World Visions Of Hope D. Dan Kahn honored for his support of ORT school. A Jewish philanthropist from Bloomfield Hills contributed $500,000 to Women's American ORT to renovate the ORT Yad Lvovich Comprehensive High School in Netanya, Israel. The school, which was established in 1949 and has 1,500 students will now include the D. Dan and Betty Kahn Science Building. Kahn is founder of Production Tool Supply in Warren. His late wife, Betty, mother of four and grandmother of seven, died in June 2004. Kahn has dedicated his energy and financial resources to ORT and other Jewish causes, including the Technion- Israel Institute of Technology, where he serves on the national board, and the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit, whose West Bloomfield building is named for him and Betty. His support extends to the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit as a Millennium Campaign donor. He is past chairman of the Metro Detroit Israel Bond Campaign. "While my professional success may have been obtained in the tool indus- try," Kahn says, "if there is one tool that enables an individual to rise above his circumstances, it is educa- tion." This year, Women's American ORT Michigan Region honored Kahn for his longstanding leadership and sup- port of the global ORT program. He was cited at the annual Visions of Hope event on May 3. "D. Dan Kahn is the personification of the ORT mission: overcoming severe financial hardship, striving to Behind The Mk News anchor strives to tell. DON COHEN Special to the Jewish News A ITN 5/12 2005 38 aron Brown wanted to talk to the 250 people at the Women's American ORT 6th annual "Visions of Hope" event just as much as they wanted to hear the Emmy Award-winning anchor of CNN NewsNight. CNN's lead anchor of breaking news and special events was the fea- tured speaker at ORT's strolling din- ner and program on May 3 celebrat- ing D. Dan Kahn's many business and philanthropic achievements and his recent contribution to establish the D. Dan and Betty Kahn Science Building on ORT's Lvovich campus in Netanya, Israel. The event was held in the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield that bears the Kahn name. Brown told the group his wife said, "It's about time," when he told her he would be speaking to a Jewish service agency. CNN has a policy, with which he disagrees, that prevents news staff from talking to groups related to what they cover. "I think we should talk with any- one and everyone who cares about what we do. In truth, I miss talking to you all," he said, referring to the Jewish community. "I am part of you all. It is important to see me as a person, not just someone on TV." He explained that he wanted to talk about the "glorious and fun," but first needed to tell about the "difficult and personal." "There is no group harder on me than organized Jewish groups," Brown said. "This is not true of Jews generally; they embrace me and there is pride. But some of the nastiest mail I get is from members of organized Jewish groups. They want me to be something I can't be. They want me to be the Jewish anchorman. I am an anchorman who is Jewish." The friction surrounds coverage of Israel. "The story from the Mideast is a horribly complicated business," he said. "Too many times people on both sides don't believe the other side has a story to tell." Brown's straightforward and per- sonal approach was well received May 3, but some audience members didn't learn, working hard to achieve success and ultimately giving back to the community that inspired him," his children — Patti Aaron, Mark Kahn, and Andi and Larry Wolfe, chairs of the honorary committee of the Visions of Hope event — said in a statement. D. Dan Kahn's gift to Women's American ORT helps to reno- vate and refurbish Yad Lvovich, which was one of ORT's first schools in Israel. The school is a hodgepodge of edifices erected over the years. Some can be renovated; others must be replaced. Yad Lvovich students have always included new immigrants and Israelis from disadvantaged backgrounds, all of whom require more attention than they could receive in other schools. The continuing challenge has been to impart skills so these students can thrive in Israel's ever-evolving econo- my. Yad Lvovich's curriculum focuses on computer programming, elec- trical system design, environ- mental studies, tourism and the humanities. It has 1,500 students in seventh grade through high school. Yad Lvovich's infrastructure is dated and Netanya, where Kahn the school is located, has been a frequent target of terrorists. Some funds directed toward the school infrastructure had to be diverted to provide for the students' welfare. ORT Israel has made a commitment to upgrade Yad Lvovich. World ORT pledged $20 million to cover the costs. Yad Lvovich is one of ORT's 237 schools in 100 countries. It is estimat- ed that 25 percent of Israel's work- force has attended an ORT school. Women's American ORT anticipates providing major support for the cam- paign for ORT Yad Lvovich. ORT's Michigan Regional Office can be reached at (248) 723-8860. ❑ buy his equating Israel and uzz mistakenly ended up in St. the Palestinians. Paul instead of St. Louis, "The Jews, with all of the and how his favorite place in suffering across the ages, New York is Ellis Island have never made statements because "you don't get a to kill a people that they piece of your own life until disagreed with," said Larry you get it," Brown told Snider of Southfield, who about a CNN segment he also didn't agree that the Aaron Brown did in 2003 about Rachel Palestinians deserve an equal Zelon. voice in the news. "If he Zelon is "not especially reli- reports both sides, he should lead gious but has an overwhelming sense with the point that the Palestinians' of her Jewish identity," said Brown, goal is to kill the Jews and take it describing her as he might describe from there. himself. Zelon, the vice president of program operations for the New York-based Hebrew Immigrant Aid Giving Voice Society, had been in Iraq on a mis- Brown's reading of Jewish history and sion to rescue the remaining 10 or the values he got from his family and 12 elderly Iraqi Jews. At the end of rabbi in St. Paul, Minn., compel him Brown's segment, he showed a 90- not to silence the stories that people year-old man Zelon brought to Israel tell. talking by cell phone to a woman he "Think for a moment how differ- had fallen in love with. ent our history would be if all those Brown proudly described the story, times we were oppressed and hurt, which he reported on CNN, as his in the worst of those moments, we most powerful story in 30 years." had no voice, no one heard us," he "There is a war going on, it's insane said. "I will not be the person who over there, people are being kid- denies a voice to those who have no napped and bombs are going off, and power." Zelon is going door to door to find "It is a fundamental Jewish value," these people," he said admiringly. Brown insisted. And non-negotiable. "One courageous person can make "If you want the rest of the package an enormous difference. They can't you need to accept that from me." solve every problem, but they can After telling how his maternal change the world." Russian immigrant grandparents " ❑