Remember When • • Rebuilding Shattered Lives From the pages of the Jewish News for- this week 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 and 60 years ago. Three Hillel teachers introduce local organizations to Israel's 'One Family' organization. 1992 DIANA LIEBERMAN Copy Editor/Education Writer 0 n March 27, 2002, a 26- year-old Israeli named Tomer Oshrat drove to the billiard club at Rishon L'Tzion to pick up a friend and drive him home. That was the moment a Palestinian suicide bomber chose to carry out his deadly mission in the popular suburban Tel Aviv nightspot. Oshrat will be paralyzed for the rest of his life. Multiply Oshrat's story by one thou- sand — by five thousand — and you have a population crying out for help. "When we hear about these terrible attacks — how many killed, how many wounded — those of us in the United States don't always realize that those people who were wounded, they don't just need Band-Aids. Their whole lives were shattered," said Daphna Feldman of West Bloomfield. Feldman teaches Judaic studies'to junior high school students at Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit in Farmington Hills. She resolved to personally assist Israelis who have been wounded, orphaned, widowed and dispossessed by the intifada (uprising). Along with two friends, Malka Littman of West Bloomfield and Fay Kruet of Farmington Hills, also Hillel teachers, she spent three weeks this summer in Israel, volunteering with an organization called Mishpacha Achat ("One Family"). The organization, with offices in New York and Israel, includes financial, medical and "adopt- a-family" programs, and is planning a camp for bereaved children. "When a member of a family is hurt, the rest of the family steps in," Littman explained. "We're not just bringing money — we're bringing a connection, like a real family." The Human Touch The organization began after the Aug. 9, 2001, attack on the Sbarro Pizzeria in Jerusalem. , , . Thirty members of the Weiss family of Southfield travel by bus through the Czech countryside to trace the escape routes of their relatives from German occupation in World War II. Thirty American students are in the first class of the National Federation of Temple Youth's high school in Jerusalem. 198 Israeli schools reopen with 1.25 million students — a record high. Marilyn Wolfe is appointed direc- tor of Jewish Parents Institute, based at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Fay Kruet and Daphna Feldman visit Tomer Osrat, paralyzed in the March terrorist attack in Rishon L'Tzion, and his wife, Sasson. It started small — with one 12-year- old Israeli girl, Michal Belzberg, con- tributing money that would have been spent on her bat mitzvah party and gifts. Instead, the tzedakah went to her fellow Jews whose lives and bodies had been torn apart by terrorist acts. Michal's parents, businessman Marc Belzberg and his wife, Chantal, took her from one hospital to another, speaking not only to the wounded but also to their families, in an effort to learn about their special needs. One of the things they discovered was that Israel's National Insurance Institute (NII) takes a number of months to process each case, and then takes care of only the basics. What is desperately needed is private funding to help victims and their families while they're waiting to be processed by the NII, plus additional funding afterward. •. "The government works marvelous- ly," Feldman said. "But they can't do it alone." So far, One Family has raised more than $2 million. It has helped victims and their families find jobs and hous- ing, arranged transportation, thrown parties, provided computers and com- puter training and much more. "The needs of all victims of terrorism have to be taken into consideration," -- Marc Belzberg said in an interview with the Jerusalem Post. "We have to do things to make life easier for them right now." Most of all, what's needed is the personal touch. "It's a long day when you're in the hospital," Feldman said. "Their fami- lies can't be there all the time." While in Israel, the three friends spent time each day with the same handful of Israelis, mostly young peo- ple, who had been terribly injured in the attacks. "It's not an intrusion — its an embrace," Kruet said. Adopt-A-Family Among the victims adopted by the INSIGHT on page 24 X972, "Torches of Independence," sym- bolizing the start of Israel's 25th anniversary year, are flown to Detroit and Flint. Temple Beth Jacob of Pontiac dedicates a new stained-glass win- dow depicting the House of Jacob, a gift of the Harold Goldberg family. 1962 Congregation B nai Jacob breaks ground for a new sanctuary on Hubbell Street in Detroit. 19 The D.W. Simons building opens as the newest branch of the Jewish Community Center at Tuxedo and Holmur streets in Detroit. Jewish Home for Aged residents Mary and Isaac Nager, 103 .and 105, respecOely, are celebrating their 81st wedding anniversary. Hyman Altman's Jewish Radio Hour program carries a Jewish New Year's message from U.S. Rep. John D. Dingell, D-Mich. Detroit's rabbis unanimously concur with the Synagogue Council of America that Jews engaged in war work should observe the High Holy Days. — Compiled by Holly Teasdle, archivist, the Leo M. Franklin Archives, Temple Beth. El 9/20 2002 23