EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK Determined And Proud T ali Dotan, a 17-year-old Israeli, has big plans when she graduates high school in two years. Those plans include serving in the army, study- ing science in college, beginning a career and raising a family. She vows not to let 34 months of Palestinian terror disrupt her life. Tali, daughter of Vered and Aaron Dotan, is an 11th- grader in Ganei Tikvah, a Tel Aviv suburb of 12,000 peo- ple. Her dad is a marine biology professor and her mother a computer software distributor. Speaking for her teenage friends, she says: "We live nor- mal lives, just like Americans. I know it's hard to think that we could do that. But our daily life is really safe. There is a sense of danger felt by our parents sometimes; they rather we not go out. But we've got to go on with our lives. We're afraid if some- thing bad happens. We're so sad. But we basically do everything." They walk to school, go shopping, take ROBERT A. the bus, visit nightclubs and hang out on SKLAR the beach — things that might seem off Editor limits. "When you go on a bus," Tali said, "there's a chance a terror- ist will be on board; we all know that and we all live with that. Still, the chance of that is smaller than the chance of my going into the road and getting hit by a car." Security is stepped up in public places, but danger always lurks. On July 15, a knife-wielding Palestinian turned away from the Tarabin cafe stabbed passersby on the beachfront promenade in Tel Aviv, killing Amir Simhon, 24, of Bat Yam. The Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, a terrorist wing of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's Fatah faction, gleefully laid claim to the attack. "It can be dangerous, but Israelis still go to the promenade to show they're Tali Dotan going on with their lives," Tali said. Poised, energetic and engaging, Tali is one of 30 special ambassadors in the Tzofim Friendship Caravan, part of the Israeli Scouts' U.S. delegation this summer. She and the nine other 17-year-old Scouts on a singing tour in the Southeast and Midwest staged five shows in the Detroit and Ann Arbor areas Aug. 8-11. The Jewish community centers of Metropolitan Detroit and Washtenaw County brought them here. Part of the Scouts' mission is to help North American Jews deepen their Jewish identity and their alliance with the Jewish state. In return, the Scouts experience our tapes- try of ways to be Jewish. Chasing A Dream I caught up with Tali after the Aug. 10 show at the JCC in West Bloomfield — the 86th of 110 scheduled perform- ances over nine weeks. The personal story she told in the show moved me. When she was 8 in 1994, she said, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin went to Washington to say, "Peace is our goal. It is peace we desire." "We are 17 years old," she told the audience of about 150. "When our parents were 17, a peace agreement with Jordan or Egypt seemed like a distant dream. But they did- n't stop believing. And what then was a dream is now reali- ty. We are only 17. But we know that if we all believe, if we all make it possible, we will see peace in our lifetime." I'm not as optimistic, given Arafat's zeal to drive Jews from Israel and incorporate the biblical land into a new Arab state. His new prime minister, Maumoud Abbas, is nuts if he thinks Israel, a democratic nation, will let loose all Palestinian prisoners — the murderers along with the rabble-rousers. Despite the turmoil, Tali will fight proudly for the Jewish homeland. "It's something every Israeli does," she said. "It makes you more mature. "When I go into the army," she added, "I will be afraid, not because there's a chance of me dying, but because it's a whole different program than anything I will have seen before." Women serve at least two years. They usually have to ask before being put in a fighting unit. "And I might ask to be in one," Tali said. "If that will be the thing I can donate the most to my country, that's what I'm going to do. I'll ), see. Her brother, Hila, 18, is three weeks into a 12-year service commitment as a fighter pilot. She also has a sister, Ido, who is 12. Tali's West Bloomfield hosts, Sue and Bob Rollinger, found it hard to fathom the Scouts in combat. "They're just fun- loving kids like America's Jewish youth," Bob said. "It's a ponderous thought how lucky our youth are." Not Giving Up Tali thinks the Palestinians at last seem ready for serious peace talks — the con- tinued, sporadic terrorist attacks notwithstanding. "There's a new future for us," she said. It's a matter of wanting. "If more peo- ple on both sides want peace enough and are ready to give some and not only take, I think every problem we have we can solve," Tali said. She appreciates every Jew who visits Israel or makes aliyah. "I think it's really good and really important that Jews here in America feel that Israel is their home, too," she said. Whenever Israel targets a terrorist leader, a Mideast ter- ror group retaliates with a suicide bombing or an ambush of soldiers. It's deflating to think Israel must rely on an unstable Palestinian leadership that equates precision strikes to diminish terrorism with legions of suicide bombers who kill and maim Israelis to spite Jews. Terrorists no doubt are using the current truce to reload. Two suicide bombings on Tuesday killed two Israelis and injured at least 1 2; more attempts are inevitable. So Israel cannot dare weaken the timbers of its resolve. As Tali Dotan put it: "Our soldiers are just people who want to defend their country; Palestinian bombers just want to hurt. And they think that hurting us will make them stronger and they will win. We cannot stop living. We cannot stop going out and doing things. "Israel must stay strong." fl 271 WEST MAPLE DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM 248.258.0212 Monday-Saturday 10-6 Thursday 10-9 Sunday 12-5 8/15 2003 5