World Congratulations to our Crystal Rose Award awardees OUTSTANDING VOLUNTEER SANFORD J. LINDEN OUTSTANDING INDIVIDUAL Blockade Runners EDWARD DEEB OUTSTANDING COMMUNITY PARTNERS U.S. sailors who brought survivors to pre-state Palestine share stories. BLUE CARE NETWORK OF MICHIGAN HEALTH ALLIANCE PLAN THE JEWISH FUND 0 V HOSPICE of michigan HOSPICE OF MICHIGAN'S 23RD ANNUAL CRYSTAL ROSE BALL • SEPT. 26, 2008 • WWW.HOM.ORG 1435460 How Well Is Your Investment Strategy Working For You? If you're dissatisfied, we can offer a solution. Murray Greenfield, right, and Harold Katz, center, with a group of American If you've been buffeted by the turbulence of the market, perhaps you should re-evaluate your strategy. A professionally designed portfolio may help. sailors on Cyprus in 1947 after their ship was captured by the British. Dina Kraft Jewish Telegraphic Agency Learn how. Tel Aviv Paul A. Harris, Financial Advisor 0 Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. 325 North Old Woodward Avenue Suite 370 Birmingham, MI 48009 (248) 593-3742 • (800) 422-2820 paul.harris@opco.com OPPENHEINIElk Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. is a Member of All Principal Exchanges and Member SIPC. 1424650 Clean + Sober 2 Words. 12 Steps. 30 Days. = A New Start srJoHN BRIGHTON HOSPITAL Chemical Dependency and Dual Diagnosis Residential Treatment Michigan'S first and most experienced addiction treatment facility. For a confidential assessment call: 1-800-523-8198 Visit us on the web at www.brightonhospital.org 1:CrvaA5 A60 September 25 • 2008 mi ne by one, until they num- bered more than a thousand, they clambered up the bob- bing rope and twine that God-fearing sailors centuries ago dubbed Jacob's Ladder. It was Italy, May 1947. A bottomless sea lay below, a dark night sky above. The Jewish refugees finally were leaving Europe and the ashes of the Holocaust. They only had the bags on their backs and the will to climb, rung by rung. "Don't lose your footing! Don't get blown off?" They climbed higher and higher. Out of the darkness came pairs of hands and shouts of "Kumarof!" — "Come on!" in Yiddish. Jewish sail- ors from America — "Imagine, Jewish sailors from America!" the refugees marveled — were reaching down and pulling them up over the sides of a ship called "Hope," Hatikvah. "It was like a miracle',' said Irit Avriel, one of those refugees, her face lighting up with the memory six decades later. "For us, they were not just sailors; they were angels." More than 32,000 Jewish refugees from Europe, just over half of the total 60,000 who came to pre-state Palestine, were brought over by North American sailors — most of them young Jewish men who served at sea during World War II. They were part of a clandestine operation known as Aliyah Bet, which included the famed Exodus ship. At a gathering last year for pas- sengers of Hatikvah hosted by one of those Jewish sailors, the young people who had climbed the rope ladder to freedom so many years ago were full of questions for the two former sailors who came to share their stories. "How were you recruited? Why did you leave America to do this? When did you know about the camps?" they asked. The Jewish ex-sailors spoke about their own European relatives and the obligation they felt to help after the Holocaust. A new documentary film about North American Jewish sailors from the Aliyah Bet operation, Waves of Freedom, which was shown at the Jerusalem Film Festival this summer, is scheduled to come soon to Jewish film festivals in the United States. In late 1946, word had gone out in the streets of U.S. cities that young Jewish men with sailing experi- ence were needed to help smuggle Holocaust survivors across the Mediterranean to Palestine. The mis- Blockade on page A62