NEW YORK — As Robin Wehl listens to an Austrian radio
station streamed over the Internet, she understands bits and pieces of
the German that her father, who left the country on the eve of World War
II, spoke when Wehl was a child.
But Wehl, 31, isn’t idly reminiscing — she is preparing for a
year of community service in Vienna as part of the American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee’s Jewish Service Corps program.
The JDC, the main foreign relief agency funded by North American
Jewry, provides the volunteers with round trip travel fare, housing and
health care, as well as a monthly stipend for living expenses.
More than 70 volunteers, mainly in their 20s, have participated in
the program so far, in countries ranging from Morocco to Hungary.
The Service Corps has been sending volunteers abroad since 1987.
After a highly selective annual application process, participants
convene in New York for two days of orientation before leaving at
different times from June through September.
Participants recruit and train local activists in order to enrich and
develop Jewish culture. Specific goals vary from site to site, ranging
from basic humanitarian aid to Jewish education and Hebrew lessons.
Wehl, whose father was a “transmigrant” in Shanghai — where he
lived for 10 years after fleeing Germany and before arriving in the
United States — will teach English in Vienna to Jewish transmigrants
who live temporarily in Austria en route to America.
She and the other five students on the program come from different
backgrounds, and have different strengths and talents. But they share a
desire to help their fellow Jews around the world.
The program is “my opportunity to make an impact,” Wehl says.
For many of the participants, the program is not the first time they
have lived abroad.
Having studied abroad in the Ukraine, Nimrod Pitsker wanted to return
to Eastern Europe, and decided to spend his year in Poland to build a
strong Jewish community.
“Hopefully, we can foster lifelong Jewish education, we can kindle
Jewish souls that unfortunately, because of where they came from,
didn’t get the chance to have what we had,” Pitsker says.
Zvi Kresch is heading to Ethiopia. The 21-year-old, who studied
religion and pre-medical courses at the University of Michigan, will
help a doctor who runs medical and welfare programs for residents —
Jews and non-Jews alike — of Addis Ababa.
Kresch, who studied for a summer in Tibet, explains how the
experience affected his view of the shopping malls and high rise
buildings of America.
“You get to see things, to be in a totally different world,” he
says. “It’s mind-boggling how there is another world coexisting with
ours that is so sharply different.”
Two volunteers, Shayna Skarf and Ronin Glimer, are going to Istanbul.
For Skarf, it will be her second time as a Jewish Service Corps
volunteer.
Robert Socolof, a JDC spokesman, speculated about the program’s
impact after participants return to the United States. Nearly forty
percent of the program’s alumni pursued careers in the Jewish
community, while others have applied what they learned to other careers.
“Social change is a powerful dynamic, and it’s amazing how rapid
and far reaching that change can be,” he says.
This year is no different. Kresch, for example, hopes to use his
experience to decide whether he wants to go to medical school, while
Orin Hasson hopes to work in international development after his service
in the Jewish community of Izmir, Turkey.
The dangers of the post-Sept. 11 world and the spread of
anti-Semitism in Europe add to the challenges the volunteers will face.
But members of the group say they remain undeterred by political
fears.
Pitsker balances a positive outlook with the need for awareness.
He’ll remain alert to possible danger, he says, but after a year
studying in Israel, working in Poland “feels safer by comparison.”