oints of view >> Send letters to: letters@thejewishnews.com Editorial Akiva Being Pro-Active To Assure Its Future I t takes involved parents, great teach- ers, hardworking administrators and eager-to-learn students who care about Torah values and Jewish identity building for a Jewish day school to succeed. Donors typically respond to such a quality school setting. Take the case of Akiva, a 51-year-old Orthodox Zionist day school in Southfield. Its leadership has worked hard to overcome financial and enrollment challenges over the years to create a homespun environ- ment for its preK-12 secular and Jewish programs. It's not by chance Akiva was awarded a two-part $8 million gift from the William and Audrey Farber Philanthropic Fund through Federation's Centennial Campaign and a $2.25 million grant from the William Davidson Foundation — both highly regarded local philanthropies. Without a lot of fanfare, Akiva has creat- ed a strong niche for itself in the day school landscape of Jewish Detroit. It just needed a boost financially to upgrade its facilities and uplift its academics. Without a lot of fanfare, Akiva has created a strong niche for itself in the day school landscape of Jewish Detroit. million building will include 59,000 square feet laid out as a school; only the gymnasi- um will be kept from the existing building. Groundbreaking takes place Nov. 15. The Farber and Davidson philanthropies aren't accustomed to wildly giving without thorough vetting of the targeted cause. Clearly, Akiva leaders did their home- work. That included assuring the school's financial house is in order, just short on money to meet Akiva 50th Anniversary Improvement Plan projections. The Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, which helped facilitate Aldva's move from Lathrup Village to Southfield in 1999, has been a ready partner in Aldva's pursuit of high- octane strategic planning. Coming Of Age Beyond The Building The main capital improvement spun from the Farber allocation will be a brand-new building across the parking lot to replace the current structure — a former syna- gogue and originally a church. The $12.5 Akiva is in the midst of a $15 million uni- fied campaign, with just $2.3 million to go, to fund academic upgrades and new construction. Leadership was smart enough to understand that facility and technologi- cal improvements are pivotal to creating an inviting and modern learning environment, but that the quality of teaching relative to basic and enhanced educational offerings is what gives real texture, purpose and value to a school. For example, Aldva's planned use of the Davidson grant includes support to recruit, train and keep teachers and other top edu- cators — who comprise the vital timbers of a school. Notably, Akiva has prioritized its mathematics, language arts and science programs to assure they form a solid back- bone for secular studies, which complement Judaic studies. It's especially significant the school will cast a critical collective eye toward examin- ing and smoothing the seams connecting the lower and upper grade levels to ensure "that skills are developed, reinforced and tracked from early childhood through high school; as Rabbi Noam Stein, high school principal, told the JN in the Aug. 20 report "Ready, Set, Build!" The more seamless the transitions, the easier it will be for students to move on and grow as opposed to having to readjust and re-orient. Primed For Future Akiva, named for the rabbinic sage, strives to fill each student with a love of Israel from the very start. Graduates generally spend their post-graduation year in an Israeli yeshivah or seminary before college. Israeli teachers, tutors and families join with Israeli organizational volunteers in further honing Aldva's Zionist edge. Akiva also hosts one of Detroit Jewry's largest Israeli Independence Day festivals. Other examples of Akiva outreach include twice-daily minyans open to the commu- nity and partnerships with other Jewish institutions and organizations as well as with Southfield Public Schools. The JN report underscored that the school carries no debt. That's thanks in no small measure to savvy fundraising initia- tives, Federation's Annual Campaign and the Federation-managed Shiffman Family Day School Tuition Assistance Fund. Such support is indicative of the impor- tant role Modern Orthodoxy plays in Jewish Detroit and the emerging success Akiva is having in attracting new, young Modern Orthodox families to Southfield. Sustaining this momentum is now key. ❑ Guest Column To Honor Thy Neighbor s the Syrian refugee crisis has dominated headlines across the world this week, there have been numerous calls, both from inside Israel and from diaspora communities, for the Israeli government to take in thousands of Syrian refugees. The plight of the Syrian refugees is beyond heartbreaking. The situation is deplorable beyond expression. But the calls for Israel to take in refugees are folly. This is not because we are callous to the plight of Syrian families stranded by war and a murderous regime; it is because the Jewish state simply cannot afford to do so. Those who have called for Israel to absorb refugees, foremost Israel's Opposition Leader, Isaac Herzog, argue that Israel will benefit from absorbing Syrian refugees in a myriad A 48 of ways. Firstly, they argue that Israel has a moral duty to help those in need. They invoke the biblical credo "Help thy neighbor" and conjure up images of the plight of Jews in Europe 70 years ago. The moral duties of the Jewish state are unques- tionable; this argument would be very convincing if not for the many potential pitfalls. One such pitfall refutes the dubious claim that by performing this good deed of humanitarianism, Israel would be commended and recognized throughout the world, that Europe and even some of the moder- ate Arab states will begin to see Israel in a different, more appealing light. Thus, absorbing refugees would be a strategic victory for Israel. But this is the epitome of naivete. While it is very conceiv- able that the world would recognize and applaud an Israeli gesture to aid Syrian refugees, the idea that the news media would devote more than one news cycle to it is prepos- terous. In the next war with Hamas or Hezbollah, will anyone remember that Israel gallantly accepted Syrian refugee families in September of 2015? Absolutely not. There is a widespread culture of collective amnesia about Israel's commendable record of humanitari- anism – even when it was one of the first to send aid halfway across the world, to Haiti, during its disastrous earthquake; even when it sent sup- plies to Turkey (a country with whom it has a bitter feud and no diplomatic relations) during a mudslide and the like. But the world does not care to remember. Yet the most important reason Israel cannot acquiesce to calls for aiding Syrian refugees is Israel's "demographic threat," which refers to the erosion of Israel's majority Jewish population if it rejects a Palestinian state and annexes the West Bank. If Israel gives citizenship to every Palestinian in the West Bank, it will eventually cease to be the nation- state of the Jewish people, and will