A a THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, November 21, 1980 .69 UJA Missions Sharpen Past, Present for Detroiters By the end of the year, "We said Kadish in a shul more than 100 Detroiters that's now a Polish will have participated in a museum," said Sidney series of missions intended Freedland about the Al- to heighten awareness of teShule in Krakow. "Our our Jewish past and under- host cried; she said it was standing of our present, in the first time Kadish had Israel. Starting with the been said there in 40 years. Junior Division mission in We were seeing the death of July and the Prime Minis- Jewish tradition." ter's Mission in August, the Led by 1981 Campaign series continued with a General Chairmen Marvin Women's Division mission H. Goldman and David S. in September, President's Mondry, the President's Mission in October and Mission took its partici- Young Leadership Cabinet pants from Poland to Israel, mission called "from darkness to light," Hashiveynu — in Novem- said Goldman. ber. "There hasn't been one * * * day or night that I don't For 28 Allied Jewish think about what I saw in Campaign leaders, saying Poland," he added. The im- Kadish in Poland was more pact on other mission mem- than a religious act. bers was equally profound. * * In the top photograph, David S. Mondry, with paper in hand, is shown with fellow Detroiters at the Birkenau concentration camp memorial. Mondry's fellow 1981 Allied Jewish Campaign general chair- man, Marvin H. Goldman, is shown in the bottom photograph at the Jewish Historical Institute in War- saw. Jay M. Kogan is shown at the monument to War- saw Ghetto Uprising leader Mordechai Anielewicz in a Warsaw cemetery. In the bottom photograph, Jane Sherman talks to a youngster at a nursery school in Herzliya. When they were solicited for their individual Cam- paign shares in Israel, where they had dinner with Prime Minister Menahem Begin, the group pledged an increase of 39 percent over last year — a total of $554,000 — plus $70,300 for Project Renewal. The Detroiters had many opportunities to say Kadish in Poland. In Warsaw's Jewish cemetery, where some 2,500,000 Jews have been buried since that community's beginnings, there is one caretaker. "A group of us was about to leave," said Marvin Danto, "when we noticed a nicely dressed woman set- ting flowers and candles around several plots. She told us it was her husband's yarzeit. When she finished her task, we remained be- hind to say Kadish with her. It was the first time anyone had done that, and she broke down in tears. So did we. Here was the end of 1,000 years of Jewish civili- zation." Danto was driven, at his request, to a small village where his grandparents were born. The driver, de- scribed as well educated, told Danto that the Polish people "have never forgot- ten the belief that Jews make matzot from the blood of Jewish children." Shelby Tauber also noticed the "special" feeling about Jews. At the airport in Austria, where their El Al plane sat on the tarmac surrounded by soldiers with guns, "I thought, It's not fair. There's not one other airline that would have to defend its planes like this.' " The group visited Mila 18, the headquarters of the Warsaw Ghetto revolt fighters, as well as the sites of concentration camps. A highlight was their partici- pation in a Simhat Torah observance at the synagogue in Warsaw, once the largest Jewish commu- nity in Poland and now re- duced to a population of 3,000 with 12 children under the age of 18. A shohet acts as rabbi. On that night, the con- gregation's efforts to celeb- rate were augmented with the arrival of 24 Detroiters, bearing sidorim and talesim. "Throughout this mis- sion," said David Mondry, "there was an atmosphere that permeated our con- sciousness, images that we can't forget. "Each of us already had a strong identification with the past. But we resolved to take the message to those who have no such identifi- cation. We must see what happened to European Jewry will never happen again." President's Mission par- ticipants included: Milton Barnett, Michael Berke, Ruth Broder, Milton Dresner, Edgar Fenton, Benjamin H. Frank, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Grant, Dr. Steven Grant', Daniel Knopper, Jay Kogan,. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Minkin, Robert H. Naftaly, Fred Newman, Max Sheldon, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wallace and Barry Yaker. * * * Bilu;Just a neighborhood in the Israeli city of Ramla — rundown, devoid of charm. But to the 18 Detroit women who visited our Jewish community's "twin city" there was pride and excitement. They were se- eing the first fruits of Proj- ect Renewal. Led by Jane Sherman, campaign chairman of the Jewish Welfare Federation Women's Division, the group had its doubters at the start of the September mission to Israel. All knew about Project Renewal, the Diaspora-Israel partner- ship plan to improve life in poor areas. But some won- dered whether it really was working. Mrs. Sherman, who also chairs Detroit's Project Re- newal Committee, took mission members through the streets of Bilu and into the homes of hospitable neighborhood residents. The Detroiters came away believers. One of the participants, Pearl Zeltzer, had visited Bilu in June 1979. "The maabarot were there at that time. It was a slum. Now it's so different. It's not a slum any more; it's a community of people who are proud to be doing things for them- selves to better their lives." Some of that pride has come from neighborhood residents who have been trained as para- professionals. After six months of training, these 15 leaders are bringing the neighborhood in touch with services being made avail- able through Project Re- newal. Through mothers' clubs, many are learning Hebrew reading and writing, nutri- tion and sewing. An after- school community center has been set up so children need no longer take to the streets for recreation. While children were in summer camp, their mothers -- some of whom had never been on a vaca- tion — went to a day camp of their own. Senior citizens were taken on a four-day "tiyul" — outing — to Jerusalem and other cities. And just as pride begets pride, large families sleep- ing eight to a room are tak- ing a new interest in their dwellings and redecorating, with loans provided for the more ambitious projects. There's a long way to go. Mrs. Sherman said that the 15 trained para- professionals can deal only with the most difficult cases (some 600 Bilu families are involved in the program). "We could use 15 more," she said. If the Detroiters have a say in the matter — and they definitely do, said Mrs. Sherman — building and renovation programs will be pushed ahead. The group met with the mayor of Ramla and with Benny Aflalo, a Moroccan- born resident who is project director. With the renova- tion of a senior citizen day care facility, building of a new tennis center, estab- lishment of pre- kindergarten programs, street paving, playgrounds and streetlights, Aflalo said he shares the excitement of his Bilu friends who for the first time are active partners in changing their lives. Throughout the mission, including visits to front-line Galilee settlements, Youth Aliya and pre-kindergarten facilities — installations not under Project Renewal auspices — the women were impressed with Israel's preoccupation with educat- ing its children. "Education is their lifeline, so it must be of the highest quality," said Belle Kukes. In one Youth Aliya instal- lation, "we saw hundreds of children from poor homes being prepared for life. It struck me that Israelis are confident about their ability to defend their country. The only question is what they can do for themselves and their country to improve the quality of life." Other Women's Division mission participants were Marjory Ansell, Barbara Berry, Dolores Farber, Julie Grant, Doreen Hermelin, Edythe Jackier, Ellen Labes, Linda Lee, Edie Mit- tenthal, Miriam Mondry, Cecille Raichlen, Barbara A. Satinsky, Janice Schwartz, Leah Snider and Barbara Stollman. Avarice is wider than in- justice, and all fallen na- tions lost liberty through avarice which engendered injustice. 1 4 N- send THE JEWISH NEWS as a gift this To: The Jewish News 17515 W. 9 Mile Rd., Suite 865 Southfield, Mich. 48075 Please send a year's gift subscription to: NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE FOR• state occasion FROM $15 enclosed ZIP