Jewish National Fund re-establishes a presence in Detroit. HARRY KIRS BAUM Staff Writer M inus a local office and the overhead, the Jewish National Fund is making a renewed local presence in the Detroit area. After a top-down reassessment in 1996, the national office created a hub-and-spoke system, said Rick Krosnick, director of JNF's Northbrook, Ill.- based Midwest zone, which encompasses Detroit. "The real question was the priorities of the organi- zation and how much Tal money's being allocated domestically versus programs in Israel," he said before the first wel- come meeting of the new local 25- member board on Oct. 14 in the Farmington Hills home of Hannan and Lisa Lis. "We [also] realized that you don't have to have an office in a com- munity- to be active." JNF USA has one mission, Krosnick said — to raise money from the American Jewish community to send to Israel to help environmental con- cerns and land-and-water development — and to do it as cost efficiently as possible. This fiscal year (Sept. 30), Krosnick said, JNF will realize a 10 percent increase in its campaign, with 10 fewer offices than in 1997. "Though we physically closed the Detroit office, we're bringing in nearly as 71 much revenue from the I Michigan Jewish population s today as we were two years ago when we had an office," 7" :: : he said. 7 "We have 7,000 donors in -7 ' Michigan today. We want to do better, and it has to hap- pen with leadership and an active board." Detroit region president Bruce Israel of Sylvan Lake, said, 'A lot of people in our peer group don't necessarily know the Jewish National Fund. My hope is to raise the community's awareness, get the involvement back, get people excit- ed about it and most importan4 get people to feel a sense they walk out of a [future] meeting with the feeling that you're actually doing something." With 450,000 donors nationally, JNF hasn't turned its back on the amcha (your people) campaign with the blue boxes, Krosnick said. "But a decision was made to try the best we can to develop major gifts for the organization. Raising $18 with a tzedakah box is very expensive in regards to cost. We have to reach out to the donor who can give us a $10,000 gift." Future Needs Shunon Tal, Israel's water commission- er since July 2000, spoke of the needs of the region's residents. "Today, we're using a long-term mas- ter plan based on a sustainable approach to serve us, our children and grandchildren — not only talking about the quantity but the quality as well," he said. The desalinization plant near Ashkelon that will produce drinking water for more than 1 million citizens is under construction, and will be completed by the end of 2004 at a cost of $250 million. Seven more similar plants must be built to keep up with the region's expanding population, he said. "Within the next 20 years, the Israeli and the Palestinian population will be over 25 million people," he said. "We will need 5 billion cubic meters a year to supply them — more than double the resources we have now." Politics aside, Israel maintains a good relationship with the Palestinians and Jordanians in water issues. A joint committee meets regularly to discuss water problems, he said. "When Israel entered the West Bank in 1967, only 10 percent of the Arab citizens had access to water supply sys- tems. Today, almost 90 percent have access because Israel is doing a lot of things to operate and maintain all the water infrastructures." Israel must also invest in reservoirs — at a cost of $1 million to $5 mil- lion — to store the sewage effluence to irrigate cultivated land, he said. The first JNF Detroit regional event will be Green Sunday, a phone-a-thon volunteer fund-raiser planned for Nov. 16. ❑ tzgsWIK., ? Right: Fifth graderJosh Palan of Hebrew Day School tests the water. Far Right: Hebrew Day School fifth-grader Motem Halevy gathers water. Michigan at the Clinton River watershed. The individual in charge of this major international project is Ed Moyer, whose work is based in Lansing. He has been very helpful to Hebrew Day School and teacher Carol Gannon in planning this educational project that integrates the dual aspects of the school's curriculum. Michael Cohen, a Hebrew Day School parent who works at Pfizer got his company to donate test tubes needed for this experi- ment. ❑ 10/24 2003 41