Metro FEDERATION'S WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT INVITES YOU TO - . C. . STRETCH -1- CD YOUR 1-1 E L. lz:' BODY... at one of many exclusive classes for women of all ages and abilities on SUN DAY, MARCH 15 , 2009_ Appreciate Israel Ethiopian Jew embraces Zionist cause advocating for the Jewish state. 1 ST R ETC H YOUR MINI ED Art Aisner Special to the Jewish News ::.and learn about how you can change our community. . . , ,._ . STRETCH YOUR 1---i A. NI 0 .„to help those in need. ,-- /- STRETCH TO H E 1._1='...and be part of this life-changing event. There is no charge to participate in any of the Stretch to Help classes. A pledge to the Jewish Federation for 2009 is required to participate. Register online by March 2nd at http://jewishdetroit.org/stretch . Reservations will be granted on a first-come, first serve basis and you must register in advance. Call Women's Department. at • 248-642-4260 x202 for more information: THANK ycpu to participating venues for donating space, time and instruction! blIC I et:'iblY hitfcca- 6 I . ; CENTER FOR YOGA - •.- ' • * e ' "-.' ,.L.' 7441,' ' Jewish ' 21 lifA THE CENTER . ,, .! ■ , ' '''---,,, na ---- a r 1, 4=ns , • ni,,, 1 qp- 1 siterti, GYM q t !1 1 /121111 SHELTER Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detriiit WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT - 14E2440 Al2 February 26 2009 ews for centuries have pon- dered what it was like for their ancestors to wander the desert in search of the land of milk and honey. Zion Uness knows firsthand. At age 7, he was among the 8,000 Ethiopian Jews airlifted from the Sudan to Israel in Operation Moses during the famine of 1984. The remarkable journey culminated a three-year effort to reach the Holy Land, including a perilous trek across thousands of kilometers in the pun- ishing desert. His story of courage, unyielding faith and achievement is the type of inspirational message that the new Zionist Organization of America lead- ership in Michigan wants to empha- size in a fresh campaign to address a very old problem. "It's time to change the percep- tion of Israel; and through my story, I think, we as Jews, can be stronger and have a bet- ter life Uness, 31, said before receiv- ing resounding applause from more than 100 people at a Feb. 18 talk at the Max M. Fisher Federation Building in Bloomfield Township. His stop in Metro Detroit — the sec- ond since November — is part of a nationwide ZOA speaking tour to highlight Zionism's positive global impact. "Our goal this year is to show the positive light that Israel has shown to the world. We're the light unto all the nations, and that gets lost in the message somewhere," said Pamela Lipid, new executive director of the Southfield-based ZOA Michigan Region. ZOA President Beverly Baker with Zion Uness The Journey "Yerusalem, Yerusalem, Yerusalem ." His mother Osnat's words cried out in his mind with every leg-numbing step. There wasn't much time to dream while trying to survive the sweltering daytime heat and bone-chilling mid- night air of the unforgiving Sudanese wastelands. But he kept imagining what the holy city would look and pictured a pure, holy place, where people wore white cloth- ing and relished the chance to walk the same hallowed streets as the sages years earlier. Uness often flashes a wide smile while recounting his "Exodus," but there are some aspects of the personal journey he still has difficulty discussing, including what he and his three sisters did to survive. — Zion Uness An estimated 4,000 Ethiopian Jews per- ished en route. Many died of starvation; others of hypothermia or attacks from Muslim marauders. "Faith is beyond anything and everything. It's beyond what your body can de he said, lightly tapping the left side of his chest with his fingertips. "We believed we were the last Jews "We need to create a stronger Israel and not to be dependant on other nations to make Israel greater."