Insight Remember When • • Builder of Bridge From the pages of The Jewish News for this week 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. B'nai B'rith honors Arnold Michlin for his lifelong dedication to uniting Jews with other communities. SAM ENGLAND Staff Writer I him to join forces with George Bashara. Together, they founded the locally based American Arab & Jewish Friends in 1981. "Arnold is a tireless worker. He's indefatigable, that's the word I'd use. Indefatigable," says Bashara, a Detroit legal advisor and former state Court of Appeals judge. want to see the work done," says Jewish activist Arnold Michlin. "I'm not in it for per- sonal credit." Still, the Oakland Century Lodge B'nai B'rith saw fit to give the Farmington Hills resident a great deal of credit. Michlin, a B'nai B'rith member for more than 50 years, was honored as the organization's Man of the Year Aug. 24 for the work he's done to unite Jews with other religious and ethnic communities in charitable causes. His efforts have taken Michlin from the board of the Anti-Defamation League to founding the American Arab & Jewish Friends, to raising money for a children's tennis center (through the newly found- ed Children's Sports for Peace group) in Gaza City. All his projects, he says, amount to "building bridges between people." Michlin considers him- self lucky to have been Arnold Michlin taught empathy during a tumultuous time. "I grew up in a non-traditional Jewish home — remember, I was born in 1920 — "He can be a pest sometimes," he where we were not taught to be adds lightly. But Michlin's unflagging afraid or wary of Christians. We were resolve, Bashara says, only has done taught that they could be our good for the cause they share. I don't friends," says the Altoona,Pa., native. know anybody who has been more "So I didn't have this innate fear of dedicated. I have a lot of admiration different people, and have literally for Arnold." spent my life building bridges Neal AbuNab, who became between them. From when I first got involved with American Arab & into B'nai B'rith and got in contact Jewish Friends about three years ago, with the Anti-Defamation League, I also has worked with Michlin. "As a learned to judge people by them- man, I am impressed by his humility selves, for themselves, not who they and his down-to-earth qualities," might be classified with." says. AbuNab With this outlook, it was easy for 9/24 1999 26 Detroit Jewish News He lauds Michlin's ability to talk to "the extreme Arab side and the extreme Jewish side" and bring them together. "He's a very non-threatening human being," AbuNab says. "And he has this twinkle in his eye of what you might call innocent hope. At his age, the twinkle is still there. And that's what impressed me about him. It's what attracted me to his cause. He's a very special human being. And I think he deserves to be recognized for that." To devote the better part of his life to this goal, Michlin left a career in the chemical business for the field of community organi- zation and charity work. Since that move in 1981, he's been working out of his Farmington Hills home, where he lives with his wife, Florence. They have four children, five grandchildren and one great-grandchild. "They recognize his giv- ing ability and his charita- ble spirit," AbuNab says of the B'nai B'rith leadership. "And he's been giving for a long time. And at the age he is, if he'd spent all that time at a business, he'd be a very wealthy man. But Michlin is not wealthy. He says he cannot afford travel to Israel, and will be unable see the Gaza tennis center he's worked so diligently to fund. He does not, how- ever, lament his situation. "I'm grateful for each day," he says simply. "Because most people don't know what their purpose is, but I do. It's to build bridges between people. Bridges of respect and understand- ing." As B'nai B'rith has shown, those people Michlin brings together are` grateful, too. H )) A giant forest fire attributed to arsonists caused a pall of smoke to hang over Mount Carmel and the city of Haifa. Two hundred BBYOers pitched over a 40-hour period to raise $700 at the Jolson AZA Softball Marathon for Muscular Dystrophy. Five Jews who were on the Jesse Jackson mission to the Mideast quit the delegation, protesting Jackson's behavior on the tour. Alan Herbach was appointed assistant director, Michigan Region, of the Jewish National Fund. , Orthodox services and kosher meals became available in East Lansing, where seven MSU students rented a three-story house established through a Young Israel loan and a gift from Mr. and Mrs. M. Biber. A new class for students with limited Hebrew educational back- ground has opened at Hillel Day School. „ Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev refused to receive any Jewish dele- gation during his stay in the United States. After 19 years of business on Dexter, Walter Herz Interiors opened a new showroom on Livernois. PW A"t, The Israel government has decided to join the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Samuel Rubiner, secretary of the Cunningham Drug Co., has been named chairman of the major com- mercial and professional unit of the United Foundation Torch Drive. — Compiled by Sy Manello, editorial assistant