4." Spirituality M SHIRT REVITAL BILIK egan Nesbitt woke to the sound of the alarm clock at 4:30 a.m.— a new day of digging was beginning. She and nearly 50 other students filed onto a bus headed for their excavation site, Zippori National Park in the Jezreel Valley in Israel's central Galilee. "The tools for us diggers were already at the site locked in big cases: pickaxes, small pickaxes for more detailed work, buckets, gloves, and wheelbarrows," Nesbitt said. By the time real breakfast came around at 9:30 a.m., the group of American students had been digging for four-and-a-half hours in the 110- degree heat. Nesbitt, a 23-year-old native of Ann Arbor and 1999 English and Judaic Studies graduate from the University of Michigan, was a member of the William Davidson Zippori Archeological Excavation in 1998. The dig, which takes place each summer, has brought students from universities around Michigan, including Albion, Eastern Michigan and Michigan State, to Zippori since 1985 for six weeks of intensive work, friendships and Israel exploration. While some students involved, like Aaron Kaufman, 23, a 1999 U-M Judaic studies and cultural anthropology major, join the trip partly to comple- ment a line of study, Nesbitt said her reasoning included wanting to learn more about Israel and Judaism. "I wanted to go because I really wanted to visit Israel, to see Jerusalem, to be in a country where Jewish is the norm," she said. The students involved indeed start out the trip in Jerusalem, learning about their upcoming experience. "We always start out with a pre-semi- nar where students are oriented to Israeli society, politics, cultural differences, etc.," said Marty Zimmerman, a 23- year-old masters student in the Service, Training and Research in Jewish Communal Development (S.T.A.R) masters program at U-M. Zimmerman interns at the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit and helps in the planning of this summer's trip. The Federation helps coordinate the program along with the U-M Hillel and the University of Michigan. Their efforts are made possible by Detroit-area residents Nancy and James Grosfeld, Harold and Penny Blumenstein, and Doreen and David Hermelin. After the seminar, students go on a 10-day tour of Israel. For Rebecca Zaidel, a Michigan State University sophomore from Grand Rapids, the most memorable point of the trip came in hiking the Golan Heights. "I jumped off of a cliff into the freezing waters of the Golan. That is definitely something that I will never forget," she said. Students then settle into Kibbutz Hasolelim to begin their excavation. This year's dig is June 19 to Aug. 1. According to Rabbi Rich Kirschen, associate director at U-M Hillel, the site was first excavated in 1931 by U- M Professor Leroy Waterman. He found the first remains of an ancient town, once the capital of the Galilee, where Jewish Oral Law was codified into the Mishnah. Today, the excavation is led by pro- fessor and archaeologist Zeev Weiss of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and his team of experts. Kevin Berman, a U-M Business School junior from Bethesda, Md., said hav- ing Weiss as the dig leader made his trip more memorable. "You're going to be excavating history instead of just learning about it," he said, "and you're taught by one the lead- ing experts in the world on Zippori." Some of the history dug up by the students included the 1998 unearthing of the city's defensive wall from the time of King Herod. The find was featured in the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz. While at the dig, students continue learning about the history of their site and the Jewish meaning behind it. "There is an overwhelming sense of Jewish connection and identity," Zaidel said. Nesbitt said her expectations for the trip were well met. "It is a great way to experience Israel, a wonderful dig with wonderful people, and a real bonding experience for the participants. It was the best summer of my life," she said. "Of course, you have to be willing to work hard, but the payoff is worth it." ❑ .* W 4/21 2000 67