INSIDE: Community Calendar 51 Mazel Toy! 55 Feeling Of Beshert Tamarack Camps has musical, joyous celebration of 100 years. WENDY ROSE BICE Special to the Jewish News 0 n a warm August day in 1902, Ida Koppel and Blanche Hart, two Jewish women of means, hosted a picnic on Belle Isle along the Detroit River. Their guests, recently arrived Jewish immigrant children and their mothers, became the first campers of what would become known, two years later, as Fresh Air Society, the operator of Tamarack Camps. One hundred summers later — just five days before the end of Tamarack Camps' second session — 2,500 Jewish mothers and fathers are visiting Camp Maas in Ortonville for a special outing with their children. They are gathered to celebrate Fresh Air Society's 100th birthday at a concert and Havdalah (Shabbat:----- closing) service featuring Debbie Friedman, the spiritual songstress of Jewish camping. Parents at camp? Not since the 1930s have parents been allowed to visit their kids at a FAS camp. "I don't think there is another Jewish camp that would try this, but 100 years is a long time. We wanted a special celebration," said Harvey Finkelberg, Tamarack Camps director. The Aug. 10 fete marked the close of a camp season studded with centennial activities. Each Shabbat week- end campers embraced camp history through activities including quilt-making and skits. At the Jewish Community Center-sponsored Jewish Book Fair last November, Tamarack Camps released Songs of Summer, a compilation of camp songs sung by campers and A Timeless Treasure: 100 Years of Fresh Air Camp, a hard- cover book detailing the agency's history. A gala dinner this October will conclude the 100th-year festivities. Happy Reunions Scores of black T-shirted teenage bouncers — in reality, the Teen Service Staff crew of 2002 — escort eager parents onto the field beside the Stephen and Nancy Grand Gymnasium. The teens' job: enforce the rules. No food, no pack- ages, no bags and no purses (code for "don't try to smuggle in gifts for your kids"). Inside the cordoned-off area stand the anxious campers — amazingly clean campers — and easily identified in their bright, color-coded T-shirts, a different color for each camping village. There are a few tearful reunions, but overall just hugs and kisses and smiles, miles and miles of smiles. "Tonight, we are celebrating what Jewish camping is - all about. On this Shabbat, the ruach, the spirit of camp, will come through," a hoarse Finkelberg bellows to the crowd. Then Friedman takes the stage. Parents, although charmed at the chance to see the famous Friedman in person, have really come to see their children at camp. Brian Gordon embraces his 10-year-old daughter, Mia. "I got a little weepy-eyed when I first got here," the Franklin resident admitted. "There are - so many memories. I remember this field; we played ball here. There wasn't a big gymnasium or a pool, but it was this same field. "This is a great night. It's a rare opportunity to see these kids in their own element. Catch a glimpse of their world," he said. What goes on behind those bunk walls is a secret that's 100 years old, a rite of passage reserved only for those who've experienced overnight camping. Children start their camp session nervous and anxious and often come out, three or four weeks later, more mature, independ- ent, happy and two or three inches taller. Behind those walls, a most unique family is formed. With their many shared experiences, bunkmates often become lifelong friends. And, as with so many of life's most Above: Parents and campers are happy to see each other at Camp Maas. Here, Jim Roll of Ann Arbor greets his daughter, Natalie, 9, with Ruth Bardenstein. Left: Singer- songwriter Debbie Friedman, considered the spiritual and musical soul of jewish camping, takes the stage to entertain campers, parents and supporters at Camp Maas. 8/23 2002 45