Insight t A Remember When .11. • . ".4:$ Open For Business From the pages of the Jewish News for this week 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. Golan Fund sends two economic emissaries to the Detroit area. 1991 DIANA LIEBERMAN Staff Writer R onnie Lotan has lived in Israel's Golan Heights since 1968, running both a kib- butz and one of Israel's most successful tourist attractions. Although he has never been involved in local or national politics, he now is on the campaign trail — not for him- self, but for his community. Loran is presidenr of Keren Golan, the Golan Fund, Inc., a nonprofit, nonpolitical organization. The fund seeks investments and grants to strengthen the 33 communities that make up the Golan. On April 25, Loran and Nathan Thaler, the fund's United States national director, met with Jewish business and community leaders at the Max M. Fisher Federation Building in Bloomfield Township. The event was arranged by attorney Michael Traison, senior principal of the Detroit law firm Miller, Canfield, Paddock and Stone and president of the America/Israel Chamber for Economic Development, Inc. The Golan's population comprises a pluralistic Jewish population of about 18,000 and another 18,000 Druzim, members of an ancient eclectic monotheistic religion. Since Israi..1 acquired the land in the aftermath of the 1967 war, the nation's government has spent "billions of Israeli shekels supporting the region," Lotan said. "Why we are here is to get more than the limit of government financ- ing," he said. The Golan Fund was founded in Israel in September 2000. The fund's United States operation, a 501-3C not-for-profit organization, began in January 2001. Other international branches are in the planning stages, Lotan said. Some of the Israeli industries already in the Golan are farm-related, such as dairy, wine and produce. There's also a large water-bottling plant and factories for producing plastics, aircraft parts For the first time in 30 years, a kosher restaurant opened in Warsaw, Poland. American Jewish organizations organized relief efforts for the 1 mil- lion Kurds who fled northern Iraq. Detroiters Tami, Robyn, Jaimi and Sara Tarnow were among the stars in the Berkley Ice Show. 1981 The long-lost son of the Jewish painter Amadeo Modigliani was found in a small village near Paris where he served as the parish priest. Rabbi Leizer Levin, president of the Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Greater Detroit, declared May as Metropolitan Detroit Kashrut Month. 10'71 Nathan Thaler and Ronnie Lotan explain details of the Golan Fund to Detroit-area business and communal leaders. and specialty electric motors. Thaler, whose 20 years of fund rais- ing for the Jewish people includes work with the Anti-Defamation League and Rambam Medical Center, recently returned to the Golan on his first visit since 1983. He said he was highly impressed with the changes since his last visit. "The industrial part of the Golan is very expandable," he explained. "Basically, the whole area is a national empowerment zone." In addition to promoting industry, the Golan Fund also seeks to build a technical college. At this point, higher education is limited to a newly built teachers college. When asked about the stability of the region, Loran said the outside world tends to confuse the Golan, where people live in peace, with the hotly contested West Bank areas. "If the worst should happen, and the area would go back to Syria, then you would have a factory in Syria," he said. "Syria has no argument with the United States." Thaler added: "The people I met [in the Golan] were very adamant they are there to stay." Among those in the audience for the Golan Fund presentation was Joel Bussell, vice president of marketing for the Michigan-based Motron Inc., a tech- nical marketing consulting company. After the meeting, the West Bloomfield resident said he agreed that "the chance for Jerusalem or the Golan Heights ever being taken by Syria are slim to none." However, he said, "This thing [the Golan Fund] is embryonic. They haven't got it refined enough to attract any prudent business people, unless they are very altruistic." Traison called the effort to increase industry in the Golan "a sound idea. "Looking at it from a political as well as economic viewpoint, I certainly see it as a viable effort. I would recommend people take a good, hard look at it." ❑ For more information on the Golan Fund, e-mail Nathan Thaler at nthaler@optonline.net David Lewis, Socialist member of parliament from Toronto, is the first Jew to be elected head of Canada's New Democratic Party. David C. Garlock of Southfield was awarded a $1,000 National Merit Scholarship to study mathematics. Walter Farber, educational director of Congregation B'nai Moshe since 1944, announced his retirement. 1901 A United Arab Republic MIG jet fighter was shot down near the Sinai border in the first air clash in five months. Detroiter Sol I. Stein was appoint- ed to the board of directors of Metropolitan Hospital and Clinics. 1951 New York columnist George E. Sokolsky complained that a new dic- tionary of American expressions omitted the words "bagel" and "lox." Detroiter Jacob Savin, owner of Michigan Box Co., planned a trip to revisit Israel, where he was a pio- neer settler 28 years earlier. Roberta Peters, 19-year-old soprano, was signed to an exclusive long-term contract with RKO Pictures. —Compiled by Sy Manello, editorial assistant Di 5/4 2001