Remember from page 48 "The event I am most proud of," Eden said, "was suc- cessfully performing CPR on a 92-year-old man. I per- formed the compressions." Other calls saw her ambulance crew aid homeless Israelis and venture into areas wracked by violence. "These are calls where the individuals do not have the means to pay for their treatment," Eden said. "Nonetheless, MDA never refuses these patients. It treats them just the same as any other call." MDA ensures a rapid and skilled emergency medical response to 500,000 Israelis each year. It is a government- mandated agency but is not government funded. It relies on service fees and donations to fund operations and keep paramedics and other responders properly trained and outfitted. Donors worldwide fund 30 percent of the $100-million annual MDA operating budget. They also fund capital expansions, renovations, equipment pur- chases and, of course, new ambulances. Volunteers extend invaluable support lifelines. Eden takes the blood pressure and pulse of a 21-year- old security guard who had been feeling faint. is a 2011 graduate of Frankel Jewish Academy in West Bloomfield. In high school, she was very active in BBYO, the Jewish youth movement. At the University of Michigan, she's majoring in cellular and molecular biol- ogy. She serves on the executive board of the American Movement for Israel on campus. Her summer in Israel, which ranged from June 9 to July 24, certainly was incredible. Following 60 hours of training in Jerusalem, she qualified as a certified first responder. In the field, she went on to help prevent two suicides, help assist two women in labor, help intervene in two strokes and help respond to two major traumas, seven heart attacks, 11 car accidents and one missing- person case. DRYB ON ES. C OM Dry Bones Eva And John Engaging and articulate, Eden recounted her amazing six- week journey serving MDA at the 45th annual dinner of the Dr. John J. Mames Chapter of the American Friends of Magen David Adom-Michigan Region. The dinner, hon- oring the legacy and memory of chapter founders Eva and John Mames, drew 225 supporters to Congregation Beth Ahm in West Bloomfield. It was held on Sept. 11, which marked the 11th anniversary of 9-11, the worst terrorist act ever on American soil. Eva was a Hungary native and teenaged survivor of the Holocaust; she died in 2011 at age 81. John was a dentist, a Krakow native and a Russian labor camps survivor; he died in 1989 at age 67. The devoted Zionists founded the chapter in the wake of the Six-Day War in 1967 to support and save lives in Israel. They were frequent Israel visitors. Dinner speakers included longtime MDA support- ers Dr. Margo Woll of West Bloomfield, Libby Newman and Manny Charach, both of West Bloomfield, Mames son-in-law Craig Rosenblum of Atlanta and Michigan Region director Can Immerman, who is based in Cleveland. American Friends CEO Arnold Gerson flew in from New York. The Mames Chapter has raised more than $22 million over the years for such MDA basics as bulletproof vests, paramedic scholarships and defibrillators. It has donated 240 ambulances. A basic life support ambulance today costs $100,000 and a Mobile Intensive Care Unit is $125,000. The chapter has funded the Lillian L. and Allan I. Waller First Aid Station and the Natalie and Manny Charach Emergency Medical Station, both in Ashdod. It also donates toward stem-cell research and scientific research equipment at the MDA National Blood Services Center in Ramat Gan. MDA supplies most of the blood needed by Israeli hospitals and all of the blood required by the Israel Defense Forces. Lending Support To donate to American Friends of Magen David Adorn, the U.S. fundraising arm of MDA, call Cari Immerman: 1-877-405-3913 or write her at 23215 Commerce Park Road, Suite 306, Beachwood, Ohio 44122. She's seeking sponsors and cosponsors for an ambulance not only in memory of Eva and John Mames, but also for ambulances in honor or memory of others with significant Detroit ties. Bonds That Echo As a teenager, Eden helped stuff and sew teddy bears, which were boxed and shipped inside an MDA ambulance as part of the Michigan Region's custom-made teddy bears and blankets program for hospitalized Israeli kids. Two years ago on a school trip, she was an MDA ambulance patient herself after being thrown from a Bedouin camel (a rare occurrence for Israeli tourists, Eden wants every- one to know!). Serving MDA was her way, she said, of "giving back to the people of Israel — my people, our people. Being there for the patients when they were in their most vulnerable states and keeping them comfortable was one of my most rewarding experiences ever?' Another highlight of her MDA service was a morning shift in the ambulance donated in memory of her other zaydie Lawrence Newman, Nancy Newman Adler's father. This ambulance was stationed in Petach Tikva, near Tel Aviv. "When I went to their station, everyone was so friendly," Eden said. "They couldn't wait to tell me how, just hours before I arrived, the paramedics in the ambulance were able to successfully perform CPR on a 50-year-old man. "When I met with the paramedic who would be on my shift, he kept emphasizing how hard the ambulance works, and how much the people of Petach Tikva have benefited from its services?' Eden believes this summer of combining her love for Israel and medicine made a difference — whether it was holding someone's hand and telling them it would be OK or helping to physically clean and bandage wounds. As an MDA volunteer, Eden Adler witnessed Israel up close and without pretense. She returned to Michigan, an American state with a big stake in Israel's emergency services community, with an unswerving belief in MDA and what it has stood for so profoundly since the troubled days of 1940s Palestine. As she so eloquently put it at the MDA dinner: "It is our vital responsibility as Jews to make sure that MDA has all of the resources and equipment it needs to keep our people ... For Israel alive — and And Our Jewish therefore, keep our country, Community the Jewish homeland, U.S. - Israel relations and other issues alive and of importance to the Jewish community thriving?' are front and center as we approach the Nov. 6 general election. Most members of the Jewish community reside in the newly drawn 14th, 11th and 9th congressional districts. Please learn the candidates' positions, register and vote. standing guard Prepared by Allan Gale, Jewish Community Relations Council of Metropolitan Detroit © Sept. 27, 2012, Jewish Renaissance Media September 27 • 2012 49