'We had an hour and a half to fight the crowds in the hustle for shabbat. The colors, sounds and smells created a rainbow-like atmosphere. A mood of joyous festiveness filled the marketplace. It's fun to know that this happens every Friday afternoon." — Amanda Warner May 10, 1997 "After dinner, we had a Yam Hazikaron cer- emony. At 10 p.m. a siren rang across the country and everyone stopped, stood, silent. The siren startled me at first. I was scared, associating the noise with an air raid siren. It had a somber tone. We stood alongside a street — cars pulled over and drivers stood nest to their vehicles. The patriotism in Israel is awesome. Unlike the U.S., everyone cel- ebrates this holiday knowing that others died for them to live. It is truly inspirational." — Amanda Warner May 11, 1997 "At 11 a.m., the second siren for Yom Hazikaron sounded across the country. I felt honored to stand on Ammunitioin Hill where the reason for the war originated, next to Is- raeli soldiers who would give their lives for their country. I felt a glimpse of patriotism that doesn't exist in the U.S." — Amanda Warner 'We came back to the hotel and rested and showered before going to a closed mall. Thank God it was closed because we got to go to Ben Yehuda. What a party. I have never seen such mass insanity. People were smashed into the streets, spraying shaving cream everywhere. It was awe- some to see a country so united to celebrate its independence. I think in Israel they truly know the meaning behind independence." Lindsay Spolan — May 13, 1997 'We had a simple burial in the soldier pro- tion of the cemetery. Mike Simon had taken human ash from Birkenau and we gave the victims a burial in Israel. This gesture made our trip full circle, as we used our knowledge from Poland and Israel. It connected the two weeks with a definite tie." Amanda Warner in Har Herzl where Ra- bin and Heal are buried. May 14, 1997 "Before I knew it, we were landing on Ameri- can soil. I never thought I'd not want to be there (in Israel) so much in my entire life. I wanted so much to be back in Israel cele- brating my freedom with the most incredible group of 60 teenagers and 12 staff mem- bers ever!" — Julie Jonas 'These weeks have gone by tremendously fast — even though it has only been a few hours that I have been home, things have sunk in. Everyone that I have talked to is like, 'How was it?"Was it fun?' How can I answer such a question? I can't I cannot put all of these feelings and emotions that I am experiencing into words ... The one thing that will always stick out the most from this trip is the way I think we bonded with the Jewish community. When we left, we got on the plane in our separate groups. Two weeks later, we have come back; only this time, we got off the plane honding hands and singing — Orthodox, Reform and Con- servative. All together." — Lindsay Spolan But when the road took them over train tracks and within sight of the infamous gate at Birkenau, the chatter stopped. The students — Conservative, Reform and Orthodox — clasped hands and walked in silence. At the end of the tracks, students from 40 countries held a service honoring the dead. Names of some victims were list- ed, followed by poetry reading and songs. A light rain fell on the crowd and a cool spring breeze caused the Israeli flags to ripple from the barbed wire to which or- ganizers attached them. Some of the marchers were moved to tears. Still having to tour the camp and its museums, they trudged on, support- ed by their newfound friends. Misha Feldman, a student from Ald- va, was moved by the experience of stand- ing with so many Jews of different backgrounds. "I kept looking at that gate," he said, gazing at the entrance to Birkenau, "and the railroad and thinking about how many died trying to walk what I did." "I follow these laws and these laws and I try to understand the ways others see themselves as Jews," he said, referring to other members of the Detroit contin- gent. "But I see how they are affected here and I know they too would be here with me." At the end of the tour, darkness had come. The students walked toward the tour buses, through fences that once held so many Jews, the same fences that once served as the means of suicide to those who had given up hope not so long ago. Through these fences 52 years after the liberation of the camp, the future of Detroit Jewry walked, hand-in-hand. D riving to the airport to catch the flight to Israel, it was plain to see from the windows in the bus that the vegetation in Poland is very similar to Michigan's. Like the various fruit-bearing trees and or- namental bushes, the tulips and daffodils were in full bloom and daisies were just beginning to poke from the rich dirt. Above: Adina Newman views a display of human hair shaved from the heads of prisoners in Majdanek. Below: After a day of visiting several sites in Krakow, Sari Tracht takes a break in a cemetery. Unlike Michigan, there is not much of a Jewish community in Poland today. A vast majority of those who grew up on Polish soil were plucked by Nazi hands, destroyed before they ever had a chance to bloom. After the war, some Polish cities re- duced to rubble by the bombing were re- built with concrete buildings which turn to a darker grey in the omnipresent rain. Although the dwellings returned to their original sites, the Jewish occupants never did — at least not in the vast num- bers that were present before the war. Those who survived for the most part moved away, never to return. But for one week, a group of Detroit teen agers from three separate branches of Judaism returned to the cities and shtetls some of their ancestors inhabit- ed. There, they prayed as a group, laughed with each other, mourned as one, learned together. There, they visited the past and formed bonds for friendships and unity that will transcend the present and serve as roots for a future they will build to- gether. And together, their vibrant blooms stood in stark contrast to the grey and dour existence that is Poland. D