em ii IL11.11 F W Respect The Holidays East Lansing s a senior at Michigan State University, I have been exposed to what Judaism means to the good majority of my generation. Every year, I have gone home for the High Holidays even though I would be missing classes. Not once have I gone to school on the days of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. When I am at my synagogue, however, many of the students I know are conspicuous by their absence at services. Granted, there are students not able to get home. But there are Hillel A houses and synagogues near most schools in Michigan for students to pray. It is inexcus- able for students to stay up at school and actually go to class. The High Holidays are the most important days of the Jewish There's no excuse for students who go to classes instead of services. exam on one of the year. What is sadder is days of the holidays, that many students skip but I am making it classes on other days up afterward. for lesser reasons. Universities must Unfortunately, a good accommodate for majority of my peers do the various reli- not share my views gious beliefs of stu- about the importance of Daniel Fischer dents on campuses; the High Holidays. I Community to not even try tak- know someone who View ing an alternate "accidentally" planned a exam or reschedule group presentation on a presentation the first day of Rosh speaks volumes Hashanah. I heard about how much some students another student say an exam respect their own religion. could not be missed. Well, I If we do not observe our have news for all the Jewish holiest days of the year, then students out there: I had an why would other people respect us? The High Holidays are the time for the Jewish people to unite as one in prayer for the repentance of our sins during the closing year. I ask all college students in the future to please stay away from classes on these holiest of days. Go to services at home or at a local synagogue or Hillel house near campus. Make these days sacred again amongst our generation. ❑ Daniel Fischer, 21, of Farmington Hills is a pre-dental senior at :- Michigan State University. 21: Remembering Katrina Ann Arbor espite the constant footage of the devastation shown on television, I see the clearest depiction of Katrina in my imagination. What I picture is a nightmarish Atlantis, submarine and mythi- cal. In my mind's eye is an underwater scene of a saxophone sadly floating past a library whose walls are furry with sea- weed. My focus jumps back and forth from the vast emptiness of an evacuated city to the impossi- ble crowding of the evacuated masses. I see disconsolate figures hud- dled in the Houston Astrodome, slumped on stadium seats. Real images I have seen on TV flicker in and out of the picture as well: a baby with languid eyes, too hungry to cry. A dead body lying solo on the side of a highway, fin- gers blackened, stomach bloated. Face exposed indecently to passersby, who aren't looking, anyway. I've found that such scenes are D need unfathomable much more potent amounts of money. I when I watch them sometimes feel at a loss with the sound turned as to how I can become off. When it's on, all I one of those people, hear are angry indict- that I'm too small and ments against those in powerless to help. power, those who Few New Orleanians failed to protect the are going to make it all citizens in their Arielle Soclof the way to charge. They declare Community Michigan to escape the death toll and View the ruins from the destruction "needless," August diaster, so I but when are such can't take in a fami- things ever necessary? ly. Any donation I could make Why do they find solace in plac- from my own pocket would ing blame? be meager. I'll give it anyway, Pointing fingers gives our but I want to be doing more. I hands something to do so that want a plan in which the peo- they don't remain idle. Idleness ple of New. Orleans can see a lets our minds wander through face across from theirs, a per- the New Orleans of our imagina- tions, lets them float past the alli- son who cares about their loss, because they haven't gators and the bodies with no seen that so far. They've been coffins. told very clearly who doesn't There are those blessed people care, and who didn't help. who have found better things to It's time to turn around and do with their hands than point, face forward, get our hands like feed the endless hordes of dirty and start helping people, take them in or write rebuild the lives of the people checks towards a cause that will of New Orleans. I'm sure I'm not alone in wish- ing that I could take my own advice literally and jump on a plane to New Orleans tomorrow. But I know that this would not be the best way to help, or the safest. I also know that there will be much more that needs to be It will be a year from now that help will be the most needed, when we have all forgotten about New Orleans in light of some new disaster or the preoccupations of our normal lives,. done even after the images of this disaster disappear from my TV screen and my conscious. It will be a year from now that help will be the most needed, when we have all forgotten about New Orleans in light of some new dis- aster, or the preoccupations of .1,-, our normal lives. My hope for myself is that I will be able to continue giving and caring long after I have ful- filled my social responsibility to do so. My hope for the nation is that it will unclench its pointing fists and reach out its hands to give to the people of New Orleans,'. the supplies, strength and sup- port they will need to make their lives whole once more. ❑ Arielle Soclof, 17, is a senior at the Jewish Academy of Metropolitan Detroit. Her interests include writ- ing, reading and ceramics. She . plans to spend a year in Israel upon graduation, following which she hopes to study journalism in college. She is the daughter of Dr. Avi and Mrs. Mindy Soclof. October 13 . 2005 ttni