Opinion A MIX OF IDEAS Editorials are posted and archived on JNonline.us . Editorial Yes, Maccabi! ewish teens in America find their Jewish identity tested more and more by the spreading and intimidating forces of hatred toward Israel. These forces take the imposing form of campus anti-Semitism, Holocaust denial and Islamist terror. Our teens may not be touched directly by these chilling effects, but thanks to today's instant communica- tions network, they certainly are aware of them. The JCC Maccabi Games for 13- to 16- year-olds provide a great way to counter the impact of Jew-haters and instill pride in being a Jew. Now in their 28th year, the Games are hosted in different places around the U.S. each year to foster camaraderie, sports- manship and respect as well as Jewish continuity and values. They bring Jewish kids together from different backgrounds to bolster their Jewish soul so they know they are part of a very special people. International delegations of Jewish teens often participate to enrich the experience. We can't say enough about the volun- teers who keep things humming and safe at the Games. And the logistics to house, feed, trans- port, stage competitions, hold other events and provide security for all the competi- tors, coaches and visiting family members j is daunting. From Aug. 1-13, the Maccabi Club of Detroit will have sent 90 teen participants to three sites of the 2010 Games: Denver (delegation heads Nicole Wagner and Harold Friedman), Richmond (delegation head Stuart Bass) and Baltimore (delega- tion head Karen Gordon). The club also will have sent two teens to the Maccabi ArtsFest in San Rafael, Calif. It's no surprise that the Jewish Community Center movement has embraced Maccabi. It, as much as any Jewish institution, has a vested interest in keeping kids involved and affiliated with the organized Jewish community follow- ing bar or bat mitzvah. Typically, Maccabi kids have never seen so many Jewish kids in one spot. They learn that the Jewish community is worldwide. They discover what they have in common regardless of where they come from. They're eager to share e-mail addresses and otherwise keep connections with their newfound friends. The Games secondarily foster friendly competition. Their central intent is to help highly impressionable teenagers mingle and, as a byproduct, learn more about who they are as Jews through the power of peer interaction and influence. The Games are merely the vehicle for the kids coming together. For teens traveling to a Maccabi site, enjoying the hospitality of host families is another plus. The athlet- ics do matter, though. Teens like to run, jump, shoot, hit, skate, bowl, swing, swim, kick and dance. It's not so much about winning and losing as it is about display- ing competi- tive prowess and becoming a team player. Even when a competition ends in a rout, kids on the winning side strive to be courteous toward the other team, reinforcing the spirit of Maccabi. Few kids tolerate ridicule. In the civilized world, we cherish our kids and seek to give them every chance to relish life. In the uncivilized world of radi- cal Islam, kids are taught to hate Jews as disciples of Satan. Maccabi helps give our DryBonesBlog.com teens the self-worth to stand up for Israel as our ancestral homeland and Judaism as our abiding faith. The JCC Maccabi Games enable all of us — teens, parents and supporters alike — to affirm the familial ties of klal Yisrael, the Jewish people, and to project an ever-widening circle that ripples across world Jewry, given the tens of thousands of Maccabi alumni. ❑ A Broader Relationship Jerusalem/JTA E very Jew, no matter hoW insignifi- cant, is engaged in some decisive and immediate pursuit of a goal;' the German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe wrote nearly 200 years ago. Throughout history, Jews have num- bered disproportionately among Nobel Prize laureates, acclaimed scientists, phi- losophers, economists and in many other important fields. These achievements are made all the more remarkable consider- ing the persecution endured by the Jewish people during their 2,000 years of exile. When the State of Israel was proclaimed in 1948, broken souls arrived from the four corners of the world to re-create what was lost and re-establish a state that would become a "light unto the nations." Since the re-establishment and liberation of our nation in its homeland, Israelis have strived to maintain these exceptionally high standards. Even while our neighbors rejected us, the Jewish people still sought repair of the world through tikkun olam. The early pioneers stretched out their hand to their Arab neighbors, and the first Israeli leaders sought to use their knowledge of draining the swamps and water irrigation for the betterment of the develop- ing world, even while Israel was struggling merely to survive. Today, Israel stands uniquely placed to act as a bridge between the developed and developing world, a nation at the forefront of the technolo- gies desperately needed to dissipate the growing desertification of our region and beyond. Israelis are at the cutting edge of clean technology, energy efficiency and finding replacements for fossil fuels. As recently witnessed in Haiti, Israelis are prepared to travel halfway around the world to offer a helping hand to those in distress. We continue to assist the developing world in medicine and public health, education, gender issues and humanitarian aid through Mashav — Israel's Agency for International Development Cooperation. In the turbulent Middle East, Israel remains the only full- fledged democracy, the first nation to pass gay-rights leg- islation and the only nation to have a female leader. A member of Israel's Arab minority ran for prime minister; Arab Israelis have become ministers, ambas- sadors and Supreme Court justices. Much of this is unknown, even to Jewish supporters of Israel in the diaspora. Unfortunately, many in the diaspora only relate to Israel through the Internet or their television screens. The Israel they encounter is one of conflict and violence. The framing of Israel solely through the lens of the con- flict allows the remarkable Israeli history of feats and achievements against the odds to become distorted. We need to reverse this trend by allow- ing Israeli progressive society, innovation and humanitarianism to become the lens by which our brothers and sisters in the diaspora see Israel and its developments, including the conflict. Those in the diaspora who are uncom- fortable identifying with Israel do so largely because the Israel they assume they know appears to conflict with their other ideologies or sensitivities. The most worrying trend in the dias- pora is the increasingly partisan nature of support for Israel. It has become almost reflexive to assume that support for Israel is only to be found on one side of the ideo- logical and political spectrum. This cre- ates a great danger and pigeonholes Israel in a certain manner. Israel always was a bipartisan issue that crossed the aisle, and those that seek to claim exclusive support for Israel through their narrative renders Israel a disservice. While our responsibilities may differ, all Jews have a shared destiny. Our goals are largely the same even if our means widely differ. We must concentrate on what binds us rather than that which divides us. ❑ Danny Ayalon is Israel's deputy minister of foreign affairs. iN August 12 •2010 37