Happy Anniversary Israel! Our entire Rock Financial family salutes Israel on 50 years of growth & happiness. ltl A ia Rock Financial TheMortgage Bank 1 -800431 -ROCK Michigan Locations: Bingham Farms • Rochester • Canton Fenton •Pittsfield •Grand Rapids •Lansing Clinton Township •Grand Blanc • Detroit Saginaw • Hartland•Southgate • Flint 5/1 1998 26 rm! Rock Financial is a Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac and FHA approved lending institution. Fresh Start Loan Center is a division of Rock Financial ebrate it on my own. It's too bad that the Israelis don't participate more, because then they could influence it more." The Detroit Jewish community held a memorial service at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloom- field April 29. Gafni estimates that there are some 50 Israeli families living in Ann Arbor. A more precise figure is harder to arrive at, given the number of students who come for only a few years and return without making contact with the local community. But those who stay have a strong sense of national identity, so it is not surprising that when Gafni and her husband, Ari, a professor of biochem- istry at the University of Michigan, arrived in Ann Arbor 14 years ago, they were met almost immediately by a wel- coming committee of compatriots. "The infrastructure was actually very impressive when we got here," she recalled. "Within two weeks, someone contacted us and invited us into the organization [of Israelis in town]." The newcomers got a phone list and a year's worth of parties to attend, Gafni said. "I was very impressed by the fact that they found me," she said. "I don't think that exists anymore, unfortunately." As with most college towns, new- corners are more likely to be short- term visitors than long-term tenants. Building relationships amid such tran- sience can therefore be as precarious as being a baseball fan in the world of free agency — one never knows who will be around next year. Rivka is a clinical psychologist who married a Michigan native she met in her hometown a few miles outside Tel Aviv. They have lived in Ann Arbor for nearly 10 years now, and Rivka, who spoke on the condition that her last name not be used, said that one defense mechanism against the disrup- tive transience is to develop tighter bonds with fellow expatriates. "It's very hard on us to get close to the people who come and go, so we kind of keep together," she said. Although neither she nor her husband is religious, they send their oldest child to Hebrew Day School — a modest attempt at acculturation which, she said, sometimes leads the boy to declare that he is an Israeli. "I won't just stay at home. I'll prob- ably talk to parents and some of my friends, and I'll tell my kids what Yom Ha'atzma'ut (Independence Day) is like in Israel," Rivka said. Michigan is certainly capable of supporting expatriate communities. Chaldeans, for example, flocked here in great numbers from Iraq, mak- ing the Detroit area a major center for their people away from the Middle East. Ann Arbor has a substantial con- tingent of Palestinians, many of whom are active in town commerce. Both Jerusalem Market and Jerusalem Gar- den, for example, are Arab-owned. Still, for some reason, which Ann Arbor's Israelis were hard pressed to identify, lately their community hasn't been as tight-knit. Of course, not every expatriate feels fragmented. Tal Harris, who arrived in Ann Arbor four years ago from Indi- ana when her husband, Michael, took a job teaching political science at East-< ern Michigan University, said "the Rana Gafni loves Ann Arbor, but regrets missing Israel's celebration of its Jubilee. Jewish community here is great." Like the other Israelis interviewed for this story, Harris, a nurse at St. Joseph Mercy hospital, does not feel the holiday vibes that infuse her homeland on special days. But, she added quickly, the Jewish community here is able to satisfy the rest of their sense of being Israeli. "We are very impressed with the Jewish activity" in Ann Arbor, she said, citing the various social and cul- tural programs and the resources for the couple's three children. As for Yom Ha'atzmaut, she is less c: torn than her compatriots about miss- ing the big anniversary. "The number five-oh does not make such a significant effect [on me and my husband], as much as know- ing that Israel is surviving another year," Harris said. ❑