e Life Under Fire Detroiter mourns a friend killed in Hebrew U. bombing; one family relieved to know relative is safe. DON COHEN Special to the Jewish News EE ebrew University long has had the largest overseas students program of any university in Israel, and last week's bombing of the campus cafeteria hit close to home for former students from around the world and their families. Below are stories about Detroiters who worried about loved ones when they heard about the bombing. In one case, a close friend was killed, in the other a relative narrowly missed the bombing. A College Friend Erica Davis lost a close friend last week. "I thought it was a joke, a sick joke," she said. "Some of my friends I talked to thought it was a joke, too. I mean, a person is alive, and the next minute he's dead? That is so screwed up. He was the last person I saw before I left Israel." Davis, 23, of Farmington Hills spent this past school year at Hebrew University in Jerusalem and was part of a four-person "posse" that includ- ed Benjamin Blutstein, 25, of Harrisburg, Penn., a student in Jewish education at the Rothberg International School's two-year graduate program. "Ben was my first friend in Jerusalem," Davis said. "He knew the best places to go, the best places to eat. He was pretty fluent in Hebrew, and was always there with a shoulder you could cry on. Being from Harrisburg, he understood the Midwestern thing. He was such a good listener." Blutstein was killed with his friend, Marla Bennett of San Diego, while eating in the university's Frank Sinatra Cafeteria at the Mt. Scopus campus. They were among five Americans out of the seven stu- dents murdered in the Hamas-claimed terrorist , attack that also wounded 97 persons. Davis went to Israel in the fall of 2001 to spend a year in the Pardes Institute of Jewish Studies Ben Blutstein, who was killed in the Hebrew University cafeteria bombing, with his good friend Erica Davis of Farmington Hills. program, but left it for a different program soon after she began. Blutstein was in his second year of Pardes and loved it. He had just signed up for a two-year program in Jewish education after which he planned to return to the United States to teach in Jewish schools. "Ben was just Ben," Davis said. "No matter where he went, he was just Ben. I admired him for that. He was confident. He was an extraordi- nary person. He gave his entire life to klal Yisrael [the Jewish people] and that is what he wanted to do with his life. I always pictured that when I went back to Israel next year he would be there." Brian Kohn of Jerusalem, formerly of Oak Park, was with Ben the night before he was killed. "Ben epitomized love, kindness, unity and humanity," he said. "He was a special guy. He didn't seem afraid of terrorism. He was very open- minded and had no hatred of Arabs whatsoever. In fact, he often was offended by anti-Arab rheto- ric and insisted that these type of discussions not continue in his presence. ALL NEW 2002 C70 CONVERTIBLE "Ben didn't talk much of politics — he was a lover, not a fighter, and focused more on his love of learning Torah, helping people who needed help, being friendly to everyone and practicing Judaism." Davis is not particularly political but, after the last year in Israel and Ben's murder, she has no choice but to consider what it all means for Israel and the Jewish people. Not surprisingly, she has come to some definite conclusions. "It put some clarity in my life about what we are up against," she said. "They want the Jews gone. They are trying to kill us. It is horrible. I used to accept they might somehow be real free- dom fighters who were misguided. Now I think they are sick. "To place a bomb into a university cafeteria is pure hate, make no mistake," Davis said. "Israel is fighting for her very existence and for the lives of her citizens. "My grandfather is a Holocaust survivor and he taught me never to sit by and let injustice happen in the world, especially to our own people. If we don't help, then we let it happen. We must never, never apologize for our allegiance to Israel and to our heritage. "Our sages say that when you kill one person, you kill a whole world. For every single Jew who dies, there are a thousand people that knew and loved him or her. The dead are not just names, they are souls that brought joy into the world. The Palestinians killed two whole worlds when they took Ben and Marla from us. We can remember that the next time we see three dead or five dead, that they are real people with real fami- lies. "When I think of Ben, I think of Israel," she said. 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