spend time and money in Israel. just to show them the Americans will support them — that we're not afraid." The youngest travelers in the group were Michael and Kathryn Marcus of Royal Oak, married just a year and a half. They were attracted by the mis- sion's $999 cost. We saw the ad for the mission trip and said, 'We can afford that, let's go,"' Michael said. We want to show support for Israel, but I've never been there — so we can do both at once." Mission-goer David Kahan of Troy, on his 22nd visit, recently donated an ambulance to Israel. "I was hoping that they wouldn't have to use it for anything bad," he said. "Of course, I have some apprehen- sions, but I feel we must support Israel in these perilous times. "My philosophy is that it's a miracle that I survived Auschwitz at age 15," he said. "It's the duty of every Jew to support Israel because we learned through the Holocaust that if terrible things should happen again, we need a place to go to. Norman Katz of Birmingham, chair- man of the Detroit contingent, was res- olute. "Despite all the terrorism that's going on now, we've got to go there and life has to go on," he said. "We have no choice. There's no alternative. "If you give up, you wring your " hands, then they've won. They're not going to win." Terrorist Bombing Although they arrived at the King David Hotel in Jerusalem on Monday, the Detroit contingent spent most of Tuesday and Wednesday checking up on Detroit's special commitment to Israelis in the Central Galilee region and coastal Netanya. . [Next week's Jewish. News will look at specific Detroit efforts through Partnership 2000 and the American Jewish. Joint Distribution Committee to aid both everyday and underprivi- leged Israelis.] Wednesday morning, as the Detroiters were visiting the Central Galilee, about a two-hour tour bus ride north of Jerusalem, a sui- cide bomber struck two blocks from their Jerusalem Hotel. Minneapolis contin- gent member Marc Grossfield of Minnetonka, Minn., witnessed the attack. Grossfield was in a taxi, returning to the King David Hotel, from early morning Shacharit services at the Western Wall in the Old City. His cab was tvvo blocks from the hotel, behind six or seven other cars, when he heard the bomb ao off in the middle of the street. "When we got to the intersection," he said, "we saw the bomber's corpse with no arms, no legs, no head. "We found out that his head flew up through a window into a room on the fifth floor [of the David's Citadel Hotel]." No one other than the bomber. was killed, but two people were injured. Police speculated the bomb had exploded prematurely and it could have killed many if it had been deto- nated in a crowd. The Detroiters heard about the blast while at breakfast in their hotel in Nazareth Illit. Many called family in Detroit to let them know that they were out of town when the bombing occurred. Norman Katz and Daniel Cutler, part of the Detroit contingent on United Jewish Charities' IsraelNow MiSSi011, find a welcoming sign on a Ben Yebuda plaza gift shop, four days after the bombings.