EDUCATION 1:IJOIVIC) VOGUE FINE MEN'S EUROPEAN FASHION 29475 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, MI 48034 (313) 352-7660 GREENSTONE'S CREATORS OF FINE JEWELRY 528"1\1. Woodward, Birmingham 4 blocks north of Maple 642-2650 Monday-Saturday 9:30 to 5:30 Hearty Wishes To Our Customers and Friends For A Very Healthy and Happy NEW YEAR Monis lisdairsh Anthony Ferrari APPLEGATE SQUARE Northwestern & Inkster 356-7007 116 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1991 Wendy Blumfield, founder of the Israel Childbirth Education Center, gives pre-natal classes in her Haifa home. Childbirth Education At Israeli Center SHELLEY KLEIMAN With Our Sincere Wishes For A Happy And Healthy New Year JEWELRY DESIGN & MFG. LTD. Photo by WZPS/Yossi Chrem Happy New Year! from the Sales Staff of Special to The Jewish News W hen Wendy Blum- field, a licensed childbirth educator, made aliyah from Great Bri- tain in 1974, she assumed she wouldn't find much to do in Israel. "I took it for granted that such a child-oriented country would be highly developed in the field of childbirth education and pre- and post-partum care," she recalls. She assumed wrong. Although up-to-date techno- logically, Ms. Blumfield was amazed at how far behind Israel was in medical trends. In the United States, Great Britain and Canada, peer- support childbirth education classes were well-established, men were encouraged to take an active role in the birth pro- cess, and most important, women were working togeth- er with the medical establish- ment in making decisions that would affect them and their babies. In Israel, Ms. Blumfield still found men pacing in the waiting rooms — a portrait of a by-gone era — while women could be heard screaming hysterically from the delivery rooms. The emphasis of the few childbirth preparation classes that were available was on the medical aspects of birthing. "The message was, `come in and be a good girl and everything will be all right,' " says Ms.Blumfield. Ms. Blumfield soon found herself flooded with requests for childbirth education classes mostly from English- speaking immigrants, and so she began giving informal classes in English. Recogniz- ing a more serious need, however, Ms. Blumfield decid- ed to return to England and become a certified tutor. Back in Israel, she began training future instructors. What began as one woman's modest attempts at education turned into a network of women who wanted to change medical policies and even more difficult, attitudes among health-care profes- sionals and even amongst the expectant parents. This net- work was the basis for the Israel Childbirth Education Center, a grassroots organiza- tion founded by Ms. Blum- field and other like-minded immigrants. A sister organization of the National Childbirth Trust of What began as one woman's modest attempts at education turned into a network of women who wanted to change medical policies. Great Britain, the ICEC was founded in 1981 and trains childbirth educators and breast-feeding counselors. "The ICEC does not look upon birth as an isolated medical phenomenon, but in the context of a person's whole life," says American- born Shulamit Green, one of the first instructors to be trained by the ICEC, which covers everything from pre- natal nutrition to medical in- tervention during pregnancy and labor, infant care and post-partum depression. The ICEC actively cam- paigns for changes in hospital policies, and allowing husbands in the delivery