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November 29, 1991 - Image 58

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1991-11-29

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

I TRAVEL 1

2 Hours Daily
ly
Sunshine

ALL
UNDER
ONE ROOF

Air Conditioned & Heated

SCHECHTER'S

Entire Oceanfront Block
37th to 39th Stnsets
Miami Beech
YOUR HOST...
Schechter Family Mgt

101111

KOSHER HOTEL

Diary

Continued from preceding page

"Your Home Away From Horne"
L
"11

INCLUDES..

Re-Opening November 24

• Meals

PRE-SEASON
SPECIRL






Activities
Daily Shiur
Private Beach
Heated
Therapeutic
Uhirlpool
• Free Parking_
• Color TV All -Rooms
• Radio All Rooms
• Nightly
Entertainment
• Cater to All Diets
• Delicious
Kosher Foods
• Much, much morel

From December 1 to December 22

STAY 7 DAYS...
PAY FOR 6
34,00

GLATT

„es.

DAILY PER PERSON • DBL. OCCUP.

INCLUDING MEALS

Phone Toll Free

where we've come from; only
our future is what is impor-
tant. But we have roots too.
Are we Israelis? Are we Jews?
Who is a Jew? Who are we?

11•800•327•8165

MEI INN MN UN. MEI MP 1=1 MI M1.11=1

NMI

MI

111171

=I UN INIII

356 6013

dedners

Tissue Paper and Clothes

We are proud of the artful cleaning and the
fine finish our pressing gives your clothes. But
nothing ruins our work like hanging on a
hanger in a crowded closet. So we stuff each
garment with tissue paper to help keep the fine
pressed finish. We stuff the sleeves, body and
collar with tissue paper so that the garment
will be ready to go when you are.

Skillfully Stuffed:

One of the many reasons why knowledgeable
customers say:
"MY Cleaners is my cleaners."
Located on Northwestern Highway
at 12 Mile Road

1..1.1.1 11.111 11111.11W1111111.........111.1.1
••=,
■ ID
Mni MIN 1 ■ I
I ■ 1
SM.

IN THE ORCHARD MALL
WEST BLOOMFIELD

LAS VEGAS

NEW YEARS

FR $499

DEC 29-JAN. 2
R.T. AIR & TRANS. 3 OR 4 NITES HOTEL

MOTORCOACH TOURS:

PHANTOM OF THE OPERA— $255
TORONTO

BEST SEATS!
MARCH 13-15 & Other Weekends 1992

NEW YEAR'S CELEBRATION

gia7

N. DAYTON—DEC. 31-JAN. 1
IL
MEALS • PARTY • CHAMPAGNE • DINNER

REDWING HOCKEY

DEC. 27-29 — TORONTO

METRO CA

"The Official and Exclusive Luxury Sedan Service of
Detroit Metropolitan Airport"









PRIVATE AIRPORT TRANSFERS
LOW FLAT ZONE RATES
DOOR:TO-DOOR SERVICE
EXECUTIVE AS DIRECTED SERVICE
UNIFORMED DRIVERS
CELLULAR PHONES
MAJOR CREDIT CARDS

"RUMORS" JAN 19
$47
"THE BOYS NEXT DOOR"
FEB. 16 $47
CROSWELL DINNER THEATRE
— ADRIAN, MI

ALL PRICES P.P. DBL OCC
Call for additional Trips and Cruises
GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE

BERKLEY TOURS AND TRAVEL, INC.

(800) 456701

AM Departures

11 999°

Complete packages from 5 289"

DEPART 8:30 am RETURN 12 mid.
GET
530 Quarters
S15 Food
S30 Deferred
From
I 51 0 Transfers

Pir:Iripa;lt Contract Required

$9090
..w

Per Person
and Receive

$13500 BONUS PAK.

CALL YOUR TRAVEL AGENT OR
HAMILTON, MILLER, HUDSON & FAYNE (313) 827-4070

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1991

559.8620 or 1.800-875•TOUR (8687)

ATLANTIC CRUISE DISCOUNTS...
CITY
BALLYS Save up to 50%

TUES. & WEDS.

58

ONE DAY TRIPS INCLUDE LUNCH

For Reservations Call:

DEPART—SUN.. MON., THURS., FRI.

FR.$

$239

HOTEL • FULL DAY TRAIN • 2 DINNERS •
1 BREAKFAST

* WEHAVECONSUMERBANKRUPICYINSURANCE *

"'VEGAS

ONLY

AGAWA CANYON SNOW TRAIN

JAN. 31-2; FEB. 7-9; 14-16;
21-23; MAR. 6-8

At rates much less than a limousine and
only a fraction higher than a taxi.

(313) 946-5700

AIR

$ 179

FEB. 28-MAR. 1 - ST. LOUIS
$ 175
(R.T. AIR & TRANS.)
HOTEL • RES. SEAT GAME • 2 CONTINEN-
TAL BREAKFASTS.

The Cruise Shoppe
at Summit Travel
489.5888

Wednesday, October 9

An overview of Israeli
answers to mass aliyah by
Shalom Orzach, Melitz
scholar-in-residence. Housing,
employment, education.
Numerically and logistically,
taking in such huge numbers
makes no sense. Yet more
than half of the Soviet olim
are now employed. In order to
accept reality you must
believe in miracles. These
olim, ex-refusenik Yuli Edels-
tein told us, are forcing the
Israelis to discover who they
really are. At Rishon Letzion,
one of the best examples of
direct absorption into com-
munity life, we met with new
Israelis who recognize that
many may never find employ-
ment in the fields in which
they trained in the Soviet
Union. Yet they continue to
come — not for themselves,
but for their children and
their children's children.
Here in a community center,
one of our group, Anne
Newman, discovered that the
Russian woman for whom she
had been working to find a
way to bring to Detroit has
left the Soviet Union and was
seated immediately beside
her. Without any assurance
that she will secure a position
in her field, Galina Linden-
baum has decided to make a
new home in Rishon Letzion
for herself and her daughter.
We visited Yavne, Detroit's
Project Renewal sister city.
We saw the handsome, newly-
renovated Henry Ford II park,
the Teitel Day Care Center,
and a child development
center partially provided by
an Applebaum, Hermelin,
Tauber grant. We danced with
seniors who will move from a
crowded recreation facility for
the elderly to a brand-new
senior citizens center — from
monies we here in Detroit
have contributed to Project
Renewal through the Allied
Jewish Campaign. Yavne
families welcomed us and
Detroit's eight college
students taking part in the
OTZMA program this year in-
to their homes for dinner.

Thursday, October 10

We saw Jerusalem as a
microcosm of the complex-
ities facing Israel today. From
a church rooftop, we peered
down upon the Christian
mosaic in the Old City. What
will shape our thinking and
our actions, the Jews' majori-
ty status in the land of Israel
or our minority position in
the world? And what of the
Greek Orthodox, the

Lutherans, the Armenians?
Amir Heshen, Jerusalem's
advisor on Arab affairs,
reminded us that although
Israelis attempt to provide
equal services to Arab and
Jewish communities, the
Arabs have not yet recogniz-
ed Jerusalem as a unified ci-
ty. And Ziad Abu Ziad, an
outspoken Palestinian, minc-
ed no words in his demand for
either equal citizenship for
the West Bank Palestinians
or allowing the territories to
become an independent
Palestinian state. No other
choices, Ziad proclaimed to
us, while General "Ya Ya"
(Yoram Yair) admits that the
Israelis may need to pay for
peace. But the important
question becomes: How
much? Also, an army is not
designed to contain an in-
tifada, he explained. "We're
doing the best we can, and,
truthfully, the Palestinians
know this."

Friday, October 11

We awoke at 4 a.m. to
meet a plane of new olim
from the Soviet Union. Their
faces first full of fear, then
wonderment, then gradually
accepting the reality of the
welcome and love awaiting
them on the tarmac. We, the
visitors, were given the honor
of welcoming them to Israel.
We have pledged to provide
what help we can through our
Federation commitments. But
by now we have seen that it
is the Israelis, themselves,
who bear the burden of ab-
sorption. We cried as we sang
Hatikvah today. but it is the
Israelis who will be enriched
by the strength of this unpre-
cedented aliyah. That after-
noon Dr. Eta Bick, a settler in
Gush Etzion on the West
Bank, explained in the no-
nonsense terms of both a
mother and a political scien-
tist why she and her fellow
settlers have both the
historical and legal rights to
retain their land and that the
world must understand that
any withdrawal from the ter-
ritories would be a very pain-
ful process. When the sun set
at the Western Wall that
evening, we prayed, each with
our own private thoughts. At
Shabbat dinner Melitz Direc-
tor Avraham Infeld reiterated
that we are all products of our
own experience, and we must
understand the concept of
Jewish peoplehood. But then
we walked through Mea
Shearim and realized that the
answers to what it means to
be Jewish become even more
complex. We have not climb-
ed Masada. We did not swim
in the Dead Sea. Many in our
group had been to this land
countless times, and yet, we

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