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January 11, 1974 - Image 30

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1974-01-11

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30—Friday, January 11, 1974 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

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Youth News:

Teach-hi on Middle East Set

"Myths and Facts in .the freshmen, will be held 1 p.m.
Mideast," a teach-in for high Feb. 3 at the Jewish Center.
school students and college Registration will start at
noon.
The teach-in, which is spon-
Youth Asked to List sored by all Detroit Jewish
groups, was organized
Social Action Work youth
by the Detroit Zionist Feder-
Mrs. Bertha Br ot m an, ation and the Center.
chairman of the Walter E.
Ziedan Atashi, a Druze who
Klein Youth Award Commit- is Israel's consul in N e w
tee of the Jewish Commun- York, will speak. Participants
ity Council, asks all youth will be divided into discus-
groups to keep a complete, sion groups and will receive
up-to-date list on all activi- information kits.
ties on social action.
Competition this year will
focus on evidence of con- Founder Honored
structive efforts in this area. at AZA Tribute
OMAHA — Sam Beber,
founder of Aleph Zadik
Aleph, the boys counterpart
of the founding of the or-
Orchestra and Entertainment
ganization, will be honored
here on the 50th anniversary
of the founding of the or-
ganization.
Beber, 71, who started the
first AZA chapter here with
15 members, wil be honored
by the surviving members
of the original Omaha chap-
ter. Alumni David M. Blurri-
bem international president
of Bnai Brith, and Philip M.
Klutznick, honorary presi-
dent of Bnai Brith and the
second president of AZA,
also will pay tribute to
Beber.
Since its founding, AZA
has become an international
Jewish youth organization
with more than 1.800 chap-
ters of AZA and BBG (Bnai
Brith Girls) in the U. S.,
When it comes to meatless Canada, Latin America,
Italian spaghetti sauces, Great Britain, Australia and
Chef Boy-Ar-Dee is tops. Israel. More than 650,000
Just take his Mushroom- or youth have participated in
his traditional Meatless BBYO activities since its in-
and add either one (or ception.
both!) to spaghetti, noo-
dles, pot roast, meat loaf, Registration Open
fish, omelet, • you name it.
The rich sauce, loaded With for Special Camp
CHICAGO — Applications
flavor, takes over from
there. Keep both sauces on' are being taken by Camp
hand for family pleasing Ramah in Wisconsin for 13-
18-year-olds with learning dis-
variety.
abilities for the 1974 camp
season. The camp's Tikvah
Program is designed to offer
these youngsters a Jewish
educational experience in a
camp setting.
For information and appli-
cations, write Camp Ramah,
72 E. 11th St., Chicago, Ill.
60605 (312-939-2393).

Larry Freedman

647-2367

"Chercalls them Spaghetti
Sauces

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ou

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Kosher Meat Dealers Aspic

JACK ATTIS PHIL SWARIN
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KETURA, Israel — Forty
miles from Eilat in the sun-
bleached desert wastes of the
Negev, 37 young American
men and women have founded
a kibutz called Ketura —
after Abraham's second wife.
They are graduates of
Hadassah's Zionist youth
movement, Hashahar, a n d
come mainly from protective
middle-class homes where
they never worked as hard
nor risked their lives as they
do now.
"People ask why we have
left the U.S.," -one of the
young women said. "It isn't
a rejection at all. We see this
as a positive thing: we arc
contributing to the upbuilding
of a Jewish homeland whiCh
desperately needs us."
A young man, said. "The
American example— the
democratic values and the
organized voluntarism—grow
in fertile - soil in Israel."
The young settler s are
graduates of Hashahar's 1967,
1968 and 1969 year-course in
Israel program. Before they
return to Israel from the
United States they first had
to study in the U.S. Upon
their return to Israel, they
had to live on an established
kibutz to understand the prac-
tical problems of running
their own.
After living on the kibutz-
where three couples have
married and three became
engaged — they had to serve
in Nahal, the farm-pioneer

Local Miss and Teen
From Japan at Home
in Israel High School

Casey Briskin of Ann Arbor
has won distinction in the
Kfar Silver Choral Group, it
was reported by Mrs. M-.c.q-
vina Fraser, director of the
department for high school
education in Israel of the
Zionist Organization of
America.
.Relating activities at Mol-
lie Goodman High School in
Kfar Silver, Ashkelon, Mrs.
Fraser said that Howard
Paley, an American/Israeli
citizen who was born in
Japan, is now spending his
second year in a Kfar Silver
program for Ameridan stu-
dents in Israel.
Howard attended Japanese
kindergarten, then studied at
an American school until the
sixth .grade.
In 1969, his family left
.Japan for Sweden, where for
the first time Howard lived
outside the Orient. He at-
Let your prayer be a win- tended an Anglo-American
dow to Heaven.—The Baal school with students from
Shem.
Saudi Arabia, Finland, Spain,
Ethiopia and many other
countries.
Bar Mitykis, Wed • ings
and special occasions
Howard's mother, Israeli
born, discovered the pro-
Garson Zeltzer
grams for American students
Photography
in Israel. During first year
545-3646 or 354-2120 in Israel, he fell in love with
the country and decided to
stay for a second year.



Member Detroit Retail

37 Young Americans Found Negev Desert Kibutz

WE DELIVER,

Graduates of Hadassah's Young Judaea Zionist youth movement, Hashahar, hoist
their flag at Ketura, a former Nahal settlement in the Arava — only two miles from
the Jordanian border.

division of the Israel Defense
Forces.
On Nov. 22, the ,garin (nu-
cleus) formally took over the
operation of the kibutz,
which until then had been a
Nahal settlement. Despite the
Yom Kippur War, the cere-
mony was attended by gov-
ernment officials, by Rose E.
Matzkin, national president
of Hadassah, by 120 Young
Judaeans in Hadassah's cur-
rent year-course program in
Israel; and member s cf
neighboring kibutzim.
The setting is austere: two
rows of severe-looking, bar-
rack-like cottages set in a
patch of lawn on the salty,
gravelly, sand floor of the
Great Rift Valley between
two parallel mountain ranges.
To the west are the stony
and uninviting hills of the
Negev, and to the east, be-
yond the border of Jordan,
the towering mountains of
Moab.
Minister of Agriculture
Haim Gavati said: "We are
proud of our settlements in
the Arava. There are not
many nations in the world
who have managed to make
the desert bloom as we in
Israel have done. We are
helped by cadres of scientists
and researchers. But without
the hundreds of pioneering
youth to devote their energy
and skills, the miracle of
settling the desert would
never have taken place. This
is the first time that a settle-
ment has been founded with
pioneers who got their train-
ing in America."

Reintegration of Jews
With Their Judaism
Unless Jews "reintegrate
themselves with their Juda-
ism, its traditions, its values,
its standards, and co-operate
as such, as integrated Jews,
on highest levels of American
culture and on these alone,
there is no future for the
American Jewish community
except one of shame and dis-
aster.—Ludwig Lewisohn.

The dedication scroll, tures in winter and with the
signed by members of Ke- help of fresh-water springs
tura, read in part:
found in the desert nearby,
"On this day, Nov. 22, 1973, the main agricultural prod-
we are settling together in ucts will be flowers, melons,
the Arava and beginning to onions, green peppers and
build our new home . . . let various other winter vege-
us consider it a blessing that tables.
The garin has already
even while man is making
war against man and nation started to build and farm.
against nation, we are able They have planted 621/2 acres
to dedicate all our strength and have built a cowshed and
to the war of man against the a turkey coop.
desert, a war of life against
the wasteland."
RE TONE
The environment is one of
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THRIFT SHOP

invites you to their

Cultural Calendar

GRAND OPENING

of Events in Detroit Jewish Community

JANUARY 17, 18, 19

Week of Jan. 11-17

Jan. 13-9:45 a.m.—Col. Robert D. Heinl Jr.: "Crisis in the
Middle East: What Next?" at Beth Abraham-Hillel
Breakfast Forum. Admission. 851-6880.
—9:30 a.m.-5 p.m.—Registration for spring semester
of classes at Jewish Center.
14-8:30 p.m.—Rabbi Sherwin T. Wine: "The Orthodox
Response," second in "Crisis of Jewish Identity"
series, at Birmingham Temple. Admission. 477-0177.
15-8:30 p.m.—Jewish Community Council Delegate As-
sembly. Hyman Bookbinder: "Mideast Develop-
ments and the Impact on U.S. Public Opinion," at
Cong. Bnai Moshe. Free.

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