ENTERTAINMENT Oren, 13, claims to be able to light torches using powers of concentration only. Israel's Super Boy Shows His Powers An Israeli teen-ager is a stage star on the weekend. CLAUDIA YIFRACH A s a group of class- mates at the Makor Haim school in Bnei Brak begin an exam, one boy quietly leaves the room. Though his behavior is not disruptive, his presence, ironically, is. The pupil, Oren Maili, 13, knows both the questions and answers to a test before it is even ad- ministered. "I've been given a gift," Oren admits, "but I consider myself a regular kid. It's only on stage that I feel like a star." "At first, everyone wanted to be Oren's friend," says father Rony, "and people started turning up at our home in the hope that Oren would reveal something to them, touch them, or heal them." His classmates, once in- timidated, are now relatively comfortable with Oren and his abilities. Surprisingly, they have never tried taking advantage of his talents. However, weekly perfor- mances at the "November" nightclub in Old Jaffa allow Oren's talents free rein. Blindfolded and seated with his back to the audience, Oren describes audience members and how they're dressed, giving phone numbers and other personal details listed on their ID Special to The Jewish News cards. He also bends spoons, can move the hands of a wrist- watch and light a torch simp- ly by concentrating. Often referred to as "the lit- tle wonder worker," Oren was spotlighted some two years ago when a reporter from Japanese television came to interview him. Oren traveled to a location in Jerusalem, while his father went with the reporter and a translator to Tel Aviv. Successfully "reading" the serial number of a 50 shekel note the reporter was holding, along with the positioning of the box he placed it in (there were 50 empty film boxes on the table), the reporter was dumbfounded. The final test came, though, when the reporter secretly switched bills. Oren, from a distance of some 65 kilometers, insisted the serial number he had originally given was no longer compatible with the number on the bill. On another occasion, the reporter and Oren each open- ed a pack of playing cards. The reporter picked a card and Oren picked the same card out of his pack. In December 1991, Oren ap- peared on a television show and amazed audience members and home viewers by cracking the code of an "uncrackable" police safe us- ed for keeping weapons. Dur- ing his performance, the studio was bombarded with telephone calls from viewers who had experienced a varie- ty of strange sensations: broken clocks that suddenly began ticking and watches and clocks that stopped en- tirely. One woman's wrist- watch simply popped off her hand. Another viewer phoned to say that her spoon bent of its own accord inside her cof- The only rationalization behind Oren's powers is the headaches that Oren suffered at age four and a half. fee cup. Strange things also happened with electricity. One household suffered a complete power failure during the show and the electricity company maintains that it was not due to any central power failure. The electricity company also noted that there was an unusual and dramatic rise in the demand for electricity during the show. "It's natural to be skep- tical," says Rony. "Oren was in first grade when I discovered his abilities. "He came to me one day and told me to take a bill from my pocket. He then proceeded to tell me the serial number. I was sure he was playing some sort of trick on me," he recalls. "I told him to go into the next room and said, 'I'll touch ob- jects. See if you can tell me which ones? He looked at me and said, 'You think I'm try- ing to fool you, but I know everything you're thinking? He went into the next room and I touched different ob- jects. He knew everything I touched." The only rationalization behind Oren's powers, says Rony, is the headaches that Oren suffered at age four-and- a-half. Doctors were of no help and X-rays showed nothing. The doctors concluded that Oren was perfectly healthy and that the headaches would go away in time. They disap- peared the following year. Family members have been involved with Oren's career from the start. One of three children, he says, "we all get along great . . . they have nothing to be jealous of. My success is their success." In fact, his 16-year-old brother Gili is also a successful artist, having recently released a record album. During one performance Oren told a member of the au- dience that he should enter the national "Hishgad" lot- tery. He did and won a Peugeot. "I rely on Oren a lot myself," admits Rony, a graphic artist with his own sign-making business. At times, Oren helps his father land jobs by telling him what bid to make. Once, he even saved his father money by ad- vising him not to place a bid. While Oren has spent much of his life in the entertain- ment world, his father and manager help him lead as normal a life as possible. He attends a traditional Jewish school "so that he'll learn about his roots and why we celebrate the holidays," says Rony. "These basics are not as ingrained in a secular school." Spending so much time together has acted as a positive influence, and no doubt affected the father-son relationship and their telepathic bond. "I do feel very connected to him," smiles Rony. "Once people would say 'That's Rony's son: Now they say, 'That's Oren's father.' "