Community Mazel Toy! Millennium Stacy Gastwirth andiason:T7ager planted revis CARL WALDMAN Special to the Jewish News erusalem, the Old City, and Masada ... that was what Jason Trager and Stacy Gastwirth learned about in their childhood Hebrew school lessons. A few weeks ago, it all became real. Just an hour before the clock turned to Jan. 1, 2000, on the bal- cony of the Hyatt Regency of the Dead Sea, 24-year-old Trager of Flint nervously pulled out the dia- mond ring he had carried from East Lansing to propose to his girlfriend, 20-year-old Stacy Gastwirth of West Bloomfield. Looking back, Trager says, "I never expected to have the opportunity to share such a special moment in such a special place." With much to celebrate on this second day of their trip, the two Michigan State University students were thriving on being in love in Israel at that stunning moment. The new millennium was just moments away, there was a big party in the hotel ballroom hosted for the uni- versity students they were traveling with, and a fireworks display was awaiting them at the beach. 2/4 2000 54 Moment An MSU student picks just the right moment to pop the question. Ortonville. Finding "The engagement out about the free added a level of Birthright Israel pro- excitement to the gram through a trip," says Bryan friend, they applied Abramson, pro- over the Internet. gram director for After interviews MSU Hillel. "Not with their MSU only were we all Hillel directors, taking part in the Trager and experience together, Gastwirth landed we were taking two of the 40 spots part in their Jason and Stacy cemented their available to MSU engagement." relationship in Israel. students. The couple's The Birthright parents, Cheryl Israel trip was and Craig designed for Jewish college students who Gastwirth, and Dr. Allen Trager and have never been to Israel. "It was more Lea Trager, received New Year's than I ever expected," says Gastwirth. phone calls about the engagement. "The only portion we had to pay For now, plans are for a May 2001 ourselves," says Trager, "was the wedding at Adat Shalom Synagogue. flight to New York, and a $250 Birthright Israel brought Trager, a deposit, which was returned when second-year osteopathic medicine we got home. The trip included air student, and Gastwirth, a senior in travel to Israel and 10 days of pro- telecommunications, to Israel. Trager gramming on the ground." and Gastwirth met two summers ago For the newly engaged couple, while working at Camp Maas in highlights included floating in the Dead Sea, touring Tel Aviv, and tak- ing a jeep ride through the hilly Golan Heights. Especially unforgettable was get- ting their hands wet in the soils of the Jewish National Fund forest, where they physically planted a tree to commemorate their engagement. But meeting new friends and getting away from the stresses of school helped the two learn even more about themselves and Israel. "Knowing that Jerusalem was just minutes away was almost surreal," says Gastwirth. "I was in a Shabbat service the morning after we got engaged, in a room with all glass walls; on one side was desert for as far as I could see, and on the other side was the Dead Sea." Now back in East Lansing, the two are finding that being engaged is really no different than before. In addition to studies, Trager works in the medical school computer lab and Gastwirth is the producer and on the student board of directors of the MSU radio station. Next year, Trager will do his med- ical externship at Genysis Hospital in Grand Blanc, while Gastwirth will look for a broadcasting job in Flint. ❑