I icc maccabi 1pla.CAM I LES. Maccabi Games 2008 ON THE COVER www.2008detroltorg Ready To Roll! from page A17 Alissa Graff, 16, of Huntington Woods Madame Director You're about to be stranded on a des- ert island for two years and you're only allowed to bring one item. Take plenty of fresh water. And if you're only allowed to bring one person, bring Karen Gordon. As director of the 2008 JCC Maccabi Games in Detroit, Karen has a seemingly impossible job: organizing hundreds of volunteers, thousands of athletes, dozens of sporting venues, working with lay leaders and profes- sionals, overseeing everything having to do with the Games from securing the location for opening ceremonies (the Palace of Auburn Hills) to making certain athletes have enough water. So she's resourceful and organized. She's also direct and generous with her compliments. And she loves cook- ing. Gordon's introduction to Maccabi came in 1984, when her parents hosted athletes at the first Games to be held in Detroit. Two years later, she was coaching a girls' volleyball team and, in 1989, she was a juniors chaper- one with the USA Maccabiah team in Israel. In 1999, she became a Detroit delegation head and now she's Games director. "Karen had shown herself to be a very successful staff member, running the Center's charity golf tournament and the Maccabi team," said JCC Executive Director Mark A. Lit. "We were thrilled to have the opportu- nity to expand her responsibilities to include hosting these Games." "Karen is really the perfect person for this enormous job," added JCC Assistant Executive Director David Stone. "She's committed to JCC Maccabi, plus she's organized, inspir- ing and she's got a great sense of SPECIAL EVENTS THE VENUES Geoff Kretchmer Jesse Polan IN-KIND HELP Mort Plotnick In-Kind Help There are very few people in the United States who have been involved with Maccabi longer than Mort Plotnick, former executive director of the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit. He helped put the idea together for the inaugural JCC Maccabi Games in Memphis in 1982. He pushed to bring the second Games to Detroit in 1984 and pushed again for 1990, when few cities wanted to host the Games. Hugh Greenberg, active at the Detroit JCC and with the national Jewish Community Centers Association, was the first continental chairman. 'At that point:' Plotnick says, "the Games were held every two years, and Chicago in 1998 had lost $125,000 hosting the Games." Plotnick created a fundraising model for 1990 that has been adapted and used by every Maccabi host city since. He reached an agreement with Coca-Cola to be a continen- tal sponsor, which the company continues annually, and has recruited other national and local corporate sponsors. Financial and in-kind contributions total $2 million for next week's Games. Plotnick says Jewish communities host- ing the JCC Maccabi Games have found a common experience: "It brings in people not normally part of the organized Jewish com- munity. That's the strength of the Games." The JCC Maccabi Games have changed over the years. Multiple sites now serve as hosts — including San Diego last week and Akron this week — and participation has grown. Detroit alone will host teens next week from 59 communities, including Israel, Great Britain, Hungary, Mexico, Venezuela and Canada. "There are so many kids, no one commu- nity wants to take it on," Plotnick says:And school schedules are different in the North and South. By breaking it up, smaller com- munities can hose.' Travel expenses have made the Games costly for participants today. Last year, before fuel expenses rocketed skyward, it cost close to $1,000 to send Detroit athletes to the Los Angeles Maccabi. Plotnick says the teens get a lot for their money, "but it's very expensive' On the other hand, the Games provide a mutt-million dollar boost to the local economy. humor." "I love what I'm doing," Gordon says. "I love watching Jewish kids from all over the world meet. For some, it will be the most exposure to Judaism they have. The fact that the kids are social- izing and working with each other is so much more important than who wins. Once you Karen Gordon experience the Games, you're hooked. "So I love what it stands for – but it's also really fun." As Maccabi nears, it's pretty much the Games 24 hours a day for Karen. A month ago, she had lost 25 pounds despite her office in the JCC being piled with boxes of water bottles, pret- JEWISH INPUT Sally Krugel ❑ zels ... and volleyballs. Except Thursday nights. Don't ask Karen for Thursday night; that's when she plays softball. And Friday nights are reserved for Shabbat dinner with her mother, husband Vernon and their two children. Gordon also likes fix- ing weekday dinner: Mexican food and fish sticks (from scratch) are favorites. She'll often try recipes from her favor- ite magazine, Cooking Light. But not lately, with Maccabi. "I've got a few issues to catch up on," she says. - Elizabeth Applebaum