,, fWALwOo; \ wra 01 ‘.- *ft • Barbara Zweig, Bracha and Menachem Rosenberg and Eugene Zweig at the Shabbat dinner table in Tel Aviv. SHELLI DORFMAN Editorial Assistant F or Eugene and Barbara Zweig of West Bloomfield, the April 27 end to a wonderful, his- torical trip with Michigan Miracle Mission III was just the start of an adventure that Mr. Zweig calls a unique journey into family history. After 10 days of traveling and touring with friends and their daughter Susan, the Zweigs were ready for a much-anticipated meet- ing with their Israeli family. For three emotional days, the Zweigs were reunited with relatives not seen in nearly 40 years and others met for the very first time. Eugene Zweig is reunited with brother- in-law Shlomo Sinclair at Kibbutz Gesher Haziv. West Bloomfield couple connects with Israeli relatives. On April 28, the Zweigs set out for Kibbutz Gesher Haziv, near the Lebanese border, for a long-awaited reunion with their brother-in-law, Shlomo Sinclair, who was once mar- ried to Mr. Zweig's late sister, Tzyvia. The Sinclairs had been among a group of Detroiters who founded the kibbutz in 1948. Following Tzyvia's death in 1960, Shlomo remarried and he and his wife Naomi remained on the kib- butz, raising their children there. This being hisfirst trip to Israel, Mr. Zweig met Shlomo's family for the first time, and was able to finally visit his sister's grave. After a traditional Israeli dinner and a viewing of a scrapbook of pho- tos of Tzyvia, prepared by Naomi, the Zweigs were on their way. On the second day of their excur- sion, they had a reunion with Mr. Zweig's first cousin Miriam, who made aliya in 1935 and whom he had not seen since she was in the United States in 1982. Visiting her • home on Kibbutz Afikim in the Galilee, they were reunited with her son, Elyakim, whom they met once before, and were introduced to his two daughters. The next day, the Zweigs met cousin Bracha, who moved from Russia to Givatayim, a suburb of Tel Aviv. Language barriers were bridged by her son Tzvi's English and the Zweigs and Bracha's Yiddish. They shared Shabbat dinner together, which Tzvi said 81-year-old Bracha "had been cooking for a week." The meal was highlighted by the Shehecheyanu blessing said in honor of the family's meeting. Bracha presented Mr. Zweig with a menorah that had belonged to his sister, Tzyvia. The gift now sits in the Zweig home as a reminder of a new relationship made with a country and with its people. 5/14 1999 Detroit Jewish News 37