From Midwest To Mid East Michigan Jews who start over in Israel. n January 1991, when Iraq was bombing Israel with Scud missiles, University of Michigan stu- dents Dana Miller and Renee Himelhoch had CNN going 24 hours a day. Six years later, the two are Israeli citizens. Close friends since college, both feel the 1991 war played a key role in strengthening their connection to Israel. "During the Gulf War I realized how attached I was to Israel," Ms. Miller recalls. "I was so worried about what was going on [in Israel]." A native of Orchard Lake, Ms. Miller made aliyah (the Hebrew term for immigrating to Israel) in 1994 after living in the country for two years. "I felt a strong need to be in Israel and not watching it on TV," she said. "I always thought Israel would be a cool place to live — even before I ever came," said Ms. Himelhoch, of Southfield, who had spent time studying and vol- unteering in Israel before making aliyah in 1996. "But, I think that it was being here before and after the Gulf War that sort of cemented my thinking." Ms. Miller and Ms. Himelhoch are two of hundreds of Michiganders who have made aliyah in the past ten years. Although a diverse group, i F share a com- JULIE WIENER STAFF WRITER mitment to Israel that goes beyond simply writing a check. When Sima (formerly Darra) Phillips of West Bloomfield went to Israel in 1992 on her junior year abroad, she was planning to become a Humanistic rabbi. By the end of the year, she had met her future hus- band and was studying in a yeshiva for ba'alei teshu- va (newly observant) women. As an American student at the Hebrew University, she found her- self attracted to the spiritual life in Jerusalem. Ms. Phillips made aliyah in 1996 and lives with her husband and baby daughter in Jerusalem. "Because we were recent ba'alei teshuva, being in Israel was really crucial to us," she said. "The learn- ing here is unparalleled to anywhere else, and we felt like leaving wasn't an option." While Ms. Phillips first went to Israel and then ac- quired her religious knowledge, Noam Koenigsburg moved to Israel because of what he had been taught in the United States. "I was educated that God told us in the Torah many times that the Jewish people are supposed to be in Israel," he said. Originally from Oak Park, the 24-year-old Mr.