FEDERATION'S MICHIGAN MIRACLE/ • • ` — 'v," /11=I April 18-28, 2004 Israel Bound Michigan Miracle Mission takes o on Sunday. Marion Alflen looks at Judaica at her Southfield home. SHARON LUCKERMAN Staff Writer Ea anion Alflen of Southfield plans to make aliyah in two years when she's 85. She's one of 573 travelers on Federation's Michigan Miracle Mission 4 from April 18-28, the largest mission to Israel from any sin- gle community this year. It's Alflen's chance to get closer to her dream and to visit her sister, who lives on Kibbutz Ein D'Or in the upper Galilee. As young girls in Vienna, Alflen and her younger sister, Susie Margalit, escaped Hitler's armies on the "kinder transport." Amazingly, they were reunited with their parents in England and came to the United States in 1939. Margalit, a Zionist, went to Israel illegally in early 1948 with other Detroiters and established Kibbutz Ein D'Or, where Alflen hopes to join her. Michigan Miracle Mission 4, cosponsored by the Detroit Jewish News and Michigan Board of Rabbis, is attracting all kinds of people: from honeymooners to those celebrating anniversaries and birthdays to fami- lies sharing their first taste of Israel together to those who want to sup- port the Jewish state. Among the 13 buses will be groups formed by synagogue members who will travel together with a member of their clergy. Several groups of young adults, including those participating in a Camp Tamarack reunion and B'nai Brith Youth Organization (BBYO) advisers, also are traveling on the mission. The recent killing of Sheik Ahmed Yassin in Gaza has not deterred this determined group from its travels, says Sally Krugel, mission director. With such a wide variety of people with varied Israel experiences travel- ing together, the planners came up with special interest tracks to satisfy everyone. For someone like Alflen, who has always been interested in history and who found a 13th-century BCE coin on a prior visit to Israel, one track offers the chance of a lifetime — to participate in an archeological dig. Visitors can choose from 10 other itineraries, includ- ing visiting cultural and his- torical sites to learning more about volunteerism in Israel — which includes more than 20,000 non-profit and non-governmental organiza- Krugel tions as well as individual and corporate philanthropy. The most popular track, Krugel says, is "Hiking Through the Bible," which takes people to biblical sites and nature preserves. Also popular are "Israel 101" and "A Cultural Journey," which includes a visit to the Bezalel Academy for Art and Architecture in Jerusalem, the Cameri Theater in Tel Aviv and the Susan Delal Center for a dance ses- sion with the Bat Sheva dance troupe. Another highlight will be the lega- cy of Detroit giving and building in Israel. Places like the Ethan and Marla Davidson Center in Jerusalem Archeological Park, the Tali-Frankel School, the Hermelin ORT School of Engineering, Friends of Alyn Hospital, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Weizmann Institute of Science and the Irwin Green School in Nazareth. Younger mission-goers will cele- brate the tradition of giving and vol- unteerism. The 10 advisers and three staff members of BBYO are going on the mission courtesy of Federation's Blumenstein Millennium Fund and the BBYO Cook Endowment, which will pay for those who have been advisers for three years. "I'm looking forward to going back and sharing this trip with friends," says Emily Weiss, 23, of Waterford, vice president of the BBYO Advisors Association. "It's important to go because it's our his- tory. It's important for a tourism presence there and for people to see we're not afraid to be in Israel." El 4/16 2004 17