THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Franklin Gift Gallery Special to The Jewish News It all began last year, when 46 active retirees from the U.S. spent a winter in Natanya on a very special volunteer program showing that being retired does not have to spell the end of one's usefulness. The success of this program initiated by the B'nai B'rith and Aliyah Department of the World Zionist Organization 2 prompted an enrollment of more than double the number this year with the added participa- tion of the Hadassah organiza- tion. Stretching from December to March, the program consists of volunteer work in the morning and ulpan (Hebrew class) in the afternoon. This schedule is di- versified by a number of trips throughout the country, lectures and movies in the evenings, classes in Jewish culture, his- tory and geography. As part of the volunteer as- pect of the program, several of The program includes trips, lectures and entertainment. the participants are helping both elementary and high school students with their English les- sons and a very special kind of rapport seems to have grown be- tween the youth and the volun- teers. The students often visit their new friends at the seafront hotels where they are housed and in turn invite them to their . homes. Micky Kroos, a volun- teer from Cleveland,_ Ohio, working in the elementary school says: "I love every minute of it. The children are very re- ceptive, and I'm getting them to speak English more distinctly. They're very anxious to learn, and it's very gratifying to help them." Another aspect of the course is the Hebrew lessons given the volunteers by the high school students in exchange for their lessons in English. Micky who gives English lessons to high school students, says she is as grateful for their help in impro- ving her Hebrew as they are for her aid in English. Aside from tutoring, the re- tired volunteers are also doing renovation — constructing a li- brary out of a neglected bomb shelter, complete with an aleph-bet wall mural. "I wanted to leaVe something behind me in Israel," says Leonard, who was busy working on the four-color design of the mural. Another of the volunteers, Shirley Engleman, an artist, is design- ing brilliantly vibrant stained glass windows for the school. Other volunteers are doing work at the Malben Old Age Home. Here, it is human contact that makes a great deal of dif- ference — talking to the resi- dents, taking walks with them and generally showing interest in them. "It is very painful, but Whatever the occasion...maybe no occasion at all. There's no other way to say so much, so completely. 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Still other volunteers work at the Laniado Hospital and at the Netanya Savy organization, which was established by Australian philanthropists. At Savy, the volunteers put together occupa- tional therapy kits and make clothing for hospitals and the deprived. "I never sewed before in my life," Naomi claims pro- udly. "But now I've made sev- eral lap-warmers for the elderly. And believe me, I'd like to take one home for myself?" Several of the active retirees are working in a library for the blind. Hana Kravitz is typing a book which teaches speed reading in braille, something she finds "absolutely fascinating!" The influx of so many Ethio- pian Jews to Netanya has created an even greater need for volunteer help, and the active retirees have pitched in eagerly. When the Ethiopians first ar- rived clothing was sorted and distributed by the program par- ticipants. Many of the retirees speak with deep emotion of the great privilege they felt was given them in being part of the Ethiopian absorption into Israel. The Israeli army is also bene- fitting from the program as some volunteers work in the army base in Netanya. "What- ever we are able to do is ap- preciated," one of them says. "The officers and soldiers have all been very friendly, and our being there and making an ef- fort to help them makes them happy." Others help by tutoring army officers who are being sent on delegations abroad, in English. Many of the volunteers • work in JNF forests, where they ex- perience a real satisfaction in clearing out the forests, and are enthusiastic about the fascinat- ing things they learn during their work sessions. "It's very gratifying to see the forest being cleared," says Yetta from Montreal. "It takes many hands, but we are making a real im- pact." 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