This Chanukah,
Giving a
experience that when you go through
something together, relationships
become much stronger," he said,
adding that plans are in the works for
a shared tour of Jewish Detroit and a
meeting together with U.S. Rep.
Joseph Knollenberg.
AJE's executive director HOward
Gelberd sees the D.C. trip as an
experiment that could serve as a
model for other synagogue high
school programs. AJE recruited the
senior citizens and solicited funding
to cover some of the trip's costs.
"I think there's an enormous
amount of potential to do things that
are intergenerational, and it has a
variety-of-benefits," said Gelberd.
"We think that the senior citizens
have something to say to teens about
sh News
will look in 10-20 years."
Smith and Keys, both avid travel-
ers, thought seeing D.C. with high
school students would be a "breath of
fresh air."
"I do a lot of volunteering with
seniors, and I thought it would be
refreshing to do something with
young people," said Smith, who is
active in the National Council of
Jewish Women's "Up And Out" pro-
gram as well as Meals on Wheels.
Keys, who volunteers with Smith,
agreed. "They're our future leaders
and it would be nice to hear their
ideas," she said.
Before breaking into discussion
groups with the senior citizens
Monday night, the high school stu-
dents seemed more excited about
VW'
N\
le*
\
A
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Lorraine Keys fields questions from Shir Shalom teens.
how we should run the country, and
they also have history."
For the senior citizens, the trip
offers a chance to find out what
today's teenagers are thinking. "I
would like to talk to them and find
out how they feel about Israel, what
they think about our government,"
said Michael Weiss on Monday,
shortly before breaking into discus-
sion groups with teenagers. "I'm curi-
ous what they think about how Israel
missing a day of school and seeing
the sights than the inter-generational
component.
But after talking to the Holocaust
survivors and after a discussion on
homelessness that night, several teens
struck up spontaneous conversations
with the adults.
"The trip will be cool because it's
not just seeing from our perspective,
but we get their perspective as well,"
said ninth-grader Jenny Nathan. ❑
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