I nvinaccu THE DETRO IT JEWISH NEWS PHOTOS 4Y DANI EL LIPPITT Days of 74 The Metropolitan Film Festival showcases the award-winning film. LIZ STEVENS SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS acob Feldman approaches the Residential Care for Adults with Devel- Western Wall on his first trip to opmental Disabilities), the local nonprofit Jerusalem, reverently kisses the organization that provides support for the ancient rock and moments later disabled and their families. But it's their turns toward the camera that has universal humanity and their inspiring courage, not their handicaps, that the film been watching him. "What did it mean to you, to be reflects most clearly. "We're very big believers in the fact that able to do this?" an off-screen voice asks. The 53-year-old Feldman, these folks can speak for themselves, and choking back emotion, removes his they've got something that's really worth glasses and rubs his tearing eyes while hearing," says Victor. "You just have to lis- the camera lingers. "I felt closer to God," he ten." It took one meal to convince the film- responds softly. "It's like a dream come makers that Days of Joy was their artis- true." The scene lasts just a couple minutes, tic destiny. In 1993, JARC invited Victor/Harder but it captures the essence of what film- makers Fran Victor and Bill Harder set out Productions Inc. to create a video high- to do three years ago when they began work lighting the organization's transitional liv- on the documentary Days of Joy. Complet- ing program. On an evening before they ed last spring and awaiting its first public started shooting, the filmmakers visited screening on Feb. 8, the film follows three the home of the three men who would be developmentally disabled Jewish adults the film's primary subjects. Feldman, de- making their first trip to Israel on the 1993 voutly religious and an employee of the Ira Kaufman Chapel, was among them. Miracle Mission. _ "So we had dinner," Victor recalls, "and The stars of Days ofJoy — Feldman, Lor- raine Schwartz and Harold Folkoff— are Jacob is just this wonderful, warm, gentle all clients of JARC (Jewish Association for spirit, full of love and full of laughter and -full of jokes, and we just fell in love with him. When we had our next pre-production meeting at JARC, we were saying, 'Gosh, you know, he's going to Israel and what a great (documentary) that would make' — and Bill and I looked at each other... and we decided what the hell." The pair went to work researching pos- sible funding sources, and almost immedi- ately found an interested party in the Bernard L. Maas Fran Victor works on a Foundation. A major project in her editing contributor to JARC, room. the foundation agreed to pay the pair's travel expenses. "Three weeks from the first contact with Maas," Harder says, "we were on the plane." The initial idea for the documentary was to focus solely on Feldman, but two days into the trip Victor and Harder decided to broaden the story. From the six JARC clients on the Miracle Mission, the film- makers chose to add the vivacious Schwartz, 63, who lives independently in Southfield, and the introspective Folkoff, 41, an avid public speaker despite a diffi- cult speech impediment. The 26-minute film, culled from 15 hours of tape Harder took over 10 days, tags along as its stars float in the Dead Sea, plant trees in the desert, partake in Silly String fights, pray at Yad Vashem, and, in Schwartz's case, celebrates a bat mitzvah on Masada. "We got there, and we knew we had a great story," says Victor. "But we weren't sure what was going to happen, so we just shot everything." The three subjects talk candidly before the camera about their disabilities, their families and their everyday lives: "I feel everyone is losing his or her faith in one way or another," Folkoff says at one point. "I just want to get myself revived, re-edu-