EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK Finding Meaning t is a small, nondescript hospital situated in a lower- income town in north Israel, far in distance and demo- graphics from big cities like Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. But the HaEmek Medical Center, almost in defiance of Mideast politics, is where Jews and Arabs work together to improve living standards for all in the Central Galilee, Michigan Jewry's partner region. The 74-year-old hospital is in Afula, a growing, culturally diverse city of 150,000 in the Jezreel Valley. The Christian Arab city of Nazareth is nearby. The Jezreel Valley combines with two neighboring Jewish areas, Nazareth Illit and Migdal HaEmek, to make up the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit-Jewish Agency for Israel's Partnership 2000 region. The 10-year- old partnership strives to inspire business, learning and cultural exchanges, some of which are more successful than others. HaEmek Medical Center is no pretender: Even soldiers are treated there. The hospital dispenses care under Dr. ROBERT A. Orna Blondheim, the first and only female SKLAR director of a major hospital in Israel. She's Editor just as likely to observe an Israeli Arab sur- geon treat a Jew victim- ized by terror as she is a Jewish ER physician examine a Palestinian child . from Jenin, a West Bank terrorist breed- ing ground. There's zero tolerance for hate under - her watch. "Everyone is treated here equally," she told Israeli writer Shlomo Stephens, who sent me his engrossing interview. "People leave their political views at the door because our teams of doctors are mixed." Talk about a striking juxtaposition. I read about Dr. Blondheim, who Stephens aptly called a medical pioneer, against the backdrop of the July 11 blast of a bomb lurking in weeds by Tel Aviv's old central bus station. Army Sgt. Maayan Naim, 19, of Bat Yam died in the blast and at least 30 more were hurt as Dan Bus 26 left a stop at 7 a.m. Still a teenager for God's sake, she was en route to her base at Tel Hashomer. This first terrorist attack in Israel since March 14 came two days after the United Nations' International Court of Justice, with only the U.S. judge dissenting, ruled that Israel's anti-ter- ror barrier was illegal and a land grab — and a violation of Palestinian human rights. The nonbinding ruling denounces the barrier and seeks reparations, but inexplicably neglects Israel's right to impede West Bank suicide bombers. Yes the barrier is negotiable, but only if Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat truly wants peace. It's revealing that the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades of his Fatah faction took credit for the Sunday bombing, hardly coincidental to Friday's ruling. Rachel Kapen of West Bloomfield rode Bus 26 during a three-week Israel visit that ended Monday. Palestinian moder- ates should take heed of what she heard on Israeli TV. Israeli Arab Sammy Masrawa of Jaffa had just stepped off the bus when the bomb, reinforced with ball bearings and bolts, was somehow detonated. Sharpnel tore into a leg, but he managed to hobble over to Naim and tried to help. He now backs the barrier. Masrawa, who advocates coexistence, also survived a 1995 bus bombing in Tel Aviv. He told the Jerusalem Post, "The Palestinians are stupid for what they're doing. They're not achieving anything and in the end, they will only turn us Israeli Arabs against them. " Away And Back Dr. Blondheim honed her medical skills as a pediatrician in both Israel and America. Stops included Shaare Zedek Hospital in Jerusalem and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. She and her husband, David, a New York-born cardiologist, then sought to "practice medicine in the periphery, in places where we really would be needed," while making Judaism res- onate for their four kids. So they helped settle Mitzpe Netufa, a small religious community in the Galilee near Tiberias. Later, Orna Blondheim worked with newborns at HaEmek Medical Center, rising to deputy director. In 2002, she reluc- tantly left for Schneider Children's Hospital near Tel Aviv to break through the glass ceiling and become the director. Sadly, gender equality is still the exception in Israel. But that could change. Almost 50 percent of Israel's medical students are women, up 40 percent since Dr. Blondheim's student days. Credit Clalit, the Israeli HMO that owns HaEmek, with believing in the good doctor so early. In 2003, Dr. Blondheim returned to HaEmek as director, succeeding Clalit's new chief executive. She's quick to urge the government to step up and better HaEmek services. Her gumption is welcomed in a state that has lost at least 980 lives to Islamic terrorists over the past 45 months. "Yes, we have terrific physicians here," she told Stephens, but the people of the region "deserve to have the same access to specialized medicine as the average medical center offers to patients in Jerusalem or Tel Aviv." She also said that if the government wants more Jews to settle up north, it must create jobs, enrich educational opportunities and begin to meet HaEmek needs, "such as a radiation Blondheim center, which we are lacking just as the number of cancer cases is on the rise." Resigned to Israel's dire financial straits, Dr. Blondheim knows it'll take years to find enough mega donors to generate up to $100 million to realize her dream of a modern, fully equipped hospital. Meanwhile, she tells of three "modest" goals. "We need to revamp our fertility unit; update our delivery room, because at the moment it's old and overcrowded; and we need to seriously upgrade our gastroenterology depart- ment, which has excellent doctors, but not enough room or enough new equipment," she told Stephens. I think back to Sgt. Naim, who was buried Sunday. The logistics corps officer had gone home to a Tel Aviv suburb for Shabbat two days before. She arrived in time to sing Lecha Dodi with her mother, Mazal, and four siblings. Kiddush came after her father, Chaim, arrived home from minyan. Sgt. Naim, who so looked forward to traveling and resum- ing her studies, was a year from being discharged. "It's impossible to describe how this girl, such a beautiful flower, leaves home in the morning and does not return to her family," family friend Liron Aruch told Israeli Army Radio. Dr. Blondheim didn't know Sgt. Naim. But their lives intersected in striving for a strong, undeni- able Jewish state that still touches non-Jewish citizens in pro- foundly meaningful ways. ❑ 271 WEST MAPLE DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM 248.258.0212 Monday-Saturday 1 0 6 Thursday 10-9 Sunday 12-5 - kIN 7/16 2004 5