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January 16, 2004

Teenagers take over Toronto

Pinwheel Region sends 57 youth to annual international convention.
KYLE BERGER REPORTER

Imagine walking into one of Toronto's fanciest downtown hotels and instantly being surrounded by more than 1,300 Jews. That's what visitors to the Sheraton Centre Hotel had to contend with during the 53rd International Convention of United Synagogue Youth (USY) last month.

The annual convention, which took place Dec. 21-25, brings delegates from the 17 regions across North America to a different city each year. This year, the event was hosted by the Eastern Canada region (ECRUSY).

The Pacific Northwest Region (Pinwheel) was represented by 57 USYers in Toronto, including 24 from chapters in Richmond, Vancouver, Victoria, Calgary and Edmonton.

As always, explained Pinwheel region's youth director Neal Chark, the opening ceremonies, where each region is paraded into a large ballroom, set the tone for the rest of the convention.

"Try to imagine 1,300 teenagers and leaders singing and dancing as one and then rising in unison to sing Hatikvah," he said. "I have attended over 20 conventions and each year I am overwhelmed by the commitment and drive of our young Conservative Jewish leadership."

"As a Jewish teen living in a smaller Jewish community like Vancouver, to have the chance to be constantly surrounded by other Jewish teens for five days is amazing," said Vancouver's Tamara Nachmani, a Grade 12 student and Pinwheel's regional president. "It's a very unique opportunity for many of us to celebrate our Jewishness and really feel like we're a part of something that makes us stronger."

Michael Slonimer, a member of the Calgary chapter, said that even though his friends told him how much fun international convention was, he couldn't have imagined what he experienced.
"Everywhere I went, people were introducing themselves to me and asking me where I was from," he said.

"I was pretty tired when I came home but I was prouder than ever to be Jewish."
One of the traditional events at each international convention is the Social Action/Tikkun Olam projects (SATO), for which the USYers travel throughout the host community to help those less fortunate. This year, the Pinwheel USYers joined up with teens from Pennsylvania to make stuffed animals for kids who may not otherwise receive any Christmas or Chanukah gifts.

Keeping with the theme of helping those less fortunate, convention participants were introduced to John Beltzer, the founder and CEO of the Songs of Love Foundation, which writes and produces more than 30 songs a month for sick children. The original songs offer a sense of hope and inspiration for the children, or just bring a much-needed smile to their faces.

Beltzer brought his recording equipment and staff to the convention and had the USYers sing the chorus of a new song written for a sick young girl.

The official theme for the convention was Jewish lifecycles. Daily sessions and programs throughout the week focused on the various steps of Jewish life – from birth to marriage to death.

The convention also featured reunions for participants of USY summer programs, a variety of different types of prayer services and an entire floor of the hotel with booths that promoted various tours to Israel or post-secondary opportunities.

One of the more important parts of the week was the election of the 2004 USY international board. David Goldberg from ECRUSY handed the president's gavel to Josh Nason of the South Western Region.

Pinwheel region spent four days before the convention in Ottawa, where they enjoyed Shabbat hosted by the city's Congregation Agudath Israel. The USYers spent a day in Montreal and also toured the Parliament Buildings, where they met Elinor Caplan, the member of Parliament for Thornhill, Ont., who was also the first Jewish female cabinet minister in Canada.

Next year's convention will take place in Chicago. More information about USY can be found online at http://uscj.org/pacnw/usy/.

Kyle Berger is a freelance journalist and graphic designer living in Richmond.

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