Editor's Notebook Community Views An Airport, A Message And A Journey Missions To Israel: Fond Remembrances PHIL JACOBS EDITOR RABBI DAVID NELSON SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Jocelyn Frank al- ready seemed homesick this day. Neal and Chaya Duchin and their little children were leaving for a new home. And thousands of miles away in a place most had never been before, 238 kids would soon land in the Jewish homeland. It was all happening before us in the Metro Airport Internation- al Terminal The juxtaposition was odd. Just an open building with a coffee shop serving flat pop, a newsstand hawking magazines and periodicals about events that seemed out of place and time, and a huge picture window overlook- ing the runway. Let's get back to Jocelyn. She is a student at Temple Kol Ami. She writes poetry and has an intelli- gent and sensitive mind that a teacher would love. I know that because I have taught her at Kol Ami. On this day, though, when the kids in the terminal were But I also remember just four years ago sitting in the same in- ternational terminal, having said goodbye to my family on a Sunday morning, getting ready to go to Is- rael for just 10 days. I was home- sick; I was nervous. Yes, part of my role in the first Miracle Mission was to interview every Jewish Detroiter I could find. But that's easy. When the notebook was put away, I want- ed to do exactly what Jocelyn is probably doing right now in Is- rael. I wanted to meet new peo- ple. Not 20 feet from where Joce- lyn sat on the floor of the termi- nal with three other girls she had just met, a family was snacking on some munchies. They weren't wearing Miracle Mission T-shirts or name stick- ers with bus numbers. But the Duchin family, now formerly of Oak Park, talked with their friends, Tzvi and Chana Sherizen, who came to see the family off. Neal Duchin was part of many things Jewish in Detroit. He was the man behind the video cam- Some kids brought guitars; some brought stuffed animals. Some were plugged into their Walk- mans; others leafed through pa- perbacks. They didn't know it, but the next day Shaarey Zedek's Asso- ciate Rabbi Bill Gershon would lead them in morning services in a hotel bomb shelter. All the oth- er conference rooms were booked. Later in the day, the kids would dance and sing together on Ben Yehudah Street in Jerusalem. But let's not get too far ahead. We have a month to talk about what will happen in Israel. When the kids were told to board El Al Flight 014, Jocelyn Frank got up and got in line. She wasn't alone. You see, there was a girl named Annie Lefkowitz in line with her. Annie didn't know anyone on her bus. Now she knew Jocelyn. The Duchins were the last ones to get on Flight 014. They hugged their friends and then walked down the long runway to the plane. Now, the scattered few re- In 1966, I was 27 years old and en- ergetic. I was closer to the ages of the partici- pants on the USY On Wheels trip than I was to their parents'. I identified with the youngsters, with their ex- citement for a summer of ad- venture and discovery, with their eagerness to conquer the world. I led many trips: USY on Wheels across the United States in 1966 and USY Pilgrimage to Israel in 1970 and in 1977, when my family accompanied the group. Today, I am at least as old as the parents of the teen-age -par- ticipants on Federation's Teen Mission to Israel. My children are adults and not participat- ing in this journey; yet I find myself packing my bags again, seeking out my 220-volt con- verter and dusting off my san- dals. to be their teacher. Hopefully, upon our safe re- turn, they will feel a bond and a new comfort level with a rab- bi, and they will understand that the synagogue can and should be a welcoming place for them. Over the years, I have heard from many of the young people who traveled with me and my wife. That has been the best re- ward — to receive regards from others who crossed paths with An opportunity to form lasting relationships. these young people from our past. They have reappeared in our lives at unexpected mo- ments, adding a special sense of connection to another gener- ation. We've been introduced to a spouse met on our trip or to their children; some have re- Rabbi Nelson and his family in Israel in 1977. meeting one another and putting on their coolest "how ya doin?" face, Jocelyn wasn't buying it. She admitted to me that she had never been away from home for more than a week. She was concerned that she could be home- sick. But she wanted so badly to meet new people, to reach out. You've been homesick, haven't you? I can remember being so home- sick that it hurt. That first month away from home at age 12 at Camp Moshava. I remember how it made it worse to see my parents at the halfway point on visitors day. era, and he and his wife A goo dbye hug mainingipeople hanging were as loved as one fami- betwe en Julie around the gate were ly could be. Cohen and her alone. They were taking the mothe r, Carol. The people on the same flight as the Teen plane — Jocelyn, Annie Mission. Their children played and the Duchins — they were to- with balloons, turning their little gether. section of an airport into a happy They were on their way home. playground while the adults qui- We cry because we miss them. etly, nervously talked. We're homesick for them. There were many scenes to For the Duchins, it is a new life take in around the airport. The of aliyah. chill we all experienced at seeing For the mission members, the that El Al jet land at Metro. The experience, in its own personal kids wandering around, hugging way, will be profound. When the their friends. Rabbi Efry Spectre teens get back to Detroit — handing out Reese's Peanut But- well, that's when they'll get home- ter Cups to everyone in sight. sick. ❑ Have I lost it? Is this a quest to recapture the days of my youth? Am I foolish enough to think that I have the energy of these teen-agers? Not at all; yet I look at this summer with the Federation's Teen Mission to Israel as an op- portunity to form lasting rela- tionships with a new generation of young Jews who will become the Jewish leaders of tomorrow. I hope to use this time to be a mentor to some, to hear their ideas, to learn from them and Davidlelson is rabbi of Congregation Beth Shalom and is with the Teen Mission in Israel. mained close friends of ours to this day. Whenever and wher- ever, it is always gratifying to make these connections, for they are the most meaningful experiences of my career. Now, with grayer hair, I un- pack the sandals which I rarely wear because my orthotics don't fit in them. I bring a fresh but older perspective that will hope- fully lend meaning to the won- derful summer the Jewish Federation has planned for our teen-agers. I look forward to a renewed vigor, an increased sensitivity to the concerns of our young adults and a fresh op- portunity to teach. ❑