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Friday, November 22, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
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. . . and
thank you for
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Continued from preceding page
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first outdoor Dahlia Festival.
To hone her skills and bring
back new dances to Detroit,
Shelly attends the Har Shalom
seasonal workshops on the East
or West Coast. "Dance af-
ficionados and teachers attend
to learn firsthand from the mas-
ters — often choreographers vis-
iting from Israel," she explains.
It has been exciting for Shelly
to practice her dancing
whenever she goes to the Jewish
state. She has, on occasion, been
mistaken for a sabra.
After additional visits to Is-
rael, Shelly and Larry's con-
cerns took on an expanded focus
when they traveled, with a
group of Detroiters, to the
Soviet Union in 1980. The trip
followed a banner year in which
more than 50,000 Soviet Jews
had been allowed to emigrate.
The granting of exit visas was
already declining when the Jac-
kiers met with refuseniks in
Moscow.
Larry was particularly moti-
vated after seeing firsthand the
conditions confronting Jews in
Russia. Upon his return to the
Detroit area, he and Joel Ger-
shenson acted on "a personal
and professional commitment"
to re-form the existing, well-
intentioned, but disorganized
local solidarity efforts on behalf
of Soviet Jews.
Since the committee's re-
structuring under the aegis of
the Jewish Community Council,
Larry says, "Five times the
number of lay people have be-
come active than before."
Citing the success of the
Bar/Bat Mitzvah Twinning Pro-
gram, he said, "There's hardly a
Shabbat in Detroit now which
doesn't include a twinning
ceremony." His daughter Ariana
twinned her bat mitzvah in
1984 with Anna Chernobilsky of
the Soviet Union at Cong.
Shaarey Zedek.
"Detroit is a community
which responds very well_to the
stimuli of a few individuals,"
Larry commented, and the
number of people who have be-
come aware of how serious
things are in the Soviet Union
today has greatly increased.
During the last four years in
which a Freedom Concert has
been sponsored by the Detroit
"That exposure (to
Junior Division)
gave us both an
appreciation for the
potential of young
Jewish leaders to
make some impact,"
says Larry Jackier.
Soviet Jewry Committee, annual
attendance has exceeded 1,000
guests.
Much of the credit, Larry said,
should go to Beverly Yost, who
has done "an exceptional job" as
the Jewish Community Coun-
cil's Soviet Jewry staff liaison.
Sharing praise, according to
Joel Gershenson, is simpl• an-
other aspect of Larry's
ity.
"He has made a tremendous
impact on my life," 'Jershenson
emphasizes. "Larry is a mensch,
in the truest, moF. inspirational
way. He sees it 'As his obligation
as a Jew to mach out and help
others. His kindness and his
compassior_, I think, have been
very evident on the local and
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