T s For Openers Sharing His Birthday SUSAN TAWIL Special to the Jewish News T alk about sharing your toys! Yisroel Meir Green of Oak Park wanted to help the Israeli terrorist victims he had heard about, so he turned his ninth birthday party into a mitz- vah project. In lieu of presents, he asked his classmates at Yeshiva Beth Yehudah to bring a gift to send to the children of an Israeli terrorist victim. "Yisroel Meir is a very special boy, a special neshamah [soul]," said Rabbi Moshe Levinson, Yisroel Meir's teacher. "He's always thinking of others; he has a lot of heart. We talk about the matzav [situation] in Israel — age appropriately, of course — and about how we have to daven [pray] for them; but it's unusual for a child this young to take it so to heart. Of course, it comes from the home, too." The boys who attended the birthday celebration played party games, then wrapped the presents they brought, which Yisroel Meir's par- ents, Rabbi Reuven and Sharon Green, will send on to Israel Afterward, the boys recited tehillim (psalms), traditional prayers for the recovery of the sick and wounded. "It was beautiful to see such young boys be so con- cerned with the plight of their fellow Jews," said Rabbi Green, executive director of the Kollel Institute of Greater Detroit. "I'm very proud of my son," Sharon Green said. The toys included arts and crafts kits, Lego sets, toy trucks and cars, puzzles and a soap bubble blowing set. The gifts will be sent to the Druks, a Jerusalem family the Greens were referred to with seven children ages 7 months to 9 years. Yossi Druk, the father, was shot in the neck by a Palestinian terrorist who suddenly opened fire at pedestrians walking through the center of town. "I don't care that I didn't get my own presents," said Yisroel Meir. "I think the children will like these toys. I hope it makes them happy." Those who wish to help other families of terrorist victims may contact Mishpacha Achat (One Family) at belzberg@netvision.net.il Run by Mark and Chavital Belzberg of Jerusalem, the organi- zation directs volun- teers to visit and care for families of terror- ist victims. The Belzbergs can match you with an Israeli family and tell you about their individ- ual situation and needs. I 11.(Vrf1E %ha Don't bow © 2003 n addition to Sen. Joseph Lieberman, which gentile Democratic presidential candi- date eats no unkosher meat? — Goldfti 17 . .IDADOS siDnpoid FLUME _TO LnBP 'ivatu ou saumsuoD aH •LIESDA E sT ONO Jo tpupnN s!uuaci dad uannsuv Quotables "I am going through a terrible emo- tional crisis, with which I can no longer live. I beg your forgiveness and wish you all long and happy years without me." Zeev Niz; 67, a failed caterer from the Haifa suburb of Binyamina, in his May suicide note to family and _friends in the wake of Israel's economic collapse, reported by the Forward. "We seek true peace, not just a pause between more wars and intifadas." — President George W Bush, presum- ably rejecting the notion that a cease-fire including Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad would itself constitute a major step forward, at the Sharm el- Sheik summit. Yiddish Limericks Yisroel Meir Green, 9, right, and his brother Shalom, 5, with the wrapped presents to be sent to the Druk family in Israel. — Martha Jo Fleischmann Shabbat Candlelighting * disgrace ** shameless audacity "When I light the Shabbos candles, I pray that this tiny light is my part to add to the light of Judaism in the world. Yiddish-isms — Shirley Grace Zinzbezg, Oak Park, mother and grandmother 6/27 2003 10 The French were opposed to the war, And called it a shandeh* what's more. But seeing us win it, They want right back in it. I've not heard such chutzpah** before. Sponsored by Lubavitch Women's 0,ganization. To submit a candlelighting message or to receive complimentag candlesticks and information on Shabbat candlelighfing, call Miriam Amzalak of Oak Park at (248) 967-5056 or e-mail• mainzalakejuno.com yold A simpleton, a fool, a boob, a yokel, a harmless dolt; one whose gullibility gets him into trouble. Candlelighting Friday, June 27, 8:56 p.m. Shabbat Ends Saturday, June 28, 10:08 p.m. Candlelighting Friday, July 4, 8:55 p.m. Shabbat Ends Saturday, July 5, 10:07 p.m. Source: From The New Joys of Yiddish by Leo Calvin Rosten, edited by Lawrence Bush, copyright 2001, by the Rosten Family LLC. Used by per- mission of the Rosten Family LLC