DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ftbt forteens b a matter of innocence experience at Israel's Hadassah Hospital causes teen to redefine "enemies." by Ruthie Lehmann ooking into the imploring eyes of a child, prematurely balding, whose body is enslaved with cancer and the effects of chemotherapy, how could anyone hesitate to give him something, some sort of peace of mind . . . a teddy bear, a blanket? Yet that child is just part of a very complicated picture smeared with blood and hatred. Sometimes it is not so easy to look directly into those eyes and see a child, not an enemy. For my symbolic coming of age, bat mitzvah, I decided to do something meaningful — to give blankets to sick children in Israel. For my family, that automatically translated into "blankets to sick Israeli children." Going to the hospital and person- ally delivering the blankets turned out to be a more dramatic rite of passage than I had imagined. Our tour guide's comment that there were Palestinians as well as Jews in Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem was delivered too late to be fully comprehended. On the way to the pediatric oncol- ogy unit, ambivalence filled my mind. As my family went from room to room distributing blankets, I was shocked and horrified — my mother skipped the bed of a child whose nametag read "Mohammed." My mother is not an evil person; she was just angry, as we all were. It was late August and my family and I were riveted to horrors flashing on the TV screen: "suicide bomber ... got on at bus stop ... scene of chaos ... . tragedy ... casualties." These headlines penetrated my imagination. A picture of a very religious woman was played over and over and over again; her re- ligious wig (shaytl) — a symbol of mod- esty and devotion — had been blown off her head. She wandered aimlessly in shock through a scene from hell. I wondered where the heavenly peace was that both Jews and Palestinians yearned for. Later, the relentless news media showed images of strewn bloody limbs, bodies without faces. The scenes of gore beamed to my family's TV set, translated into a barrage of heart- breaking bullets of information: three soldiers wounded ... death toll 20 and climbing ... many in critical condition. The Palestinian terrorists, I learned, had supposedly agreed to hand over the bodies of three dead Jewish sol- diers in exchange for some hundred terrorist prisoners. This possible trade convinced me that the Jews were the "good guys" and the Palestinians the "enemies." The "us" and "them" had no individual features, only the gener- alized face of an enemy. When my family and I traveled to Israel, shouldn't I have been riddled with fear and suspicion, despite the fact a wave of peace had washed over my homeland? Each time I entered a shop or restaurant, I feared that my life might be cut short. While at a café, I spent most of my time wondering where the next bomb would explode. So, on our way to Hadassah Hos- pital, the initial controversy erupted in our car after we were informed that Palestinians as well as Israelis were confined in the walls of the hospital — together. I was afraid to think that the heartfelt letter I had written to anony- mous sick children would end up in the hands of anti-Semitic Palestinians. Moreover, I dreaded the looming Ruthie Lehmann with blankets like those she gave to children in Israel's Hadassah Hospital. choice ahead — who would receive the precious blankets? After leaving the hospital, I burst into tears, not only from the trauma of seeing such sick children, some of them my own age, but also from guilt. The reality finally dawned on me. In a hospital, the lines drawn by preju- dice become blurred, if not invisible. I had been so used to the words "en- emy" and "good guy" that the concept of "innocence" had not entered my mind. I had been so accustomed to seeing young Palestinian children in terrorist training camps with bombs strapped to their bodies, that I had not even considered seeing them in hos- pitals strapped to TVs. I realized that these children were only human be- ings worthy of respect. One can learn a lesson from sick- ness, which is totally blind to whom it attacks; a black person's blood is no redder than that of a white person and a cancer no kinder to a Palestin- ian than it is to a Jew. Reflecting back upon the pained child I had seen, I now perceived a human being in need — in need of my cuddly, comforting gift. t Ruthie Lehmann, 17, is a senior at Yeshlvat Akiva in Southfield. teen2teen January 21 • 2010 TT1