The Jerusalem Post

Hugging a tree to beat the coronaviru­s blues

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Can’t embrace friends and family these days? Hug a tree instead.

That is the message the Israel Nature and Parks Authority is spreading on social media to try to help people overcome the sense of detachment that coronaviru­s social-distancing rules can bring.

“In this unpleasant corona period we recommend to people around the world to go out to nature, take a deep breath, hug a tree, express your love and get love,” Orit Steinfeld, the authority’s marketing director, said in Apollonia National Park.

At the park, about 15 km. north of Tel Aviv, tree-huggers such as Barbara Grant heeded the advice during a tour arranged by the authority.

“The most basic human need is for connection, for touching, for hugging,” she said, lamenting that, as a health precaution, she can’t hug her grandchild­ren.

Also out in the park, Moshe Hazan said he wanted to widen his embrace beyond his partner, Pat Arthur, who accompanie­d him to the forest.

“We are not hugging too many people these days – not our children, not our grandchild­ren – and hugging a tree is quite a nice thing to do,” Hazan said.

After flattening a coronaviru­s infection curve in May, Israel has experience­d a spike in new cases over the past several weeks.

Protective masks are mandatory outdoors, and Israelis are advised to avoid close physical contact with elderly relatives, with visits at nursing homes held only in the open air.

Israel’s tree-hugging campaign follows a similar endeavor launched in April by Iceland’s Forestry Service. (Reuters)

 ?? (Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) ?? ISRAELIS FIND comfort in tree hugging in Apollonia National Park, near Herzliya this week.
(Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) ISRAELIS FIND comfort in tree hugging in Apollonia National Park, near Herzliya this week.

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