Waging Peace Seeds of Peace film shows the pain of learning coexistence in a combative world. DIANA LIEBERMAN Special to the Jewish News T he July 2002 session at Seeds of Peace International Camp in Otisfield, Maine, was not going well. Teens from the two major areas of conflict invited to the three-week ses- sion — the Middle East and India- Pakistan — did not seem CO be bond- ing as completely as in past years. The preceding spring had seen an escalation in violence in the Middle East, with a surge in suicide bombings and the resulting lock-down at Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's head- quarters. Afghanistan was under heavy aerial bombardment in a fruitless search for Osama Bin Laden, while a build-up of troops at the border between India and Pakistan led to fears of imminent nuclear war. And, as the non-profit, non-political Seeds of Peace camp began its 10th year, its beloved founder, John Wallach, lay dying in a hospital bed. Filmmaker Marjan Safinia was on hand to record it all. Her 92-minute documentary, Seeds, was aired Dec. 13 at the Birmingham 8 Theatre, raising about $250,000 for Seeds of Peace and its worldwide activ- ities. Florine Mark, co-president of the Seeds of Peace Detroit Chapter, called the movie "breathtaking." "It gave me chills," Mark said. "It said exactly what we are trying to say, that there is hope for us through these young people. " Bloomfield Hills' Gil Silverman, who chaired the Dec. 13 event with his wife, Lila, spoke of his visits to the Seeds Center in East Jerusalem, which works year-round on the concepts of mutual respect and cooperation epito- mized by the camp. "What we're trying to do through this organization is have a long-range effect on eventual peace," Silverman said. "I've given up on my generation, on my kids' generation; it's my grand- children's generation where peace will be waged." The film was not financed or cen- sored by Seeds of Peace officials or by anyone else. Unscripted, it shows campers airing some ugly stereotypes and giving way to raw emotions. Yet, by its bittersweet ending, the very kids who were shouting words of hatred are pulling together on the same side of traditional camp color wars and admitting that, yes, the "other" has a right to a country, a right to exist. In the film, Seeds' camp director Tim Wilson tells his campers they have a choice — they can sit down and talk together or they can continue fighting. Michigan Seeds of Peace Chapter co-chairs Tim Attalla of Northville and. Florine Mark of Farmington Hills receive the Community Leadership Award from Seeds of Peace President Aaron David Millet: Brad Simmons, director of the Office of the Chairman and CEO at Ford Motor Company, talks with Dustin Frankel, 18, of Cleveland about the teen's experiences at Seeds of Peace camp. "This is the hard solution," Wilson says. "Killing, bombing people is the easy solution." Points Of View Seeds of Peace has been featured in the New York Times, USA Today, Washington Post, Time magazine, Christian Science Monitor, Wall Street Journal and People magazine as well as on television programs Nightline, 60 Minutes, Today Show and Good Morning America. Since its 1993 beginnings, the organization has received full support of every United States president and every Israel prime minister. The gov- ernments of more than 22 countries have actively supported Seeds, select- ing young people from its high schools to attend the camp's three-week ses- sions. In 2003, the U.S. House of Representatives unanimously passed a resolution honoring the organization. As shown in the documentary, one Palestinian teen at a no-holds-barred coexistence session of campers from the Middle East did ask belligerently why Israelis don't return to wherever they came from. Meanwhile, at an Indian/Pakistani coexistence session, an Indian teen said Pakistanis were money-grubbing. ), In both cases, teens from the oppos- ing area of conflict were quick to point out the fallacies in the other's reasoning. Among the 150 people at the Birmingham 8 were numerous former Seeds of Peace campers. Each is known as a Seed. University of Michigan student Amy Witt, 19, originally of Chicago, said attending the camp made her "feel more aware of being a Jew, more aware of the importance of Israel." Seeds camp can have this effect on people, agreed Seed Shira Kaplan of Herzliya, now 21. "It actually has two diverse effects," Kaplan said. "It can make you feel stronger and it can make you feel challenged." "So they [people who criticize Seeds for encouraging Jews to question Israel] have a grain of truth. It could be true for one or two. "But most people go back to their home country re-affirmed in their national identity, and committed to being one of those who sits down and talks, not one of those who throws stones." (( WAGING PEACE on page 12 ILO 12/24 2004 11