Israel: On And Off The Tour School prinicipal Barbara Goldsmith Levine thanks Adat Shlaom for its pre- sentation. D ETRO IT J EWISH NEWS Students and adults dance with the Torah at the school's entrance. carried, and he smiled. For the rabbi, that smile would not leave his face. His smile connected with every high he would experience. It was as if his body, his soul were elevated somehow. His traveling compan- ion was a Torah that Adat Shalom was donat- ing to the Jean and Samuel Frankel School, a Conservative day school in Jerusalems' French Hill section. There was a teachers' strike hitting the city that day. But at that moment, every student of this elementary and mid- dle school, and many parents, were there. Rabbi Spectre had car- ried the Torah to Metro Airport. He held it like it was his child. El Al pro- vided a special seat for the Torah. Each step of the way, it was met with respect and reverence. People in the street would stop what they were doing to kiss the Torah. Even the lady who cleaned Rabbi Spectre's hotel Students Raphael Graspy (left) and Victor Nardi watch the room put Torah festivities. her dust rag aside the eyes of many onlook- for one moment to kiss ers. Children grabbed the Torah. the hands of the adults, When the bus door and whether or not their opened, the rabbi guests knew the Hebrew brought out the honored words to the songs or the guest. He was immedi- steps to the dances, ately surrounded by everyone came together singing and dancing chil- under a canopy of joy. dren, and he was with "From Adat Shalom the Torah under the came a Torah," said chuppah. The sight of school principal Barbara the rabbi at that Goldsmith Levin. moment, the Torah in his "Instead of from Zion, arms, brought tears to the Torah returned to Zion." Mrs. Levin has a direct connection to Detroit. She was the first girl to celebrate her bat mitz- vah at Adat Shalom. She also graduated from United Hebrew Schools and was confirmed at Adat Shalom. Esther Liwazer and her husband, Jacob, had tears in their eyes as they observed from alongside the chuppah. Mrs. Liwazer had been in Israel in 1982, visited the school and was among those who learned that it needed the Torah. "We just felt that a Jewish school, especially one in Jerusalem, should have a Torah. All of this shows that miracles hap- pen. This is very excit- ing. It's wonderful that our synagogue can have this sort of relationship with a school." Trudy Weiss, also on the Michigan Miracle Mission, was moved by what she was seeing. "It's a very emotional event," she said. "You have few opportunities in life to see something like this happen." Allan Nachman had to step back and make sure he made a mental photo- graph of what he was seeing because he came away with the same warm reaction that he gets during a family sim- cha. "You get a feeling of contentment, a feeling that this is a win-win sit- uation. It was a good thing for everyone." Mr. Nachman, who attended UHS and Adat Shalom schools with Mrs. Goldsmith Levin, presented the school with a facsimile machine on behalf of the Frankel family. "This is an event that