4111.11011111111001011M~1161111111111.11011** Supreme Court from visiting professor Eyal Benvenisti of the law faculty at Tel Aviv University. "The admission process is long — a year — and they need your entire aca- demic record plus recommendations," Cherkasov says. "I'm really, really hon- ored to be selected." Going To Israel Because Israel is such a young country, areas of civil and international law are not as developed as in other countries such as the United States and England, Cherkasov said. There's a lot of work for the Supreme Court, and he anticipates being in the middle of it. -"What exactly I'll be doing, I don't know yet," he says. "You'll have to talk to me again when I come back." Although he's fluent in Russian, French and English, Cherkasov doesn't speak much Hebrew. What little he knows comes from his 4-year-old nephew, Marc, who attends the Sarah and Irving Pitt Child Development Center at the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit. Cherkasov flies to Israel Jan. 1. He'll be living in Nachalot, one of the old-' est sections of Jerusalem, located near the Supreme Court offices. "Some of my friends are in rabbini- cal school there," he says. "I've visited them before, and my grandfather was born in Israel. It'll be like a homecom- ing." Although the Supreme Court internship is unpaid, Cherkasov has received funding from the Clara Belfield & Henry Bates Overseas Fellowship program, which assists recent U-M law school graduates or students who have had two or more years of law study to travel abroad for study or work experience. He is realistic about the specter of violence in Israel, but refuses to let what he terms "homicide bombers" deter him. "If you don't go, you are giving in to them," he says. When he returns from Israel, Cherkasov will begin working in employment law at the Chicago offices of McGuireWoods LLP, an interna- tional law firm with offices in Kazakhstan and Belgium as well as in the United States. Sometime in the future, he hopes to attend rabbinical school — but not right away. "There are enough amazing rabbis out there already," he says. ❑ Enjoying family life before he flies of to Jerusalem, Bernard Cherkasov relaxes with father, Gregory, mother, Malika, and 4-year-old nephew, Marc. EST BLOOMFIELD* MICHIGAN, Orchard Lake Road • North of Maple 2q8) 851-7727 792200 °nor vottr loved ones ivith a JNF Tree for aningittl gift for any occasfo Available at the jelvish.com Store. rwwjewisit coin 12/26 2003 13