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ELEANOR ler CLIFT JUDITH A l it BURDICK JOURNALIST FILM'S WRITER/ & AUTHOR DIRECTOR JEWISH SPICE & CHAPLAINCY NETWORK - For details & tickets call 2 4 8 . 5 9 2 . 2 6 8 7 or visit www.jewishhospice.org/grandwomen View the movie trailer at www.transforminglossdocumentary.com IRIS PROGRAM BENEFITS MN'S A GRANT CIRCLE RE WOMEN • ERUCATIONAT ANT SUPPORT PRRGRAMMING RN JEWISH HOSPICE ISSUES ERR WOMEN BY WOMEN 20 February 21 • 2013 JN aught to hate as a teenager, Frank Meeink became a neo- Nazi skinhead at 14 years old. At 18, he was a neo-Nazi recruiter in southern Illinois with his own cable access television show, The Reich. He did hard time for kidnapping a rival skinhead member, faced drug and alcohol addiction after he got out, but hate turned to redemption because of the kindness of a Jewish employer and his revulsion over the 1995 Oklahoma City federal building bomb- ing that killed 168 people. Meeink, 37, who has been speaking out against hate for the Anti-Defamation League for many years, will bring his story to the Berman Center for the Performing Arts at Frank Meeink 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 6. Attending an inner-city school in southeast Philly as one of only a few white students, Meeink was forced to defend himself. When he visited a cousin who was already a skinhead in Lancaster, Pa., later that summer, Meeink found camaraderie. "I had been fighting about my race all the time, and I saw groups standing up for kids like me he said. "My par- ents weren't the best parents. My par- ents never took the time to say, 'How's school, Frank? How's life?' "When I was hanging out with these skinhead guys, they would always ask me how it was growing up in Philly and black people he said. "That really resonated with me. They were asking me the questions that I always wanted my parents to ask me. It really made me feel good!' Although he had never met a Jew, he hated them because he was told they operated the Federal Reserve and ran the world. He also was told that whites were superior to blacks because of DNA. A few years later, he was in prison. A good athlete in school, he played basketball and football with young blacks and found out he had more in common with urban black kids because he was an "urban white kid!' "The Aryan Nations guys were all bikers from southern Illinois," he said. "I couldn't relate much to talking about handlebars on 1971 Harleys compared to 1973 Harleys." Getting a job fresh out of prison wasn't easy, he said. "When you're try- ing to get a job with a big swastika on your neck, "skinhead" written on your knuckles and an aggravated kidnap- ping charge on your record, these are not good people skills!' A street-smart Jewish guy who ran an antique business in Philly took a chance on him. "He destroyed the stereotypes and always treated everyone honestly!' Meeink said. "He took someone's trash and refinished it, turned a profit and bought more furniture and made a big business out of it" A Lesson In Compassion Meeink always said "I'm so stupid" whenever he made a mistake. "It was ingrained from my parents!' he said. One day his boss finally said, "Quit calling yourself stupid. You're one of the most street-smart people I've ever met. You can't pay for what's in that head of yours:' "I was so grateful to have a person that showed me such empathy all the time," Meeink said. "He showed me compassion, and my beliefs were telling me that I should want to kill this man, that Jews are most evil, and here's a guy that's given me such self-esteem. "That was the start — the day I decided to give up being a neo-Nazi and a skinhead." Now Meeink is married and the father of five children, and he speaks to colleges and civil rights groups. He coaches for hockey programs, runs a company that cleans homes for people who are flipping them, produces and consults on documentaries, and has authored his autobiography. "My message is about not being a hate-filled, spiteful bully on this Earth. It's not our job. Our job is to be a bet- ter person!' he said. "To have empathy for another person is life-changing!' According to the FBI Hate Crime statistics, while the national number of reported hate crimes fell, those report- ed in Michigan rose, said Heidi Budaj, ADL Michigan regional director. "In addition, when religion was a factor in a hate crime, 85 percent of the time, it was anti-Semitic," she said. The event is open to the public, and tickets may be purchased online for $11 at www.theberman.org , at (248) 661-1900 or in person at the box office at the Berman. ❑