Brand New 1996 Sedan DeVille Inventory Reduction: LEADER page 48 "This organization is doing things in a very unique way," said Imad Younis, founder of the Arab sector's only high-tech company, Alpha Omega Engineering, who received financial assistance from the center to hire an economic ad- viser back in 1993. "They are doing things so that the Arabs will need the Jews and the Jews will need the Arabs eco- nomically, and Sarah has dedi- cated all of her efforts to this cause." '2,500 REBATE "...Arabs will need the Jews, and Jews will need the Arabs..." • . . . 4111 ■ Slk #1)6863 7100 Orchard Lake Rd. • West Bloomfield • 851-7200 *24 Month closed end lease based on approved credit. 24,000 miles. Option to purchase at lease end for predetermined price. Excess mile charge of 150/mile. Lessee responsible for excess wear & tear. Due at lease signing: ref. sec. dep., 1st mo. pymt. rounded to next S50 increment. $2500 down plus taxes, title, license & acq. fee. One payment lease plus taxes, title, license & acq. fee. All rebates to dealer. Option to purchase at lease end for predetermined price. To get mo. pymt. mul- tiply pymt. by term plus taxes & tees. GMAC must approve lease. 'With any purchase or lease while supplies last. 111 COLORWORKS STUDIO Of INTERIOR DESIGN 111 1 WI S H NE W S Is ‘414*. You've said were in a class by ourselves & we thank you for the compliment! Complete interior design services from blueprint review & construction specifications, to furniture selection & custom fabrication; from windows & walls to the last scented soap... These are the services that set us apart. We're so glad you've noticed the difference. 32500 Northwestern Highway • Farmington Hills • 851-7540 CC LLI LU Si-100NA KIDS'" 50 2454 Orchard Lake Road • Sylvan Lake at The Loading Dock Mon. - Sat. 10:00 a.m.-6..00 pan. 810-738-0579 CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS! Call The Jewish News 354-5959 Born and raised in Pennsyl- vania, Ms. Kreimer's involve- ment in Israel-based community work began in 1980 when, after receiving her undergraduate de- gree in urban planning and Russ- ian studies, her Zionist beliefs led her to Israel. During a two-year stint with Interns for Peace, Ms. Kreimer, who had cultivated her commu- nity-organizing skills working in poor communities in the United States, split her time living and doing joint communal projects be- tween the residents of the Arab village of Tamra and those in the Jewish village of Kiryat Ata. When the war in Lebanon broke out, Ms. Kreimer learned her work was not in vain. "We were living in Tamra and Kiryat Ata during the Sabra and Shatilla (refugee camp) killings and trying to do cooperative ac- tivities. Everything was normal, but when the war broke out, sud- denly all the men in Kiryat Ata disappeared and a lot of people in Tamra had relatives living in Lebanon. It was like we were two worlds 10 kilometers apart. "In June we were supposed to do our final projects with the community members. But the [Jewish] people who had not been involved in the project for very long said, 'Let's not push it,' and they decided to cancel the project. But the people who had been working together all year long said, We have to continue and it's more important now.' `The basic emotional and real message was that once people get to know each other, the relation- ships are difficult to break," Ms. Kreimer recalled. Following that experience, Ms. Kreimer returned to the United States and received her master's degree in policy planning from Carnegie Mellon University. Af- ter completing her degree, she made aliyah and started up an industry project through Interns for Peace that worked with com- panies that employed both Arabs and Jews. But in order to "level the play- ing field," Ms. Kreimer decided that it was not enough to better relations between Arab employ- ees and their Jewish employers. So she set out to encourage co- operative efforts between Jewish and Arab businesspeople. With a start-up grant of $25,000 from Con Anima, a Eu- ropean foundation that supports projects in the Middle East, Ms. Kreimer got to work. While in- dustrialists such as Koor Indus- tries' Naftali Blumenthal and leading Arab businesspeople such as Ibrahim Boulous and Ali Kadamany were willing to sit on the board, the challenge came in trying to convince the then-Likud government, which was sup- portive of big businesses setting up shop in Jewish development towns, of the need to make Arabs and small-business owners part of the equation for economic de- velopment. Although Yitzhak Shamir's government provided her with little oxygen, Ms. Kreimer kept going, and after Labor's electoral victory in 1992, some new air rushed in. In the first few years of the Rabin government, na- tional assistance for Arab towns was increased and Arab sector- based industrial zones and small- business development centers began sprouting. With the 1993 Oslo agree- ments and a change in Jewish Is- raelis' attitude toward the opportunities the Arab world of- fered, the center's business be- gan to thrive. Instead of hustling Israeli com- panies on behalf of little-known Arab businesses, international contingencies and Jewish indus- trialists began approaching her. "Suddenly, paradoxically, Is- raelis began looking at Arabs as economically important," said Ms. Kreimer, noting that since 1994 Jewish Israeli requests for joint-venture partners have dou- bled to 200 per year. Today, Ms. Kreimer's operat- ing budget totals more than $400,000, and she has expanded her operation to Arab domains beyond Israel and the territories. She brought the first business delegation from Jordan back in 1994 for a textile-industry con- ference in Jerusalem and then went on to organize regional con- ferences for the software, plastics and food industries. Looking toward the future, Ms. Kreimer says she hopes to create 100 new business part- nerships over the next five years and to •work with Arabs in helping them to gain access to government planning min- istries. "It's important to take people into account, especially when they are 20 percent of the popu- lation," Ms. Kreimer said. "This is the only way to strengthen so- ciety." III