TOP FRONT1 H Detroit Volunteers For Israel Set First Unity Flight For June RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer 0 L /- Lindsay Faber adds to the Project Chametz collection. Tviro Tons Of Chametz Given To The Hungry ALAN HITSKY H ' Associate Editor p roject Chametz was an overflowing suc- cess for hungry per- sons in southeast Michigan and Detroit's Jewish com- munity. Trucks from the St. Vincent DePaul Community Food Depots, the designated reci- pient of the Hunger Action Coalition, had to make daily collections at the food drop-off sites at the Maple/Drake and Jimmy Prentis Morris Jewish Community Centers and at United Hebrew Schools. As of mid-day Tuesday, the third and final day of the pro- ject, 4,000 pounds of food not kosher for Passover had been contributed. "We are overjoyed by the en- thusiastic response," said David Gad-Harf, executive director of the Jewish Com- munity Council of Metropolitan Detroit. "We know the food will be put to good use. It will feed the hungry and strengthen our ties to the general communi- ty." 0 'Call For Left-Overs' Proposed By Mazon ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor M embers of eight lo- cal synagogues have plans for your left- over party food. They want to donate it to the hungry. Mazon committees from area congregations have formed a coalition to broaden Detroit participation in Mazon — the Jewish Response to Hunger. One of their first goals, according to Rabbi Paul Yedwab of Temple Israel, will be to establish a pick-up service to donate left- over food to local food banks and soup kitchens. Said Dr. Nancy Fishman of Temple Israel, "We want to create a system where in- dividuals can call a number and have food picked up. It could be a wedding, bar mitz- vah — even a shivah house." Mazon asks Jews national- ly to contribute three percent of the cost of a party to help feed the hungry. Mazon's na- tional director, Iry Cramer of Los Angeles, spoke to Mazon activists two weeks ago at a luncheon hosted by Rabbi A. Irving Schnipper at Con- gregation Beth Abraham Hillel Moses. Other congregations par- ticipating in Mazon include Beth Shalom, Beth El, Emanu-El, Kol Ami, Shir Tikvah and Shir Shalom. The groups have formed a central committee to coor- dinate their efforts and broaden particpation to other area congregations. Dr. Fishman believes Mazon is becoming better known in the community. Last year, Temple Israel's membership contributed $3,500 during a Passover campaign for the charity. This Passover, the temple col- lected $6,000. C uth Vosko of Farming- ton Hills is ready to roll up her sleeves and go to work for the Israeli ar- my — again. "It's a trip of the heart," she says. On the other hand, Fern Selling of Southfield is pit- ching in for the first time. "I've been thinking of going for years." Both are participating in the Volunteers for Israel's first Detroit Unity Flight to the Jewish state, scheduled June 12-July 4. The volunteers program, which is subsidized by Jewish Welfare Federation scholar- ships, sends participants to Israel for three weeks to live and work with Israelis on an army base, a kibbutz, a hospital or a development town. Normally, says Yefet Ozery, shaliach and Detroit volunteers program director, people go on an individual basis. For the Unity Flight — which seeks to send 50 area residents as a group — the cost for roundtrip airfare from Detroit plus full room and board is about $680. A two- week option is available for an additional $100. Registra- tion deadline is next Friday. A second trip July 9-Aug. 1 is $938. "The purpose is to give an opportunity to American Jews to get to know the real Israel, by working side-by- side with Israelis," says Ozery. "The Americans get to know first-hand who the Israelis really are — what they're all about, what they're thinking, and so forth. "And while they're doing that, the Americans con- tribute manpower which is badly needed." He said 'The Americans get to know first- hand who the Israelis really are.' volunteers work in Israel Defense Forces warehouses, sorting clothing and military equipment and maintaining vehicles. In the hospital, they work as nurses' assistants and janitorial crews. On the kibbutz, they work in the fields and in the kitchen. And in the development town — Detroit's sister city, Yavneh — they assist in teaching English to Israeli youngsters, work at the community center, or help build the park being donated by the Ford family. Ruth Vosko, who'd been to Israel twice before becoming a volunteer last year and working at the IDF's Camp Julis near Eshkelon, says she feels a "duality — half of me lives here and half lives there. It's a trip of the heart" to go to Israel. "I'd always wanted to do something with my hands for Israel;' says the real estate agency executive secretary. She lived in the barracks, wore a uniform and worked on vehicles and tanks, made special treads for boats, cut gaskets, rode forklifts and folded uniforms. The work was timely because, just after she and her group arrived, the intifada began, pulling away the camp's soldiers. "Our work saves Israel money and also helps the Israeli reservists be with their families. "Being in the army, seeing Israel as the Israelis do — it's quite a different concept;' she says. The Israelis "are thank- ing us, but we should be thanking them." Since last year, she's become a board member of the recently formed State of Michigan Friends of the IDF, which raises funds for military recreational facilities. Fern Selling says past cir- cumstances prevented her from going to Israel. The fact her daughter Barbara was a volunteer last year and is now in. Israel with the World Union of Jewish Students en- couraged her. "It sounded wonderful and it's very supportive of Israel," says Selling, a social worker. "It's a wonderful opportunity and the timing is good, too." 0 ROUND UP 1-696 Fire Was Expensive Michigan Department of Transportation officials say last Friday's fire amid con- struction equipment on 1-696 in Oak Park caused extensive damage. Noel Smith, district con- struction engineer for the freeway, said a Monday in- spection found 40-45 steel beams that will have to be replaced near the baseball diamond area behind Con- gregation B'nai Moshe. The beams support the plaza that covers the freeway. Smith guessed repair costs will be in excess of $1 million. Smith does not believe Church Street will have to be closed when the repairs are made. Oak Park public safety of- ficials say they are question- ing juveniles in the area at the time of the fire. Heavy smoke forced children at Temple Emanu- El's nursery and Hebrew schools to move from the school wing into the temple's sanctuary. Soviet Jews Publish Journal Tallin, Estonia — Soviet Jews are publishing the first ever Jewish journal not com- pletely controlled by XAWAXAP (.PACCBET.) 11WDOPMALIOHH6114 fINCTOK authorities, the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry reported last week. Called Hashachar, Dawn, the paper is published in Tallin, Estonia, the Soviet Union's most Westernized ci- ty. More than 1,700 copies of the two-sided flyer are being printed in Russian. Company Sues Jewish Student A Philadelphia insurance company is suing a student at Yeshivah Gedolah who allegedly set off firecrackers that started a fire at the Oak Park day school in March 1988. The fire caused $140,000 in damage. Representatives of the Reliance Insurance Co. claim- ed that two boys setting off firecrackers ignited the fire while another two students who were smoking started fires in closets. The insurance company also is suing leaders at the yeshiva. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5