Fated To Marry Miriam Davies and Lou Pardo were bound to become Miri and Eli in Israel. Miri Davies and Eli Pardo M iriam Davies, an Oak Parker living in Cincin- nati, was married, had finished her Ph.D. in communications, and just landed her "dream job" as a developmental editor at an international publishing company. Lou Pardo lived in Los Angeles, worked as a salesman in a high-volume professional photographic equipment store, and drove a Mercedes. Yet both of them gave up their for- mer lives — and names (Miriam now goes by Miri and Lou goes by Eli) — and moved to Israel in hopes of finding the same thing: love. "I was married and so unhappy," said Miri, 33. "I was in synagogue in Cincin- nati on Yom Kippur, fasting and crying. I felt God tell me to leave my husband and move to Israel. I knew I had to do it to find love and happiness in my life." After checking with her rabbi to make sure she was not "hearing voices," Miri contacted her local Israel shaliach (emis- sary). "I never looked back," she said. At the same time, Eli, now 41 and originally from Rochester, N.Y, went to Israel on vacation in 1996 and had "an Israel experience'': "Nothing was work- ing. I didn't want to look back at 65 and regret not trying it (aliyah). I was hoping to meet my future wife, as Israeli women had had a profound impact on my decision to make aliyah." Miri and Eli met at the Beit Milman Absorption Center, a dorm-like setting with apartments and Hebrew classes for new immigrants to Israel, in Ramat Aviv, a suburb near Tel Aviv University. Eli and an American woman walked into the tiny laundry room at Beit Mil- man where Miri was doing her laundry. They asked her a question in Hebrew. "My Hebrew was pretty rough," Miri said. "I asked them if they spoke English and, when I found out they did, I start- ed telling them about Tel Aviv. I didn't know if they were together, and I thought Eli had amazing eyes. I asked them to let me show them my Tel Aviv." Miri developed a schoolgirl-style crush on Eli. "I joined his u/pan (Hebrew class), even though it was too hard for me, because he was there and I could sit next to him. I tortured myself for eight months, trying to learn Hebrew" and being near him. Miri hosted communal Shabbat din- ners at Beit Milman, and she always invited Eli. "I knew he was the one for me after he went to the doctor with me when I was really sick. I didn't know how to let him know that, though, and we didn't really have that close a friend- ship." It took nine months from their initial meeting until he decided to take another look at the short blonde woman who had been using a mutual friend, Elena, as cupid. "I told her how much I loved him," Miri said. "She told me he wasn't inter- ested, and that maybe I should dye my hair red, because Eli has a thing for red- heads. I thought that was stupid, but I kept telling her to let him know how crazy I was about him." "Messages kept coming from Elena," Eli said. – Miri really likes you,' and I'd say, `I know, Elena. Things fell into place after Miri moved out of Beit Milman and into a private apartment. One fateful evening, after having Shabbat dinner with a crowd of people, she and Eli found themselves alone. Miri's heart raced and she found it hard to breathe. Eli, howev- er, was listening to a voice inside his head. "I remember telling my mother what was going on in my life and my mother told me, 'You know, what you need is somebody,' and she was whispering on the phone like it was a secret. 'You need someone who is going to love you maybe more than you love them.' It didn't really sink in until I was at Shab- bat dinner at Miri's. "I just kept hearing the words of my mother come back to me, and I knew I didn't want to get into something for just a physical release. But I thought, `This was so 180 (degrees) from what I am normally attracted to that maybe it's just crazy enough to work.' And I kissed her. We've been together every day since then." "I told him from the beginning that I was in it all the way with him," said Miri. "I told him on the first night that I loved him. I even dyed my hair red, but that was only after we were together. I wanted him to like me for me, not because I had the right hair color." Miri and Eli will be married Dec. 31 at Temple Shir Shalom in West Bloom- field. "We decided not to get married in Israel after one of the Ashkenazi clerks questioned our 'Jewish identity' because we were married to and divorced from non-Jews," Miri said. "I clOn't want to cry anymore. I just want to get mar- ried." After their wedding, they will return to their Tel Aviv apartment that over- looks the same view Miri showed Eli the night they met. ❑ 12/: 19') Detroit Jewish News 3E