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March 11, 1988 - Image 15

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1988-03-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

NIBBLES & NUTS

Israeli High School
Students Visit Detroit

Merav Kopelowitz of
Rehovot and Eli Feinsilver of
French Hill, Jerusalem,
members of a 48-person Israel
high school delegation, will
be visiting Detroit for a week
beginning Sunday.
The two Israeli students
will visit Birmingham Groves
High School on Tuesday,
Detroit Renaissance High on
Wednesday, Southfield High
on Thursday and Oak Park
High on Friday.
They are part of an annual
six-week exchange visit spon-

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works on perfecting his magic
act. Next year he will finish
high school and join the
Israeli army. His family made
aliyah from the United States
in 1968.

Merav is a student at the
Municipal Religious High
School in Rishon Lezion. A
171/2-year-old 12th grader, her
family made aliyah from
South Africa in 1961. The
youngest of four children, she
is a volunteer with Magen
David Adom and has been
working on a biology project
based on a cancer project at
the Weizmann Institute of
Science. "At the end of the
year I'll be taking my final
high school exams," she said.
"Next year I shall either
serve in the Israel Army or do
what is known as National
Service:'

During their six weeks in
the U.S., Merav and Eli are
visiting Minneapolis, St.
Louis, Chicago, Flint, Detroit,
New York and Washington.

Merav Kopelowitz

sored by the Israeli govern-
ment. Their Detroit stay is
funded by the Jewish Com-
munity Council. Merav and
Eli will be housed by Dr.
Herschel and Toby Schlussel,
and Edward and Mitzi
Traurig.
Since both students are Or-
thodox, part of their activity
will focus on meetings with

Eli Feinsilver

members of the B'nei Akiva
Zionist Youth movement. The
Schlussels' daughter, Susie,
and the Traurigs' son, Jeffrey,
are B'nei Akiva members.
Eli is an 11th grader at
Himmelfarb High School in
Jerusalem. A composer, he
plays piano and enjoys
classical and popular music.
He also draws cartoons and

Jewish Groups
Protest Award

New York (J7I1A) — Two ma-
jor Jewish organizations have
protested the awarding of the
$369,000 Templeton Prize to
Dr. Inamullah Khan, sec-
retary general of the World
Muslim Congress. They ac-
cused Khan and his organiza-
tion of being anti- Semitic
and anti-Israel.
The congress has observer
status at the United Nations
and is financed by Saudi
Arabia. A proponent of Mos-
lem unity, Khan is the first
Moslem to win the award.
Abraham Foxman, national
director of the Anti-Defama-
tion League of B'nai B'rith,
and Rabbi A. James Rudin,
national interreligious affairs
director of the American
Jewish Committee, last week
expressed outrage and shock
in separate letters to Sir John
Templeton, who established
the prize in 1972 to encourage
progress in religion.
In his letter, Foxman
charged that the congress is
openly anti-Jewish and en-
dorses Holocaust revisionism,
denial of the Nazi genocide
against the Jews. Rudin
wrote that "Khan's anti-
Israel and anti-Jewish public
record should have immedi-
ately disqualified him from
such prestigious prize."
Templeton is a Tennessee-
born Wall Street investor.

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