Carefree, Camp Experience Former Detroiters are pursuing their dream of Jordan River Village, open to seriously ill children in the Middle East. JENNIFER LOVY Special to the Jewish News 111,1 arilyn Grant was killing time during the inter- mission of a benefit jazz. concert in Connecticut, when she casually picked up a brochure about a camp for sick children and put it in her purse. It stayed there for several days until she and her husband, Murray, were on a flight home to Israel. "I opened my purse to look for a piece of Kleenex and I pulled out the brochure," said native Detroiter Marilyn Grant of Netanya, speaking here during a recent visit. "I read it and immediately woke up Murray. I told him, 'We have to bring this to Israel.'" Four years and $4.3 million later, the Grants are well on their way to opening Jordan River Village. It is a 50-acre camp in Israel's Lower Galilee region, where children suffering from life-threat- ening illnesses and disabling, chronic conditions can spend a carefree week in a medically safe environment at no cost to their parents. While the Grants are still one year away from ground breaking, three years away from opening and nearly $21 mil- lion away from their fund-raising goal, they feel they are closer than they've ever been to establishing this trilingual camp for children from Israel, Jordan, Lebanon and the Palestinian Authority. Despite the challenge of raising an additional $21 million for the camp, the Grants don't seem overly concerned. They're focused on their mission and excited about the financial support com- ing from a number of federations, organizations and individuals, including members of the Detroit Jewish commu- nity. Government and other grant money is expected to fulfill a large por- tion of the budget requirements. During a recent trip to Detroit, the Grants received a number of individual financial commitments ranging from small contributions to a $50,000 dona- tion. Although the Grants left Michigan more than 30 years ago, their roots here remain strong. Their son and daughter both attended the University of Michigan and the son, Paul, lives in West Bloomfield with their grandson. The Grants also have enlisted the help of friends to give legal and fund-raising assistance with the camp. Murray. Grant, a Connecticut native, attended U-M as did his future wife, a Detroit Central High School graduate. Their paths crossed in 1947 at the cam- pus Hillel. From Ann Arbor, Murray took his new bride to Connecticut. Two years later, the Grants visited Israel for the first time. After spending an evening with Israeli friends, they knew the Jewish state was the place for them. In 1971, they finally made it their home. Paul Newman Connection Marilyn still can't explain exactly what it was about the camp brochure that immediately struck her. None of their family members was battling a serious chronic illness and no one worked with sick children. Her background was in sociology; her husband's in marketing. After the plane ride home to Israel, the Grants quickly called the number on the brochure. They spoke to a represen- tative from Paul Newman's Hole in the Wall Gang Camp for seriously ill chil dren in Ashford, Conn. Initially, Newman's organization did not show much enthusiasm, but the Grants were persistent and they did their homework. In 1999, actor-activist Newman sent a letter to the Grants that endorsed preliminary efforts to create an affiliated facility in Israel. "We did a needs assessment in Israel and the statistics were unbelievable. There are 30,000 school-age children suffering with life- threatening dis- eases," says Marilyn. Newman opened the first Hole in the Wall Gang Camp in Connecticut in 1988. Its success generated seven camps modeled after it, soon to include Jordan River Village in Israel. Newman's organi- zation provides professional and techni- cal assistance to member camps, which are individually run. Children at Jordan River Village will sleep in cabins and eat in a dining hall like at most summer camps. Planned for the site are pools, arts and crafts center, gym, theater, petting zoo, ROPES course and a man-made lake for fishing and boating. But different from other camps, Jordan River Village will have a medical center where children can receive chemotherapy, dialysis and other treat- ment. Other amenities include a heli- copter pad for use in medical emergen- cies, ramps and handicap-accessible accommodations, and a meditation/prayer building. The Grants say the village will be open 35 weeks per year with specific ses- sions in the summer and during the holidays open to seriously ill children. Special sessions will be geared toward institu- tionalized chil- dren as well as youngsters suffering from chronic, genetic and traumatic ailments. Parents and siblings also will have opportunities to attend special sessions to help them cope with the difficulties serious illness often imposes on the fam- ily. Well into retirement, the Grants, both in their 70s, are spending their golden years making sure that seriously ill chil- dren in the Middle East have a place where they can just be kids. "You can't move the world all at once," said Murray. "If you can move it a millimeter, you've been successful. This is our millimeter." 111 For more information about Jordan River Village, contact the Grants at murray@netvision.net.il or write to them at Jordan River Village Foundation, 7 Rivka Guber St., 43728 Ra'anana, Israel. Marilyn and Murray Grant are planning a camp in Israel for children with serious illnesses. 10/18 2002 51