Cover Story an Scott Kaufman's quest is involving the uninvolved through travel to Israel. Mission we look at four n ewish Detroiters o have stepped up to ' ership, four of many willing to devote y, four who have erence in their avors. of Detroit's Jewish ornes down to who's `Hineni,' I'm going to obert Aronson, chief icer of the Jewish etropolitan Detroit. man (this page), rn oltz (page 93), s (page 94) ) and . Gary 94) have said, it stories kick off an icIN feature on this of Jewish leaders. Kepi Guten Cohen, development editor 4/26 2002 92 HARRY KIRS BAUM Staff Writer e wasn't always as seriously involved in the Jewish community as he is now, but a trip to Israel a dozen years ago gave him a cause. Scott Kaufman, 35, of Huntington Woods works hard — and in his own way — to pump up other young Jewish adults to get involved in the community through trips to Israel. He wants them to be as moved to action as he was. Kaufman remembers taking his first trip to Israel in 1990, mainly because it sounded like summer camp. And the former counselor at Camp Seagull in Charlevoix was all over that. After spending a month backpacking on his own through Eastern Europe, including a visit to Auschwitz, the German death camp, he joined 25 other Detroiters on a United Jewish Appeal singles' mission in Tel Aviv. On the fourth or fifth day of the trip, he was at a mission party in a disco at 11 p.m. when the DJ announced that everybody should board the buses. A group of Russian refugees were arriving to their new homeland, and mission-goers were going to greet them. When the bus dropped off the refugees on the tarmac, Kaufman went off to observe on his own. "The images were very much like what I had just seen at Auschwitz," he said. "They were dressed the same, and from the same cities." In his mind's eye, the sight of these immigrants getting on the tram to the airport terminal for a fresh start in Israel contrasted sharply with the thought of Jews getting off the trains to their deaths in Auschwitz. "It was a very powerful image," he said. "It was at that moment, when 'We were slaves in the land of Egypt,' became more than just words." When he returned to Detroit, Kaufman, the University of Michigan graduate with "a Joe DiMaggio streak of bad attendance," began to concentrate on his real estate development career. An early venture was helping to start up Joe Dumars Fieldhouse, a league-sports and enter- tainment complex in Shelby Township, of which he now is a general partner. Increasing Involvement Kaufman didn't come from a home with a long history of involvement with the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. His parents didn't become active until the late 1980s, when they went with friends on a mission to Israel and Russia. "Growing up, it wasn't a big part of our house," he said. ,In 1995, Kaufmar? went on a UJA Young Adult Mission and took some friends. Watching their reaction to the sights, sounds and emotions of Israel moved Kaufman all over again, only this time he found the time to act. On his return, he began to heavily promote missions to Israel. "I felt like it's the most effective tool we have to connect young Jewish people," he said. "We didn't live through the galvanizing moments like the war for independence or the Six-Day War." To be more effective, he wrote up a business plan for his goal of getting young adults to Israel. "Make it cool and hip and market it," he said. "We used to get 20 people a year from Detroit on the average. My goal was 200." On his own time, he spoke in Phoenix, Las Vegas and Kansas City, exporting his model to