Israel Advocate JNF to honor grocer Jim Hiller. im Hiller, owner of Hiller's Markets, will receive the Jewish National Fund's Tree of Life Award for his unwavering sup- port of Israel and Jewish causes. JNF will recognize Hiller at an award dinner at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield on May 17. Hiller began his connection to JNF by putting his coins in a Blue Box as a child. Hiller has made a major gift to JNF for the building of the HaSolelim C Reservoir in the Lower Galilee, a reservoir adopted by the Detroit Jewish community. The area serves both Arab and Jewish citizens in communities that include the ancient towns of Tsipori, Nazareth and Nazareth Illit, the last of which is a partner city of Detroit Jewry. Hiller also formed and endowed the PFUND (Program for Understanding Neurological Disease) at the University of Michigan School of Medicine in Ann Arbor to research and find treatments for neurological diseases such as Lou Gehrig's disease and Diabetic Neuropathy. "The best thing that happened to me as an Israeli was that I met a guy like Jim Hiller who is so devoted to Israel. We clicked immediately and are like brothers now," said Kami Robinson, JNF's Israeli emissary to Michigan. Hiller will travel to Israel this summer to attend the wedding of Robinson's son and see the reservoir along with other JNF projects. Targeted by anti-Israel activists, who picketed and called upon the communi- ty to boycott his grocery stores, Hiller took ads in the local press declaring his refusal to be intimidat- ed by their actions and announcing even more con- tributions to Israel. In an attempt to bolster the Israeli economy, Hiller began carrying large numbers of Israeli products in his stores, includ- ing many fruits, vegetables, packaged goods and cheeses never before pres- ent in the Midwest. "This is not about me. What this is about is how far Jewish people will allow themselves to be pushed. We may have soft edges, but we have a hard core," said Hiller. "When I was told I must reject my heritage and abandon Israel, there was no deci- sion to make; there was an immedi- ate and seminal response. We all know when it's time to dig in and get tough and the time had come. It's not as though I thought about this and wondered, What do I have to lose here?' I knew what I had to do and I did it." The Detroit native is a graduate of the University of Detroit Law School and successfully practiced law for two decades before entering the fam- ily business founded by his father in 1941. Hiller received the Friend of Israel Award from Yeshivat Akiva in Southfield, as well as the Jane L. Cobb Promise Award from the Juvenile Diabetes Association in 2004. Hiller was surprised to learn of a specific connection to JNF when Robinson explained to him that the roses he imports from Sde Nitzan, a hothouse in the Israel's northern Negev Desert, was actually a project donated by the Chicago Region of Jewish National Fund. Hiller regu- larly adds new Israeli products as they are approved for sale in the United States. Hiller believes his stance against anti-Semitism will have a broader effect on young Jews. "These are issues that can cause young Jews to galvanize and stand up for their identity and know that we have our own internal boundaries," he said. "We are proud to be Jews, and we cannot let the world define who we are and what we are." 0 11-1111 Israel Conference Daylong academic symposium to look at social and political issues. Ann Arbor Foreign policy, media, political and aca- demic experts will address the fourth annual University of Michigan Israel Academic Conference on Sunday, March 13, in Ann Arbor, a daylong symposium expected to draw hundreds of participants from across the Midwest. Keynote speakers include Dennis Ross, President Bill Clinton's chief Mideast negotiator; Walid Shoebat, a former PLO terrorist; and Husain Haqqani, a leading Pakistani journalist and adviser to former Pakistani prime ministers. Haqqani will discuss Islamic funda- mentalism and the impact of the Palestinian elections. Shoebat will share his personal insights as a former PLO operative who now travels advocating on behalf of Israel. Ambassador Ross will conclude the program with perspectives on negotiating Israel's future. Coordinated by students under the auspices of U-M Hillel with_ student organizers Megan Martin and Naama Yaron, the conference is co-sponsored by the American Movement for Israel, American Israel Public Affairs Committee, American Jewish Committee, Hasbara Fellowships and Jewish Mothers of Michigan Student, a group supporting efforts to combat anti- Israel propaganda. Breakout sessions will focus on social and political issues in Israel and the Mideast. The documentary Relentless, on the Oslo years and Arafat's terror cam- paign, will be shown with a talkback led by Andre Douville, regional representa- tive of Honest Reporting, the media watch group that produced the film. Sessions include Capt. Jacob Dallal, deputy spokesman for the IDF, "The Media as Shaper of the Conflict" and "Evolution of the Conflict;" Dr. Mitchell Bard, foreign policy analyst, "Will There Ever Be Peace?" and "Myths and Facts about the Arab-Israeli Conflict;" Dror Elner, emissary to the Zionsit Organization of America, will discuss human rights in the Palestinian Authority., American Israel Public Affairs Committee representative Lauren Slawsky and Hasbara campus coordina- tor Natalie Lascar will lead sessions on pro-Israel college and political advocacy. Admission is free to U-M students and faculty-, $20 for other students; and $40 for the public. To register online www.umisraelconference.com or call conference organizers Megan Martin and Naama Yaron, (734) 657-1280. SN 3/10 2005 55