Sunday is a normal work/school day. Re-wire your internal calendar early.

01 / The food

Five recipes that buy you a seat at the table

Knowing how to make these is social currency. Bring shakshuka to a brunch, or hummus you made yourself, and you stop being "the new immigrant" β€” you're someone who gets it. Full quantities below; everything serves 4 unless noted.

Shakshuka

Χ©Χ§Χ©Χ•Χ§Χ”
Breakfast20 minVegetarian

Ingredients

  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 onion, diced
  • 1 red bell pepper, diced
  • 4 garlic cloves, sliced
  • 1 tsp sweet paprika
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • ΒΌ tsp chili flakes
  • 1 can (400 g) crushed tomatoes
  • 2 fresh tomatoes, chopped
  • 5–6 eggs
  • Salt, pepper, chopped parsley

Method

  1. Heat oil in a wide pan. Soften onion and pepper 6–7 min.
  2. Add garlic and spices; stir 1 min until fragrant.
  3. Add both tomatoes, season, simmer 10 min until thick and jammy.
  4. Make wells with a spoon, crack an egg into each. Cover, cook 5–7 min β€” whites set, yolks runny.
  5. Scatter parsley. Serve straight from the pan with bread to scoop.
Israeli rule: shakshuka is eaten from the pan, communally, with torn bread β€” never plated. That's half the point.

Hummus from scratch

Χ—Χ•ΧžΧ•Χ‘
MezzeSoak overnightVegan

Ingredients

  • 250 g dried chickpeas
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 150 g raw tahini (light, runny)
  • 1 lemon, juiced (~60 ml)
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • ½–1 tsp salt
  • Ice water as needed
  • Olive oil, paprika, cumin to finish

Method

  1. Soak chickpeas overnight in plenty of water with Β½ tsp baking soda.
  2. Drain. Boil with the remaining baking soda 40–60 min until very soft β€” almost falling apart. Skim off the skins that float up.
  3. Blend hot chickpeas (save a handful) until smooth.
  4. Add tahini, lemon, garlic, salt. Blend, drizzling ice water until it turns pale and fluffy.
  5. Spread on a plate with a spoon-swirl, pool olive oil in the well, dust paprika + cumin, top with whole chickpeas.
Eat it warm and same-day β€” that's "hummus basari" energy. Cold fridge hummus is a different, sadder food.

Israeli Salad

בלט Χ™Χ©Χ¨ΧΧœΧ™
Side15 minVegan

Ingredients

  • 5 firm tomatoes
  • 4 Persian/mini cucumbers
  • Β½ red onion
  • 1 small bunch parsley
  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 1Β½ tbsp lemon juice
  • Salt & black pepper

Method

  1. The whole skill is the knife work: dice everything tiny and even β€” 3–4 mm cubes.
  2. Chop parsley fine. Combine vegetables in a bowl.
  3. Dress with oil, lemon, salt, pepper only at the moment you serve β€” never earlier, or it weeps.
Served at basically every meal including breakfast. Smaller cubes = more respect. This is not a joke.

Sabich Pita

Χ‘Χ‘Χ™Χ—
Street food30 minVegetarian

Ingredients (makes 4)

  • 1 large eggplant, sliced 1 cm
  • 4 hard-boiled eggs
  • 4 pitas
  • Hummus + tahini sauce
  • 1 batch Israeli salad (above)
  • Amba (mango pickle sauce)
  • Pickles, oil for frying

Method

  1. Salt eggplant slices, rest 20 min, pat dry. Fry in oil until deep golden and soft. Drain.
  2. Warm pitas; open into a pocket.
  3. Smear hummus inside. Layer eggplant, sliced egg, salad, pickles.
  4. Drizzle tahini, then a careful line of amba. Eat immediately, over a plate.
Amba is divisive and powerful β€” start with a little. An Iraqi-Jewish breakfast that became a Tel Aviv institution.

Malabi

ΧžΧœΧ‘Χ™
DessertChill 3 hrVegetarian

Ingredients (makes 6)

  • 1 L milk
  • 60 g cornstarch
  • 80 g sugar
  • 1 tbsp rosewater
  • Red syrup: 100 g sugar + 100 ml water + grenadine/rose
  • Crushed peanuts, coconut to top

Method

  1. Whisk cornstarch into 200 ml cold milk until lump-free.
  2. Heat remaining milk + sugar. Pour in the slurry, whisk constantly until it thickens to custard, ~5 min.
  3. Off heat, stir in rosewater. Pour into cups; chill 3 hr.
  4. Simmer syrup ingredients 5 min until glossy. Cool.
  5. Top each with red syrup, peanuts and coconut.
The classic kiosk dessert. Light, floral, slightly wobbly β€” the taste of a summer night out.
02 / The markets

Where to shop cheap on Fridays

Friday late morning is peak market energy in Israel. Prices drop hard in the last 1–2 hours before closing as vendors clear stock before Shabbat. Bring cash, bring a trolley bag, and don't be shy about asking "kama ze?" (how much).

Tel Aviv

Carmel Market & Levinsky

Shuk HaCarmel is the famous one β€” produce, cheese, spices. Levinsky Market nearby is the spice-and-deli insider's pick. Both roar on Friday morning.

Jerusalem

Mahane Yehuda

"The Shuk." Electric on Friday before Shabbat, then transforms into bars by night. Best produce prices come in the final hour.

Haifa

Talpiot Market

Haifa's covered market in Hadar β€” produce, fish, bakeries. Less touristy, genuinely cheap, strong Friday rush.

Be'er Sheva

The Bedouin Market

Historically the Thursday market; the produce-and-goods market by the old city is a southern institution and very low-priced.

Ramla / Lod

Ramla Market

One of the cheapest large markets in the center of the country β€” produce, spices, housewares. A favourite for budget weekly shops.

The cheaper supermarkets

Not a market? Go here

For the weekly shop, the discount chains beat city supermarkets: Rami Levy, Osher Ad, Yochananof, Victory. Compare prices on the official tool below.

Friday timing Markets and most shops close early Friday afternoon for Shabbat β€” usually 2–4 PM depending on the season and city. Don't plan a 5 PM Friday grocery run. Go before 1 PM.
03 / Finding work

Staffing agencies & job boards

Israel's biggest staffing and placement firms post thousands of roles, many in English-friendly sectors (tech, support, finance). Because contact people and branch numbers change constantly, the smart move is to go straight to each company's live careers page and the national job boards.

Agency / platformWhat it's good forLive link
Manpower IsraelOne of the largest staffing firms; temp, permanent, multilingual rolesmanpower.co.il
Adecco IsraelGlobal staffing group; office, industrial and professional placementadecco.co.il
O.R.S / Χ—Χ‘Χ¨Χ•Χͺ Χ”Χ©ΧžΧ”Large local placement agency, broad sectorsors.co.il
DanelStaffing, caregiving and services placementdanel.co.il
AllJobsThe biggest general job board in Israelalljobs.co.il
DrushimMajor job board, strong for non-tech rolesdrushim.co.il
JobMasterEstablished board with placement servicesjobmaster.co.il
LinkedIn IsraelBest for English-speakers, tech & multinationalslinkedin.com/jobs
GvahimNonprofit that helps new immigrants find professional work β€” mentoring, CV, networkgvahim.org.il
New-immigrant tip Before sending a CV, get it "Israeli-ified" β€” Israeli CVs are short, blunt and skill-forward. Nefesh B'Nefesh's employment team and Gvahim both do this for free. Also: networking ("protektzia") wins more jobs here than applications. Tell everyone you're looking.
04 / Moving on Shabbat

Public transport on Saturday β€” the honest map

Here's the truth most guides won't give you straight: national buses and trains do not run from Friday sundown to Saturday nightfall. But it's not nothing β€” there's a patchwork of private, municipal and shared-taxi services. This patchwork changes every few months, so always confirm in a live app.

Tel Aviv metro area

Municipal weekend buses

Tel Aviv-Yafo and neighbouring cities run a weekend bus network ("we move on weekends") covering the city and suburbs like Ramat Gan, Givatayim and Holon. Routes and times shift β€” check Moovit.

Jerusalem

Shabus cooperative

A members' cooperative running Shabbat routes in and around Jerusalem since 2015. Free to join; small per-ride fee. Confirm current routes on their site.

Gush Dan & beyond

Noa Tnua

A non-profit cooperative operating weekend lines in the Tel Aviv area and other regions. Sign up free online, pay per ride.

Haifa & mixed cities

Buses do run

Haifa has limited municipal bus service on Shabbat (a long-standing arrangement), and Arab towns like Nazareth run normally. Eilat also has some service.

Everywhere β€” the workhorse

Sherut (shared taxi)

10-seat shared minibuses on fixed routes run 7 days a week, including Shabbat (slightly higher fare). The most reliable intercity option on Saturday β€” e.g. Tel Aviv ⇄ Jerusalem, Tel Aviv ⇄ Haifa.

Door to door

Taxis & ride apps

Regular taxis and apps like Gett run on Shabbat (with a holiday surcharge). For longer trips, intercity sherut is far cheaper.

Always verify live Treat the descriptions above as orientation, not a timetable. Cities add and drop Shabbat lines regularly. Before you travel, open Moovit or Google Maps and check the actual route for that exact Saturday.
05 / Pickup sport

Neighborhood football, basketball & pochinbol

This is the single fastest way to make Israeli friends. Pickup games happen at public courts and beaches with zero sign-up. You just show up, ask "efshar l'hitztaref?" (can I join?), and you're in.

⚽ Football / Χ›Χ“Χ•Χ¨Χ’Χœ

Find a "kvutza"

Most neighborhoods have a regular weekly game on a fenced asphalt or turf pitch. Look for the local Facebook group "[neighborhood] Χ›Χ“Χ•Χ¨Χ’Χœ" β€” almost every area has one organising weekly matches.

πŸ€ Basketball / Χ›Χ“Χ•Χ¨Χ‘Χœ

Open courts everywhere

Public basketball courts are in nearly every park. Evenings and weekend mornings draw informal 3-on-3 and 5-on-5. Winner-stays-on is the usual rule. Just bring a ball or wait to be invited.

🏐 Pochinbol / Χ€Χ•Χ¦'Χ™Χ Χ‘Χ•Χœ

The Israeli beach religion

Israel's own beach game β€” barefoot, on a low net, played with feet, knees, chest and head, never hands. Every beach has a corner of nets. It looks intimidating; beginners are welcomed and coached on the spot. The friendliest entry point of all.

How to actually get in Don't lurk. Walk up between points, smile, say "efshar l'hitztaref?" Israelis will fold a stranger into a game without a second thought β€” hanging back is the only real mistake.
06 / Running crews

Where to run with people

Running clubs are big, free, and very social in Israel. Most meet 2–3 times a week and welcome every pace. They're also a low-pressure way to practice Hebrew while you move.

Free Β· nationwide

parkrun Israel

Free, timed 5K every Saturday morning at parks across the country. Turn up, run or walk, no registration cost. The easiest possible on-ramp.

Global Β· many Israeli chapters

Nike Run Club / city crews

Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Haifa all have active running crews and brand-led groups that post weekly meetups on Instagram and Facebook.

Find your distance

Strava clubs

Search Strava for clubs in your city β€” most local crews list their meetup days and routes there, and you can match your pace before showing up.

A goal to train for

The big city races

The Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Tiberias marathons (plus half/10K options) are huge community events. Signing up gives you a target and a built-in crowd.

07 / Conversion (Giyur)

If you're pursuing conversion to Judaism

This section only matters to some readers β€” skip it if it's not for you. If it is for you, the most important thing to understand first is that which track you choose affects how your conversion is legally recognised in Israel. Don't pick a program before you understand that.

Read before choosing Conversion in Israel is not one system. State Orthodox conversion (via the Chief Rabbinate / Giyur Authority) is recognised for marriage through the Rabbinate. Conservative (Masorti) and Reform conversions performed in Israel are recognised for some civil purposes but not by the Rabbinate. The right choice depends entirely on your goals β€” speak to more than one body before committing.
State Orthodox

Giyur Authority (Rashut HaGiyur)

The government conversion administration; runs Orthodox conversion courts ("batei din") and study programs nationwide.

Orthodox Β· immigrant-friendly

ITIM

A respected nonprofit that guides people through Israel's religious bureaucracy β€” including conversion β€” and advocates for applicants. A good first call to understand your options.

Orthodox Β· moderate

Giyur K'Halacha

An independent Orthodox conversion network, often more accessible for families and children.

Conservative / Reform

Masorti & Reform movements

The Masorti (Conservative) and Israeli Reform (IMPJ) movements both run conversion programs. Recognition differs from Orthodox β€” confirm what it means for your situation.

08 / The unwritten rules

Everything else that helps you blend in

The small things no one tells you β€” the difference between living in Israel and being Israeli.

Money & daily life

Pay people back with an app

Israelis split bills instantly with Bit or Paybox. Owing someone β‚ͺ40 and not "Bit-ing" them is a small social misstep. Get one set up in week one.

Bureaucracy

The "tor" is sacred

Almost everything official needs a booked appointment ("tor") β€” health funds, Misrad HaPnim, banks. Book online in advance; walking in rarely works.

Health

Pick a Kupat Holim

You must register with a health fund β€” Clalit, Maccabi, Meuhedet or Leumi. Maccabi and Clalit have the most English-friendly apps. Do this immediately after arrival.

Social fabric

Say yes to everything early

Shabbat dinners, army-buddy barbecues, a colleague's kid's birthday β€” Israeli social life runs on showing up. Early "yes"es build the network that carries everything else.

Pocket Hebrew for fitting in

Can I join?
א׀שר ΧœΧ”Χ¦Χ˜Χ¨Χ£?
efshar le-hitztaref?
How much is this?
Χ›ΧžΧ” Χ–Χ”?
kama ze?
What's up / cool
Χ‘Χ‘Χ‘Χ”
sababa
It'll be fine
Χ™Χ”Χ™Χ” Χ‘Χ‘Χ“Χ¨
yihye beseder
Send me on Bit
ΧͺΧ©ΧœΧ— ΧœΧ™ Χ‘Χ‘Χ™Χ˜
tishlach li be-Bit
Shabbat Shalom
Χ©Χ‘Χͺ Χ©ΧœΧ•Χ
Shabbat Shalom
The one mindset shift Integration here isn't about losing your accent β€” Israel is built from immigrants, and nobody expects you to hide where you're from. It's about participating loudly: joining the game, arguing about politics at dinner, showing up to the barbecue. Israelis adopt people who lean in. So lean in.