for college students by college students Global Justice Experience in Peru proves how toxic indifference can be. By Jamie Gorosh A Going Pink! Four 2010 graduates of Akiva. Hebrew Day School in Southfield who are participating in gap-year programs in Israel took part in the first Susan G. Koman Race for the Cure walk in Israel on Oct. 28. They walked as part of Team Shasheret, sponsored by the New jersey-based nonprofit organization that supports Jewish women with breast cancer. The local students are Ruthie Lehmann of West Bloomfield, Midreshet HaRova; Gabriella Herschfus of Southfield, Midreshet Tiferet; Michal Wrotslaysky and Molly Goldmeier, Midreshet HaRova, both of Southfield; and Naomi Greenbaum of Southfield, Midreshet Ein HaNatziv, who made aliyah and will enter the army next spring. All are age 18. uthor and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel once wrote, "The opposite of love is not hate, it's indifference." I first read these words as I sat in the small village of Lurinchincha, Peru, with 17 peers from diverse backgrounds. This eclectic group was brought together this summer by American Jewish World Service (AJWS), an organization that pursues social justice in the Global South (countries mostly in the Southern Hemisphere with low to medium human development indexes) through grant mak- ing to grassroots organizations. We partnered with a non-governmental organization (NGO) called Asociacion Civil Pro Nifio Intimo (ACPNI) in Peru. This NGO works on youth development and empowerment through street soc- cer. Our goal was to devote seven weeks to build a community center, learn about issues of global injustices, work with com- munity members and become immersed in Peruvian culture. As the end of the trip drew near, I knew it would not only be difficult to part with my fellow participants, but also the people of Lurinchinca. Knowing I would never see these people again was a difficult notion. The adults had graciously opened their homes to us, and the kids had opened their hearts at our weekly English lessons. We had set up projects in their school, bakery and health clinic, and played a ton of soc- cer in addition to our main work project. Our departure felt far too abrupt. As I left a place that had come to feel like home, I knew I faced an important decision. I could go back to the U.S. and seamlessly return to my (by comparison) privileged lifestyle with its hot showers, restaurants and washing machines. I could tell people how unbelievable it was that people permanently live the way we did for seven weeks, and I could have left the experience at that. But no, I wasn't about to become indif- ferent to the suffering that exists today in the world the minute I was no longer personally exposed to it. As I seek to make sense of my shifting worldviews, I realize Be inspired by your surroundings. Wayne State University offers you a degree that will set you apart from the crowd for two key reasons: our faculty and our students. We know that if you want to do extraordinary things, you have to surround yourself with extraordinary people. Like our Dream Team, four students who reached the finals of the 2010 Microsoft U.S. Imagine Cup by collaborating to create a virtual medical clinic that can be used worldwide. At Wayne State, the students you learn with have a passion for changing the world around them. These are the people who can inspire you to reach your personal potential. Visit wayne.edu to give yourself the opportunity to he inspired. 32 :mite r 11 2 010 AIM HIGHER