14. Friday, March 28, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 0 Z. 0 An intrepid (?) news editor rappels the Judean desert. ADVENTURE IN ISRAEL Youth planning on spending their summer vacation in Israel can look forward to an experience and challenges of a life-time. BY ALAN HITSKY News Editor erusalem — Not the polite, ef- ficient, bi-lingual personnel at John F. Kennedy Airport, nor the Hebrew-and-English announcements aboard the huge El Al 747, nor even landing at Florida-like, palm treed Ben-Gurion Airport put me in the mood for Israel. But watching 40-50 men crowd the sleep-laden aisles of the El Al jumbo jet to form a morn- ing minyan before landing — that created the mood, as did the hour- long bus journey through the Judean Hills on our way to Jerusalem. It is a trip destined to be re- peated by thousands of travelers this year — tourists, families, businesspeople and students — espe- cially if they are of high school and college age attending summer pro- grams in Israel. From tennis-and- travel programs sponsored by the Is- rael Tennis Centers, to study-and- tour programs at Israel's universities or archeological digs, the hundreds of programs sponsored by Jewish organizations in the United States often have the common denominator of starting out in the Holy City of Jerusalem. "It sets the proper mood for everyone," said a representative of Israel's Youth and Hechalutz Dert- ment, which coordinates most organ- izations' youth travel in Israel. "Tel Aviv is a major Jewish city, but it is similar to most major cities. But Jerusalem ... Jerusalem is Jerusalem." The white, rocky hillsides, the rusting trucks and more formal monuments to Israel's 1948 War of Independence, the green fields and modern homes of the kibbutzim and moshavim on the hills lining the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv highway all con- tribute to the aura of history being entered by the visitor. Many of the summer programs try to capture that spirit with a Shabbat Jewish identity program in Jerusalem. College-age counselors interact with the young visitors, playing games and asking probing questions which allow each person to examine their Jewish values. On a recent visit to Israel, five American Jewish journalisti were treated to a six-day microcosm of ac- tivities common to many, of the summer programs, which are gener- ally 38 days in length. Continuing our Jerusalem experience, we were treated to a Shabbat tour of the Old City, the Western Wall and the Temple Mount area, guided by former Chicagoan Bernie Alpert of the Israel Department of An- tiquities. The department runs daily tours for summer program participants, conducting seminars and distribut- ing handouts which. accurately de- scribe the millenia-old pottery shards littering the Walks around the Old City walls. Expert guides explain the archeological digs and the modern functioning of old , Jerusalem, home of three ancient religions, the black-garbed Orthodox, thousands of Arabs and modern Is- raelis. • The faculty of Hebrew Univer- sity hosts several study programs each summer. The three-week courses are taught in English and the participants also have three- week guided tours of Israel. "It is not all work and no play," said physics professor Avraham Simievic at the hilly, tree-lined Givat Ram campus. "We give homework and tests in our classes, but we under- stand when the students have circles under their eyes." ' Dr. Simievic emphasized that his physics classes are serious courses, but geared to stimulating interest and imagination. The stu- dents pick their seminars in ad- vance, and Dr. Simievic uses simple experiments, film , and a • practical, hands-on approach to keep the courses lively. His course includes the logic of computers and astro- physics, and he excitedly links physics to humanities and politics. "I try to display the achieve- ments of physics over the last 50 years," he said. "After all, we've dis- covered more about the stars in that time than in the previous 7,000 years." Dr. Bernard Crammer, an or- ganic chemistry professor who has been teaching the summer seminars for ten years, also works hard to make his course fun for the students. He emphasizes lab experiments on how to prepare aspirin and insect repellant, how to handle lab equip- ment, and field trips to chemical plants to hold the interest of young people "who do not want to hear lec- tures during summer vacation. They want to work with their hands and see more with their eyes." But he also believes in some homework and "teaching how to write a report that is clean and tidy." An exclusive program for •stu- dent filmmakers is sponsored by the Jerusalem Cinematheque in its his- toric headquarters near the Sultan's Pool, opposite the Old City walls. The three-week program gives a limited number of students an opportunity to study Israel through film and field trips, and to produce a professional-quality film as a group project. Amy Kronish, director of the summer film program, told the visit- ing journalists the program is limited by the size of mini-buses. Sixteen students participated each of the first two yeah, but the Cinematheque would like to accomo- date 32 students this summer. Last year, the students dis- cussed film with the director of the controversial movie Behind the Wall, as well as Rafik Halaby, a Druze Is- raeli who is news editor for Israel Television. The students produced a film on Jewish-Arab co-existence, ,