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June 26, 1992 - Image 56

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1992-06-26

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

LOCAL NEWS

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Students from Hillel and Schulze Elementary at Kensington Metro Park:
Yes to Nintendo, no to cleaning.

Open Arms Program
Breaks Cultural Barriers

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fifth-graders from De-
troit's Schulze Ele-
mentary School and
from Hillel Day School
benefited from a lesson of a
different kind: with dif-
ferences in race and religion,
they found they had a great
deal in common.
They like Nintendo, the
Pistons and the Tigers, but
cleaning up animal pens at
Kensington MetroPark is not
on their list of fun things to
do.
"It was kind of gross," said
Hillel student Rebecca
Pritikin of that activity, only
one of many at the group's
May 29 outing to Kensington.
The picnic and activity day
Was the culmination of the
fourth year of the Open
Minds — Open Arms pro-
gram, a cooperative effort
to encourage communication
and understanding between
the black and Jewish children
of the two schools.
Hillel Day School's Dr.
Shelley Goldberg and Schulze
Elementary's Marilynn Rose
coordinate the program,
which kicks off in November
with the pairing of pen pals
between the two schools. The
children correspond through-
out the year, meeting for
group activities and to share
their experience of their
ethnic backgrounds.
Dr. Goldberg described the
program: "If you open your
mind to someone different
you can break your barriers,
and you might be more will-
ing to open your arms to him
as well."

Last February, Hillel
students traveled to Schulze
to help their pen pals cele-
brate Black History Month.
Then the Hillel group hosted
their pen pals at a model
Passover seder in April. The
visitors asked the Four Ques-
tions and sang "Dayenu,"
which they had learned in
music class at Schulze. This
year, the Schulze students
read a book about a child's ex-

The children
correspond
throughout the
year, meeting for
group activities
and to share their
experience of their
ethnic
backgrounds.

perience in the Holocaust,
and at Kensington they
presented their Hillel pen
pals with a book about black
history.
At Kensington the students
planted corn, toured the pet-
ting zoo, played basketball,
baseball, frisbee, "Red Rover"
and other games.
"It's more than just a pic-
nic," Dr. Goldberg said. "It's
a kind of coming together in
an area (farm life) that none
of the kids have experienced
before?'
Hillel student Leah Weiss,
10, said, "It was fun to play
with everybody, to get to
know each other better. My
pen pal introduced me to
some of her friends and I in-
troduced her to my friends."
Leah and her pen pal, Janae
Hudson, share among their

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