JEWISH BUSINESS EXCHANGE ARE WE CRAZY? page 117 DETR0111 THE JEWISH NEWS Present Alyssa Martina Publisher Metro Parent "Balancing Career & Family Demands" For Single Parents of Both Sexes Monday, April 14 • Noon The Skyline Club • 2000 Town Center, 28th Floor Southfield Kosher Lunch $15 • No Charge for JBE Members R.S.V.P. & More Information: Jewish Business Exchange 33290 W. 14 Mile, Suite 423 • West Bloomfield, MI 48322 (810) 932-5797 Jewish Business Exchange is Southeast Michigan's dedicated forum promoting networking and business development, Jewish ethics and values and business issues affecting Jewish interests and its surrounding communities. Larry Paul makes FURNITURE NEW. Custom, Restoration, Lacquering, Refinishing of new or old furniture, antiques, office furniture, pianos. For Free Estimates (810) 681-8280 All our designs are masterfully created with passion and love for our craft. M.B. JEWELRY DESIGN a MFG. LTD. Applegate Square • 29847 Northwestern Hwy. • Southfield, Michigan 48034 (810) 181 S. Woodward Ave. 1 Block South of Maple 356-7007 IN DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM (810) 642-1690 { Next time you feed your face, think about your heart. 118 Go easy on your heart and start cutting back on foods that are high in saturated fat and cholesterol. The change'll do you good. American Heart Association WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE Jacob Jacobi, the commander of the base near Safed, believes in Sar-El. "You can say the best thing in the world, but when you come and see it, it's better," he says. He says in Hebrew: An eye can see better than an ear can hear. The work volunteers do is need- ed, he says. Looking at a bunker on Ramat HaGolan, where a handful of young soldiers sit be- hind concrete fortifications, en- dure whipping wind and stare at the empty terrain of Syria — we can't help but agree. Leat Spitzer, a madricha (group leader), says she sees vol- unteers from age 18 through 85. Cory Smith, a 23-year-old from Memphis, made aliyah last No- vember. He visited Israel for the first time with Sar-El in 1994. "I was looking for a new start, a new place with new people," he says. "I felt nationalistic about Israel. I guess rm a '90s Zionist." You could say the same about Lionel Rothenberg, 72, from Green River, Wyo. Mr. Rothen- berg has volunteered with the Is- raeli army 54 times in a period of seven years. Why does he keep coming back? "I liked the work I was doing and thought I was doing some- thing worthwhile." But he does not see as many people sharing his feelings. "Years ago, more people came with the desire to help Israel. As the years passed, that desire has waned," says Mr. Rothenberg. "I think I get more out of the pro- gram than I put into it." Mrs. Solomon, who has vol- unteered for Sar-El about eight times, and Mr. Rothenberg are not anomalies. Many volunteers are repeaters, who say they come for the camaraderie and for the laughter. "As soon as you get off that plane, there's just an overall feel- ing that you get. You just belong here. It's addictive," says Mrs. Solomon. But is that feeling because of the place — Israel — or the pro- gram? "Both," she says, "because that's how I always come." And you have to, in a way. In Israel, you cannot separate the army from the state, defense from love of country. To live in Is- rael is to live on your guard, cher- ishing every moment as if it could be the last. "A repeat volunteer is twice as useful for the army because they know just what to do," says Rick- ey Cherner, the American pres- ident of Sar-El. Says Amy Spiegel, "I think it's a good way for people to get a taste of everyday Israel, as op- posed to being on a tour and just seeing tourist sites. You hear Is- raelis, see how they work." ❑ Playing The Violence Card Israel's intelligence gathering has been hurt, and Yassir Arafat is taking advantage of his gains. ERIC SILVER ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT I f Israel's intelligence chiefs know what they are talking about, Yassir Arafat has taught Binyamin Netanyahu a cruel, Machiavellian lesson. The suicide bombing that killed three young women in a Tel Aviv cafe demonstrated that the safety of Israelis depends to an un- comfortable degree on cooperation be- tween Palestinian and Israeli security services. Further, it showed that the Palestinian leader can turn the faucet on or off to achieve his political ends. Police and workers examine the debris after an explosion set by a suicide bomber in Tel Aviv. Israel's prime minister's charges that Arafat gave the llamas Islamic militants a "green light" to resume terror in Israeli cities was no knee-jerk re-