tikkun olam by Leah Snider miracle of Pinsk summer camp counselor instills Jewish pride into the lives of Russian kids. his summer I returned home from the experience of a lifetime. At the end of June, I packed my bags and flew to Pinsk, Belarus, to be a counselor for a month in a Jewish girls' camp called Yad Yisroel ("Hand for Israel"). As counselors, we taught the 60 or so campers about Judaism in a fun and positive way. And we gave them a sense of Jewish pride that, because of Communist ideals, has been lacking in their country for more than 45 years. I thought I flew to the former Soviet Union to give to the chil- dren there but, in actuality, I received more than I could ever have imagined. Pinsk seems to be a town that toggles between the past and the present. This makes for rather ironic scenes — a horse and buggy stopping be- hind new flat-screen traffic lights; young kids brandishing sticks as they herd cows, music blar- ing through their ear buds. The U.S. dollar is worth about 3,000 Belaru- sian rubles; a bus ticket costs about a quarter and a taxi about $2. So moving around the city was no sweat. A little history is in order: Before World War II, 74 percent of the Pinsk population was Jewish. Af- ter the Holocaust, the few Jews left behind by the Israel trips was because the majority of the partici- pants went by themselves, without friends. I also liked the fact that I would get to truly experience Israel, not just feel like part of a tourist group. Not only was I about to get the opportunity to tour the must-see sites around the country, but also to be with Israeli teens, go on an intense three-day hike in the Negev, participate in a community ser- vice project, do a cultural exchange with Bedouin teenagers, explore the different facets of Judaism and Israeli society and express my feelings through personal art presentations. The mission of the Nesiya Institute, based in New York and Jerusalem, is not to present the coun- try of Israel to American teens. Its Web site says its mission is "to inspire North American and Israeli young people from diverse backgrounds to enrich Jewish life for themselves and others." This doesn't seem like an accurate summary to me, maybe because it is impossible for a participant of the program to condense their incredible six- week experience into one sentence. Still, the pro- gram is unique in the way it creates a community from people who have only one thing in common: Judaism. There were 120 people total and everyone was Leah's bunk of 11-year-olds posing for a photo. Leah, back row, is third from right. Nazis were attacked and persecuted by Communist Russia. Since the establishment of Yad Yisroel in 1991, Jewish Pinsk has been revolutionized. Yad Yisroel runs the local Pinsk orphanage, boarding schools, the mikvah, medical aid, meals to the elderly, the Pinsk Jewish burial society and summer camps. Most of my campers, ages 10 to 18, were from poverty-stricken homes, with literally only one set of clothes to call their own. I found that many kids had parents in jail or were orphans. But these kids wanted no sympathy — they were glad to be in camp, glad to be receiving food and to be the recipients of our love and attention. No, I didn't speak any Russian and most of my campers didn't speak any English. Looking back on it, I can't quite figure out how we com- municated as well as we did. I gave a lot of hugs and now consider myself a master at charades. To see Belarusian Jewish kids with no former Jewish background become people who are now a credit to the Jewish people is awe-inspiring. That towns like Pinsk are once again becoming centers of Judaism, when Judaism was thought to have been extinguished, is astounding. That I could feel so much love coming from children who didn't speak my language, who I loved and who loved me simply because we were all Jews, is indescribable. My journey to Pinsk changed my entire outlook on life. What I learned from my Russian sisters this past summer will remain with me for the rest of my life: Miracles do happen. 1 Leah Snider, 16, is a senior at Bais Yaakov - the Oak Park- based Beth Jacob School for Girls, part of Southfield-based Yeshiva Beth Yehudah. true "kehillot." I could feel this personally; being with my group on Nesiya gave me a sense of belonging I had never felt before. Not only did I feel comfortable to listen to and observe others, but also open up and speak my mind. It made me understand that community does not have to be a group of _ similar people, but can be made friendships. of diverse (and amazing!) individ- The trip itself was pluralistic to uals who share a common goal. make sure everyone was religiously As I was waiting in the air- comfortable, while also allowing Israeli Moshe Wandam of port for the connecting flight to people to explore their own thoughts Kiryat Malachi with Laura Katsnelson Detroit with fellow Nesiya-ers and beliefs. An example: I partici- of West Bloomfield Lani Levi of Southfield and Zev pated in Orthodox, Conservative, Adler-Goldsmith of Huntington and Reform services and had the op- portunity to create my own prayers during an alter- Woods, I naturally felt sad to leave Israel. But I real- ized that my experience didn't have to end with the native prayer option. To make things more manageable, we were flight home. Instead, I try to apply what I learned separated into three kehillot (communities), which on Nesiya to my everyday life and change the way consisted of 40 chanichim (participants) and four I feel about my world at home. And hey, isn't that madrichim (instructors). Each group traveled, had what life-changing experiences are for? different as could be: American, Is- raeli, Orthodox, Reform, religious, secular, English-speaking, Hebrew- speaking, kibbutzniks, city dwellers, suburbanites, Ashkenazi, Sephardic, Ethiopian, etc. Because each person came from a different background and had unique opinions and com- fort levels, we had to be open-mind- ed and respectful while building discussions, studied text and did activities together, which caused us to live up to the term and feel like Laura Katsnelson, 16, is a senior at Walled Lake Western. teen2teen September 10 • 2009 TT3