obituaries
CANISTERS or TRAYS
From $10.99 and up
248-851-4450
1-800-966-7263 • We Ship Nationwide
Ten
Years : 0
Later
6698 Orchard Lake Rd • W Bloomfield MI 48322
www.americangourmet.corn
Oats Regular Rolled Oats or
Quick Oats
59C lb I
FREE Chocolate Dipped
Strawberries
on any condolence Tray upon request
With coupon. Limit 2 lbs. Expires 6/9/11
.
With coupon. Limit 2 lbs. Expires 6/9/11.
Bloom's
Jewish Cuisine
Bloom's
Dolphinariumi
attack was a
turning point
for Israel's
Russian
mmigrants.
www.NibblesAndNuts.corn
7111414 —
Same day
expres.% -
deliv
Shiva dinners, Fish frays,
Deli frays vered
Deli
248-855 9463
Jewishcatering.com
Xosher nuts mid chocolates
248-737-8088
NibblesAndNuts.com
Faina Dorfman, whose only child, Yevgenia, 15, was killed in a suicide
bombing at the Tel Aviv's seaside Dolphinarium
Dina Kraft
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
Tel Aviv
F
CareMinder•
"Your Live In Home Care Resource"
HOME CARE
The benefits of staying in your own home compared
to living in a Nursing Home.
Cost per Month
S7,000
Average caregiver ratio:
At Home
1 to 1
At Nursing Home 8 to 1
$5,250
$3,500
• Caregivers knowledgeable
in keeping kosher homes
'Cost for live in is based on care for 6
$1,750
days per week
0
LiviWat Home
with CareMinders*
(248) 851-HELP (4357)
• Most long term insurance
policies accepted
•Accredited through
The Joint Commission
Serving Southeast Michigan
www.careminders.com
5829 W. Maple Road, Suite 117 • West Bloomfield, MI 48322
Ron Fink & Bruce Karp, owners
HONOR THE MEMORY OF
THOSE YOU LOVE
PLANT TREES
fqpitrt - 44nnurt"
JEWISH NATIONAL FUND
1 -800-542-TREE
jnf.org
ft Jewish
`AO National Fund
56 June 2 • 2011
aina Dorfman, who immigrat-
ed to Israel from Uzbekistan
hoping that her only child
would have a better life here, walks
along a stretch of beach just south
of a tattered seaside disco called the
Dolphinarium.
Ten years ago, a young Palestinian
detonated a bomb packed with nails
and bullets as he stood amid a crowd
waiting to be let inside for a night of
dancing.
The suicide bomber stole away the
life of Dorfman's 15-year-old daughter,
Yevgenia. (known as Genya), along
with the lives of 20 others, most of
thein teenage immigrants from the
former Soviet Union (FSU).
"Like everyone else, I never thought
this madness would reach me, my
family;' said Dorfman.
The June 1, 2001, attack, which
also wounded more than 100, would
become seared into the Israeli con-
sciousness as one of the most infa-
mous of the second Intifada.
For Russian-speaking immigrants,
the bombing marked an initiation to
the reality of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict that would bring them into the
fold of Israeli society in the most pain-
ful of ways.
"It was seen as sort of a right of pas-
sage as it is described in anthropologi-
cal terms:' said Larissa Remennick,
a professor of sociology at Bar-Ilan
University. "To become one of `us' is to
demonstrate participation in a nation-
al log of losses, that you, too, have paid
a toll."
In the 10 years since, Russian-
speaking immigrants have gone on to
pay a disproportionate toll in terms
of suffering, some experts argue, as
many live in border areas in northern
and southern Israel that have been the
repeated targets of rocket attacks by
terrorists in Gaza and Lebanon.
Ruth Bar-On, founder of SELAH,
an acronym for the Israel Crisis
Management Center, which assists
immigrants affected by sudden trag-
edy, rejects the sentiment described by
Remennick and expressed at the time
of the attack that such suffering is a
way into the Israeli collective.
Instead, Bar-On points to the out-
pouring of compassion and support
by native Israelis seeking to help the
families of those killed or injured fol-
lowing the attack.
Some 600 people volunteered their
services within two days after the
explosion, she said.
"It was a turning point, this wave of
support, compassion and generosity:'
Bar-On said.
"It is something that touched every-
one ... because everyone wants a bet-
ter future for children, and all the par-
ents repeated this description of this
being why they had come here she
said, referring to those who had lost
children in the attack. "It's something
that touched every Israeli.
"And Israelis also simply got to
know these families, whether bereaved
Obituaries on page 58
Obituari e s