r vl e tro Mark Segel in his Sar-El service uniform Walk Proudly Independence Day walk ends with Israel Festival at Shir Shalom this Sunday. D etroit Jewry's once- popular Walk for Israel will return this Sunday thanks to the grassroots efforts of a local resident eager to show support for Israel and inspire pride in the Jewish community in celebration of Israel's birthday. The Israel Independence Day Walk will take place this Sunday, May 7, four days after Yom HaAtzmaut, which this year fell on May 3 (5 Iyar). The entire Jewish community is invited to participate in the walk on Sunday afternoon at no charge. "It is a way to honor Israel and Judaism, and to make us feel good about ourselves as Jews and about our homeland:' said Mark Segel, walk organizer. The Southfield insurance agent/financial adviser added, "I hope to recapture the public display of pride that the Jewish community has in Israel." The West Bloomfield walk will start at 1 p.m. from Temple Shir Shalom on the southeast corner of Orchard Lake and Walnut Lake roads. It will head west along the sidewalk as far as Temple Kol Ami (1'/d miles), then return to Shir Shalom for an Israel Festival. The Congregation Shaarey Zedek West Bloomfield, B'nai Israel Center will serve as a shorter turnaround point. The 3 p.m. festival will feature Israeli music, dancing and singing. Rest stops will include Keter Torah Synagogue, B'nai Israel and the West Bloomfield Library and Police Department. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee will sponsor a free kosher picnic lunch from Jerusalem Pizza at 12:30 p.m. Event sponsors include Shir Shalom, Temple Israel, Adat Shalom Synagogue, Shaarey Zedek, Young Israel of Southfield, the Israel Chai Committee of Temple Beth El, StandWithUs- Michigan, Hillel Day School, B'nai B'rith Great Lakes Region, Greater Detroit Chapter of Hadassah, the Jewish Federation, the Jewish Community Center, the Jewish Community Council, the Jewish Academy and the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA). Segel contacted Shir Shalom about the walk idea in March. "The staff thought it was a great idea;' Rabbi Dannel Schwartz said. "With Israel Independence Day, let's make May 'Israel Month.'" Segel's,.organizing team includes Andre Douville, execu- tive director of Shir Shalom; Linda Stulberg, a founder of the Michigan chapter of StandWithUs; and Don Cohen, who chairs the B'nai B'rith Great Lakes Region's Enlighten America project. "Anything we can do to bring people together to support Israel in a positive way is significant;' said Rabbi Michael Moskowitz of Shir Shalom. "Having a rally like this in our community tran- scends politics. It is saying that we love Israel and what is going on in Israel today must be a pri- ority for us as American Jews?' Said Stulberg: "We hope this walk signals to our com- munity and to the larger metro area our affirmation of pride in and celebration of the remarkably valiant and vibrant young nation that is our Jewish heart and homeland. This expres- sion of unity with Israel is now more important than ever, given the chilling existential threats to her existence from Iran, Hamas and too many other hateful coun- tries and ideologies?' Federation held Israel walks for many years each spring with attendance reaching a few thousand before beginning to dwindle. The last walk was held in 2001 although Federation and other community organiza- tions have held various Yom HaAtzmaut celebrations since then. Segel is active in the ZOA. A 2003 volunteer opportunity on an Israeli army base through the nonprofit organization Sar-El deepened his commitment to Israel. Last Sept. 11, he worked with Rabbi Alon Tolwin of Aish Detroit as well as Andre Douville, Linda Stulberg and Andrea Gonik of West Bloomfield to host Walid Shoebat, a Palestinian ex-terrorist who now advocates for Israel and condemns any form of terror. In March, Segel brought Kenneth Levin, author of Oslo Syndrome: Delusions of a People Under Siege, to speak before the Z(Vs Metro Detroit chapter. "I believe that reading his book and bringing him here motivated me even further to consider a celebration for Israel on Independence Day:' he said. Segel hopes the walk becomes annual. The walk is not a fund- raiser although it could evolve into that, he said. Lone Pine Rd W+E WBHS *= Synagogue Reststops School Parking Bnai Israel Green School Walnut Lk Rd u p Doherty Temple Israel Keter Torah Kol Am Shir Shalom Orchard Lk R d Robert A. Sklar Editor Maple Rabbi Moskowitz first went to Israel at age 11."I felt as if I had fulfilled something very impor- tant to my identity, something nurtured in my home, my temple and my community',' he said. • "If we create that kind of spirit, that kind of connection, to Israel for our community;' the rabbi added, "then we have created something truly wonderful?' JN Staff Writer Harry Kirsbaum con- tributed to this report. To attend the community lunch on Sunday, call Mark Segel: (248) 208-2773. You can park at Temple Shir Shalom, Doherty Elementary School east of Shir Shalom, and West Bloomfield High School north of Shir Shalom on Orchard Lake Road. 'Celebrate Israel' in Ann Arbor The Jewish Community Center of Washtenaw County, 2939 Birch Hollow, Ann Arbor, will host an Israel celebration from 1-4:30 p.m Sunday, May 7. it Will feature inter- active booths, games and activities as well as Israeli dancing, singing and entertainment. Performers will include the Ann Arbor Hebrew Day School litezKids, the Jewish Musical Ensemble and Temple Beth Emeth's Adult and Children's- choirs. The sponsoring organizations worked for weeks on a giant mura called "Israel Through the Decade (1948-2006)," which will be dis- played. The cost to take part is $5 per person or $10 per family (two or more). To register, visit jewishannarbor.orgkelebrate or call (734) 677-0100. I May 4 9 2006 15