AIN I * jcc maccabi* GAMES®& ARTSFEST® AUGUST 17-22, 2014 rt, E kttie rt `7X -1VY '32 B'nai Israel Synagogue JCC Cares Jewish values, interactive experiences helping others key to Maccabi & ArtsFest. Elizabeth Applebaum Special to the Jewish News M Your Family is OUR Family *Special Membership rates available for new members. For more information call our Executive Director Linda Jacobson at 248-432-2729 or e-mail her at info@bnaiisraelwb.org www.bnaiisraelwb.org n-o. Fir 1111211 1 1 7N1V.) 1 `7D All Israel is responsible for one another 16 July 24 • 2014 ove over, Wonder Woman. Your work is child's play compared to what superheroes Karen Rubenfire Sherbin and Miriam Bergman have been up to this past year Sherbin of Farmington Hills and Bergman of West Bloomfield are co-chairs of JCC Cares, a program of the JCC Maccabi Games & ArtsFest that engages participants in hands-on projects that allow them to give back to the host community. JCC Maccabi is headed to Detroit Aug. 17-22, and Sherbin and Bergman (and many volunteers) have planned an unforgettable JCC Cares experience for more than 1,000 teens, managing every aspect of transporta- tion, security, supplies, coordinating with other nonprofits and reinforcing the Jewish connection to the impor- tance of giving. "Our goal; Sherbin said, "is to empower the next generation of young Jews" "JCC Cares is important because it partners our JCC Maccabi athletes and artists with a number of differ- ent community organizations and affords them the opportunity to have meaningful interactive experiences with lasting benefit to our partner organizations throughout the city:' said co-chair Bergman. A Day of Caring and Sharing was introduced in 1997 as a one-day program for JCC Maccabi partici- pants. It has since been renamed JCC Cares, and the Detroit program has expanded to include opportunities on different days (rather than just one), making a donation (every delegation is bringing toys, toiletries, books or school supplies to give), one-on-one experiences and connecting to Detroit and the city's Jewish history. Teens will participate in JCC Cares in a variety of ways, including wrapping gifts to be donated to the Bottomless Toy Chest, playing board games with residents of senior homes and packing meals to be delivered to Karen Rubenfire Sherbin with daughters Emily, left, and Jessica those in need. Helping In Detroit Sherbin, a social worker and proj- ect coordinator for Detroit's Project Healthy Community, a nonprofit that promotes the well-being of persons of all ages, is especially excited that JCC Cares is partnering this year with the Northwest Activities Center, because the building was once home to the JCC on Meyers and Curtis roads. More than 150 Maccabi partici- pants will be going to the activities center to play sports with children in Detroit and help establish a mobile library, among other projects. "This is a really great experience for these kids:' Sherbin said, because it means one-on-one engagement and the chance to see the city of Detroit. Sherbin and Bergman say it's important that JCC Cares isn't just a day when kids are lectured to about doing something nice. In addition to active participation, each JCC Cares event includes a discussion about what Judaism says about caring for others, information about the specific organization where the teens will be volunteering and the impact of their help. "We are trying to make this very interactive Sherbin said. JCC Cares is not just "I had to make a blanket for somebody:' but "I brought this toy that will be donated to a child named Mark who hasn't received something new in years, who lives in a homeless shelter in Detroit:' It's a personal connection that teaches that "hunger" isn't just an idea but a painful truth for these six fami- lies, for whom you've just prepared six healthy dinners. And that feeling of giving back:' Sherbin said, "is life- changing:' ❑