tokitanie age, and her father and brother turned their backs on her when she "Get out of here before I smash you with moved her children into this!" Estie pushed the settlers back with the the dangers of the butt end of her rifle. "Greater Israel." Miriam cried. "Why are you on their side? She continues to search Why are you going to let the Arabs kill us?" for the meaning that "Traitor!" other settlers screamed at Estie. brought her and her hus- A woman soldier grabbed Miriam's arm. band first to become Miriam resisted. devoutly religious and When the soldier raised her arm to hit then ardent Zionists. Miriam, Estie screamed, "Don't touch her! As a child of the '60s she She's my sister!" uses yoga, bio-energy heal- — From "Storm of Terror: ing, meditation and even A Hebron Mother's Diary" Tarot cards in her quest for .equanimity in the midst of horror. children and nearby Arab families Leavitt is candidly on the extreme before the peace process "put up fringe of the Israeli political spectrum. barbed wire between us and the Baruch Goldstein, who murdered 29 Arabs." Arab worshipers in cold blood in Storm of Terror will not cause any 1994, had been her family doctor. reader to change sides. But its power- Her comment on the causes for the ful style and even more powerful crime: "So many friends had died in emotions will engage anyone interest- his arms. Many of us think it was that ed in the Israeli Palestinian tragedy to event which broke our neighbor Dr. race through its pages. Goldstein." Leavitt reveals herself not only as a She describes with almost utopian determined ideologue but a complex nostalgia the friendships between her struggling human being. ❑ man who knows the world and there- fore cherishes his own land all the more. This comes through eloquently in the final section of the book, selec- tions from a private diary. He writes: "Because, as a journalist, I often travel to war zones and other not particularly nice places, coming home to America has always had a special feel for me. Often I would come home ... and my wife would ask - • • because.. An Excerpt the firing line: "Miriam said that at school her friends are busy writing their own eulogies ... Whoever says they are not frightened is telling a lie." Leavitt also struggles to juggle among her children's differing view- points. Her oldest daughter, Estie, a soldier, was stationed in her hometown to quell settlers advancing toward violent Arab demonstrators. One of the set- tlers doing so was Estie's younger sis- ter, Miriam. Her son became intensely devout as a reaction to friends' deaths. And her 13-year-old daughter was -often so ter- rified that Leavitt spent nights rock- ing her. In the new reality of the intifada, normalcy is nowhere. Even a simple mother/daughter conversation about planning the girl's future is not immune: "Both Estie and I are trying to ignore the screaming, the whistling of the mobs, the gunfire, the grenades, the street battles between the army and the Arabs." Leavitt lost her mother at a young me how it was, and I would answer: `You know, honey, the wheels aren't on very tight out there.'" Well said, by a man who keeps going back. And well worth remem- bering. ❑ w Live Entertainment: H Friday, Saturday ednesday. Thurty, rs: litesday-Thursday 5:30 - 9:30 Friday & Saturday 5:30-10:30 Sunday 12:00-9:30 (Sunday brunch from 12 - 3) aloitude 01t6 17546 Woodward Ave. (2 blocks north of McNichols) Detroit (3 13) 865-0331 Piter rear Valet parking 7. 0 T H E 618120 • Gift Baskets • Sweet Trays Muffins • Soups o • Cookies Everything Made Fresh Daily • • • - .• -- - jeunshFiction:HonOted: Ribalow Prize is awarded to author Elizabeth Rosner. uthor Elizabeth Rosner has been selected as the 2002 winner of the Harold U. Ribalow Prize for her novel The Speed of Light Administered by Hadassah Magazine, the Ribalow Prize is awarded annually - to an author who has created an out- standing work of fiction on a Jewish theme. The panel of judges included Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel, Pulitzer Prize winner N. Scott Momaday and Myla Goldberg, last year's Ribalow recipient for The Bee Season. The Speed of Light (Ballantine; $23.95) is the story of a father's secret past and his family's journey to uncover the tragedy that shadowed their lives. To overcome the pain of his Holocaust survival, his family must reconnect with each other and A their own voices. Lyrically written, the novel examines the power of love, loss and redemption. Published in 2001, it is Rosner's first novel. "Since 1983, Hadassah Magazine has annually recognized a deserving author who has bril- liantly illuminated aspects of Jewish life," says Ruth B Hurwitz, chair of Hadassah Magazine We are proud to encourage and enable such talent, and are pleased that the Ribalow family has chosen us to administer this memorial to the late Harold U. Ribalow." Rosner received her award Wednesday, Dec. 4, in New York City. She was born in Schenectady, N.Y., and received her master of fine Voted Best Challah Bread! '1.00 Off Any Bread Order 1 coupon per order Expires 12/31/02 Not good with any other discount or special offer. Not valid on holiday orders. 24-hour notice please on specialty items (sonic exceptions) arts in creative writing froth the University of California at Irvine. After 18 years of teaching college courses in creative writing, she resigned to devote her full attention to writing. She is currently working on her second novel. 6879 Orchard Lake Rd. in the Boardwalk Plaza 248-626-9110 604270 Click 8 Shop jewish.com 12/6 2002 77