. . . may the New Year be one of joy, happiness and prosperity for all mankind An Apple A Day Is Good Business LYDIA AISENBERG Special to The Jewish. News s symbolic fruits, vegetables and spices go, the apple is a relative newcomer on the Jewish festival scene. Sym- bolizing, for some, the circle of life and for others a good omen for fertility, slices of the fruit alongside the honey bowl used for the Rosh Hashanah customary dipp- ings, are synonymous with the traditional Rosh Hashanah wish for a sweet new year. Apples are plentiful in Israel today and due to the unusually cold winter, con- ducive to apple growing, Israel managed to get a little nibble of the European market with 1,000 tons of Granny Smith. So appealing was the shape, color and all important taste of the Galilean Granny that growers are ensured a larger bite of the market, with orders for 2,000 tons and high hopes of doubling that again next year. "There is little chance of our being a serious com- Extensive orchards of Granny Smith, Jonathan, Star King, Orleans, Grant, Red and Golden Delicious apples are near the Israel-Lebanon border. petitor in Europe. Our total annual yield of about 100,000 tons is a si-r2 .1 nercentage of Euro7 - — but it is definitely a good start," said agronomist Moshe Shani of the Israel Fruit Marketing Board and one of the coun- try's leading apple experts. Israel's apple industry is mainly concentrated in the mountainous north of the country, where the climate is colder. Extensive orchards of Gran- ny Smith, Jonathan, Star King, Orleans, Grant, Red and Golden Delicious apples run along Israel's security fence with Lebanon from the Mediterranean coast to the Druze villages of the Golan Heights, literally an apple's throw from the current border with Syria. Druze farmers Tahar Abu Saleh and his cousin Nabi of Majd El Shams have grown up with the trees in the fami- ly orchard. Tahar's father, Ahmad, brought their first experimental saplings from Italy in 1945. The climate was conducive to apple grow- ing and the local volcanic soil was an added bonus. Majd El Shams and two neighboring Druze villages now account for 15 percent of the annual apple crop handled centrally by the Fruit Marketing Board. Applemania is in full swing from the end of June until Oc- tober. Picking, sorting and packing of the harvest is done in local packing houses, most- ly co-operatives formed by area kibbutzim, or groups of families such as those in the towns of Rosh Pina, Metulla and Majd El Shams. Workers from south Lebanon, who are allowed to cross over into Israel through the Good Fence checkpost at Metulla, commute daily to pick and pack. They work shoulder to shoulder with new immigrants from the former Soviet Union and Ethiopia, Israeli students and local residents whose livelihood depends on the industry. Mort Lehman, a former New Yorker who settled in Kibbutz Malkiya 16 years ago, used to have daily con- tact with the Lebanese tobac- co growers on the other side of the then somewhat "open" fence from his settlement's orchards. "Actually, I used to throw apples over to them. But these days, with an electronic fence and security road, I don't dare to do it anymore," said Mr. Lehman, recalling that the last time he did throw his offerings over the fence, his neighbors scattered in all directions thinking the apples were grenades. With a reputation of one a day keeping the doctor away, apples seem to be a definite apple of the consumer's eye. Can you imagine the Americans without their ap- ple pie, or the British without their apple crumble? William Tell split one with an arrow . . . the Beatles split one on their Apple label . . . Apple computers split the world of high-tech . . . and as for Adam and Eve, that apple certainly split the differences! ❑ THE JEWISH NEWS STAFF And Their Families Extend heartiest greetings to the entire Jewish Community of Michigan with gratitude for the splendid cooperation that has enabled us to work together for good community spirit. Charles A. Buerger Arthur M. Horwitz Philip Slomovitz Gary Rosenblatt Marianne Taylor Brian Lawrence Alan Hitsky Elizabeth Applebaum Phil Jacobs Kimberly Lifton Glenn Triest Seymour Manello Lesley Pearl Gail Zimmerman Christina Laskey Danny Raskin Rick Nessel Kathy Johnson Susan Brooks Laura Siegel Betsy Leemon Lisa Marshall Art Shafer Patty Zorlen Steven Levin Dharlene Norris Marlene Miller Percy Kaplan Pauline Max Leslie Kantor Lisa Ferstenfeld Dena Jacobs Sylvia Stafford Lisa Marks Donald Cheshure Cathy Ciccone Curtis DeLoye Joy Gardin Ralph Orme Gayle Baldi Debbie Schultz Carla Jean Schwartz Bert Chassin Bud Davis Linda McCarthy WZPS "Operation Babylon" was the code name for the 1981 Israeli mission to destroy Iraq's nuclear reactor. 181 SOUTH WOODWARD AVENUE BIRMINGHAM, MICH. 48011 I Daily 9:30-5:30, Thurs. til 8:30 Next to Birmingham Theater Adjacent Free Parking