Come see what all the Jazz is about at THE FOUNTAINS AT FRANKLIN We can jazz up your life ... REFUSING To BE ENEMIES from page 51 THE FOUNTAINS AT FRANKLIN enhances your full and active lifestyle with convenient a la carte services and free access to a variety of planned activities. Come see for yourself. STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL July 22, 7-8 p.m. join us for gourmet strawberry treats and desserts and tour our community. "LET'S GET ACQUAINTED" LUNCHEON Thursdays, 12-2 p.m. Come meet our residents, join us for lunch and learn about our lifestyle. To RSVP or for more information call (248) 353-2810 We're building a new neighborhood, one neighbor at a time. THE FOUNTAINS AT FRANKLIN Retirement Living • Assisted Living • Alzheimer's Care 28301 Franklin Road • Southfield, MI 48034 www.thefbuntains.corn AL#630084627 • NPDJ071103 For your best price, selection personeili.zedd service CINDY SCHLUSSEL SHUMAll Jeep 411. 41h. ■■ •/ CHRYSLER motor scales, Inc _ el I a k e , m I 0 6 SIP Al ■ a wolle Plymouth Eagle 1\14 1\110RIES ISUAL PHOTOGRAPHY V Give a Gift of Love FULL SERVICE STUDIO To plant a tree in • Bat Mitzvah Israel in honor of • Weddings Ilan Ramon and his • Bar Mitzvah • Children • Families fellow astronauts, COMPLETE WEDDING & BAR-BAT MITZVAH COVERAGES 52 www.jewish.com Click on STARTING AT $1995 7/1 1 2003 go to Phone (248) 960-6121 671480 Donations to Israel. co„ Johanna Epstein, Manya Arond-Thomas and Rabia Shafie view Palestinian embroideries before their meeting begins. the Nakbah, the Arabic word for catastrophe, used to describe Israel's Independence Day as a Jewish state (May 14, 1948); Palestinian Arabs in Israel were given refuge in United Nations camps. "That catastrophe lives with us every single day," says Shafie. "It's when our society began to be destroyed." Abed says, at first, she would not hear about the Holocaust because her belief was that the Holocaust was the reason used to justify taking away her homeland. Then, as part of her per- sonal growth, she realized the Holocaust was something she had to deal with. Because of her experience with Butter, she says, she is reading other personal Holocaust accounts. "I love this human being who has this horrendous experience and comes out the other end with so much love and wisdom," Abed says. "She repre- sents a person who has dealt with ugliness and turned it into beauty and hope." Still, it has taken the group almost a year to begin to hear each other's sto- ries, and the discussion that follows. Says Abed, "I'm beginning to understand the fear and concerns Jews have. It's a legitimate feeling of being subjected to one atrocity after another throughout the world." She now accepts Israel's right to exist, she says. The Jewish women, in turn, learned about Abed's emotional pain when they talked about going to Israel. "American women talk about moving or living in Israel for a while and that upsets me," Abed says. "All Jews — from the United States, Russia and Europe — can have automatic citizen- ship in Israel, and I can't. Yet my family goes back for several generations there." Open Hearts And Minds "The future of peace will fall upon people like us," White says. "We are each other's destiny. Neither Arabs nor Jews are going away. Our futures are so entwined. We need to start building for our children and our grandchildren," Abed says. And while the women in Zeitouna find it difficult to get excited about the current peace efforts — pained by past failures like the Oslo accords — they all express hope for the future when it comes to their group. They are planning a trip together to the Palestinian-administered territories and to Israel next year. "Women are doers, the key to peace," says Shafie. "And Zeitouna can be an example of how people can share and live together. When asked what's unique about the group, she says, "We're so much alike." "I hope we inspire other groups like ours to create a place of sanity where people with similar feelings and pas- sions can meet," Epstein says. Abed dreams of many Zeitouna groups that eventually form a solid base for peace. "The draw of this group is comfort and commonality," White says. "We came together with open hearts and minds."