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Thanks to a Rockville man’s persistence,
summer campers reunite 30 years later
By Kathleen Wheaton
One of Allen Goldberg’s enduring memories is of movie
night at Camp Tel Shalom, a Jewish summer camp
that operated near Capon Bridge, W. Va., from 1974
to 1979. “There was this girl I had a total crush on—every guy at camp had a crush on her,” says Goldberg,
46, who grew up in Bethesda and Potomac. “I remember sitting next
to her when we were watching The Wizard of Oz, and I put my arm
around her. It was the first time I had any contact with a girl. As I
mark milestones in my life, that was a starting point.”
But when Goldberg encountered his former crush 30 years later
at a meeting to plan a Camp Tel Shalom reunion, he learned a brutal
truth: “She has no memory of it,” Goldberg says, shaking his head
with amazement. “While for me, that was lasered into my brain.”
What happens three decades later when you see across a crowded
room the first girl you ever put your arm around or the first boy
you ever kissed? Some alumni of Camp Tel Shalom found out when
they attended a camp reunion in September at Adas Israel Congregation
in Northwest Washington, D.C. “You wonder whether he’ll
even remember, but he did,” Laura Apelbaum, 49, of Chevy Chase
says about a long-ago summer boyfriend. Apelbaum went to Tel
Shalom as a 15-year-old in 1974. “He came right over and introduced
me to his wife.”
Navigating the sometimes choppy waters of romance was only
part of the experience shared by the preteens and teens who spent
four weeks in rustic wood cabins at a lush green campsite known as Buffalo Gap. The communal experience
of Jewish faith and practice also instilled
a sense of pride in many Bethesda-area
campers. “By the end of camp,” says
reunion organizer Barry Eisenberg, 45,
of Rockville, “you went back to school
and the more diverse, secular world still
equipped with at least some of that gained
confidence.”
Exasperated by his Hebrew school students’
reluctance to spend their vacation
days in a classroom, Adas Israel Rabbi
Stanley Rabinowitz came up with the
idea of leading them into the wilderness.
“I made a deal with the kids,” says Rabinowitz,
now 92. “If they would go to
camp, we’d cancel Sunday school at Adas
Israel. We had the whole curriculum out
there, and they learned just as much.”
After only a week at camp, Eisenberg
says, “you were amazed when you could
chant the birkat hamazon [the Hebrew
grace after meals]—and enjoy it. Camp
was the sugar that made the medicine go
down for a kid like me.” But camp was
also a place where “you walked a little
taller and with more of a strut to your
step. You were more assured and flirtatious
with the opposite sex than at school.”
“At camp,” Goldberg says, “I had a
whole robust social life that was better
than my secular life, my life at Churchill
[High School in Potomac]. It was almost
like I had this secret identity. I was popular.
I was the emcee of the talent show.
I was a funny guy. I was able to break
through because it was a smaller pond,
and a pond filled with like fish.”
Reminiscing
A couple of years ago, for no reason he
could discern except that he was entering
hismid-40s, Eisenberg began to feel nostalgic
about the summers he spent at Tel
Shalom from 1974 to 1977.Although many
of his fellow campers were from Montgomery
County, Eisenberg, who grew up
in Silver Spring and attended Bethesda-
Chevy Chase High School, lost touch with
Them over the years. What had become of
the girls he’d fallen in love with? What
about the college-age counselors whose
maturity and sophistication he’d admired?
Eisenberg searched Google for Camp
Tel Shalom and got only one result: a
2004 blog entry entitled “Dear Henry,”
which was one of a series of letters written
by Goldberg, a former fellow camper, to his son Henry, who died of Fanconi’s
anemia in 2002 at the age of 9. Reporting
that Henry’s younger brother Jack
had just returned from summer camp,
Goldberg wrote, “When I was a kid I went
to Adas Israel’s Camp Tel Shalom, but
that isn’t around anymore.”
Reading Goldberg’s letters, Eisenberg
became acutely aware of how much time
had passed since camp. “People I still pictured
as kids had married, had careers,
raised families and, inevitably, suffered
tragedies,” he says. With some trepidation,
Eisenberg sent Goldberg an e-mail
and, to his relief, the response was enthusiastic.
The men arranged to meet at Eisenberg’s
office at The Society of the Plastics
Industry on K Street, where he is director
of communications and marketing.
Eisenberg recalled his fellow camper as a
short, skinny redhead. When Goldberg,
now a 6-footer, walked into the office,
Eisenberg remarked: “You’ve gotten big.”
“I grew late in college,” Goldberg replied.
A marketing officer for FKF Applied
Research, which performs brain scans to
assess consumers’ unconscious reactions
to products, Goldberg says he’s fascinated
by the disparate memories people have
of a shared event. He still isn’t sure he
recalls Eisenberg from camp. “The name
sounded familiar,” he says, “in the way
any Jewish name sounds familiar.”
The two men hit it off and began discussing
the idea of tracking down other
Tel Shalom campers and organizing a
reunion. But how would you find people
you’d known before the arrival of the
Internet? Eisenberg dug up envelopes full
of some faded group photos he’d saved.
Goldberg was amazed that Eisenberg was
able to look at the photos and match the
names on the envelopes to the faces.
“I don’t know how I do it,” Eisenberg
says. “Even if people really weren’t my
friends, I can remember their names. I
suppose it was because of the communal
thing at camp, hearing their names
over and over. Because if you ask my wife,
I’m not like that anymore.”
“I think Barry is wasting his skills in
the plastics industry,” Goldberg says. “He
could be a private detective tracking down
lost people.”
Goldberg and Eisenberg set up a Camp
Tel Shalom Web site, and gradually, with
the assistance of Internet sites that help locate people, the list of former campers
grew.“ For a while, Barry and I wondered
if we were the only ones into this,” Goldberg
says. “Then we started hearing from
people. They were just floored.” Former
campers posted their own photos, building
a ’70s-era slide show of cutoff jeans,
guitars and free-flowing hair. When alumni
couldn’t be reached online, letters were
sent to their parents, using the addresses
from mimeographed camp rosters. What
was surprising, Goldberg says, given the
Washington area’s reputation for transience,
was how many families were still
living in their former childhood homes.
He also realized that some of the parents
he’d been running into daily as they picked
up their kids from preschool at Adas Israel
were former campers whom he hadn’t recognized
in their adult incarnations.
“We realized we needed to do the reunion
as quickly as possible, before everyone
became unrecognizable,” Eisenberg says.
Out of 140 former campers contacted,
Eisenberg says, only two responded
negatively. He was taken aback by an email
he received from his “first-ever” girlfriend,
the curly-haired, blond daughter
of a rabbi. “She says she was at my 11th
birthday party the winter after camp, and
I don’t even remember inviting any girls,”
Eisenberg says. “She says I called her the
next day and told her in a
rather cold way that I didn’t
want to see her anymore.
I have no memory of this,
but she needed to tell me,
30 years later.”
Nearly 70 former Tel
Shalom campers signed up
to attend the reunion.
“Everyone had this one person
they wanted to connect
with the most—their first love or whatever,”
Goldberg says. “For me, it was my
friend John Miller. But there are a million
John Millers, so you can’t just Google
the guy.” Goldberg started a Facebook
page and posted a picture of himself with
Miller. A day or two later, Miller, who also
had a Facebook page, saw the photo and
got in touch. It turned out that he was a
professional reunion planner living in
Colorado. Although Miller was unable to
attend the reunion, “we were able to use
his planning know-how,” Goldberg says.
On the evening of Saturday, Sept. 6,
with Tropical Storm Hanna moving up
the East Coast, Goldberg and Eisenberg
decorated the Gerwitz reception hall at
Adas Israel with balloons, reproductions
of group photos and copies of an old
camp newsletter. Kosher hors d’oeuvres,
drinks and a surprise birthday cake for
Marshall Green, the former camp director,
had been ordered. Then the campers
and counselors began to arrive. They were
men and women in their 40s and 50s,
wearing cocktail dresses, high heels and
jackets and ties. People hugged and
exclaimed over how wonderful everyone
looked. They laughed at the old pictures
of themselves—the funny clothes, the
untamed hair.
“It’s like no time has passed,” says Lisa
MuchnickPote, 48,who attended Walt Whitman High
School and flew in from Nashville,
Tenn., where she works as a consultant to
nonprofits.“ We’re all wider, grayer, but the
same. I’ve run into an old romance. It was
never serious, but memorable. Not a Friday
night goes by when I don’t think about
the Sabbaths we had at camp, the rousing
singing in the dining hall.”
“I remember the guys who organized
this as my kids,” says Susannah Sirkin, 53,
who worked as a counselor during the summers
when she was a student at Mount
Holyoke College in South Hadley, Mass.
Sirkin, who grew up in Bethesda, India and
Greece, traveled to the reunion from Boston;
She works for Physicians for Human Rights
based in Cambridge, Mass. “All week I’ve
been saying, ‘I’m going to seemy kids,’ and
these are men in their 40s.”
Rochelle Helzner, 55, of Rockville, who
attended John F. Kennedy High School
in Silver Spring, was a counselor with a
crystalline singing voice that many
campers remembered from 1977 and
1978.Now she is the cantor at Rockville’s
Tikvat Israel Congregation. Strumming
her guitar, she led a spirited singing of
the Havdalah service, the candlelit prayers
marking the end of the Sabbath. The
women linked arms and danced the hora.
The food went mostly untouched,
although everyone gathered around the
cake to sing “Happy Birthday” to Green,
who was turning 64.Green, a Capitol Hill
resident and an administrator of The Jewish
Primary Day School of the Nation’s
Capital, says he was “overwhelmed.” He
shook his head over a photo of himself
sporting a mane of thick brown hair and
a luxuriant mustache. “I may not remember
you now,” he says, “but I remember
you when you were 8, 10, 12 years old.” He recalled many trips with injured
campers to the nearest hospital in Winchester,
Va. “It was over dirt roads, if you
even could call them roads,” Green says.
“And imagine, this was before cell
phones.”
Nancy Boorstein of Potomac, 44, who
graduated from Churchill High in 1982,
showed off a scar on her knee from five
stitches she’d gotten at Winchester Hospital.
Somebody threw a watermelon at
her when she was 8, she says.
“Camp Tel Shalom was an experiment
that worked,” declared Rabbi Rabinowitz.
He is now white-haired and walks with
a cane, but his voice is still resonant and
authoritative.
“My mother says he could move people
to tears just by reading the phone
book,” Laura Apelbaum says.
“I am glad to see so many of you here,
fertile and married,” Rabinowitz concluded.
“Actually, married first and fertile
second—and that’s the proper order.”
Eisenberg then spoke, describing how
he and Goldberg originally made contact
through Goldberg’s letters to his son
Henry. “I think it’s just wonderful that
the catalyst for a camp reunion is a child,”
Eisenberg says.
The evening wore on, but people lingered.
It was far better than a high school
reunion, several alumni remarked:
warmer, friendlier, no cliques. Old friends
posed for new group photos. Future and
more frequent reunions were proposed,
now that everybody is back in touch—maybe regular Sabbath potlucks?
Eisenberg’s curly-haired girlfriend of
30 years ago did not attend. Later, she
wrote to Eisenberg that she would have
liked to come, but that her husband was
away and her children were to be in a
dance performance that night. The air
was cleared over the fallout of his long ago
birthday party, Eisenberg says, and
they have since exchanged several cordial
e-mails. She wrote to congratulate
him on the success of the reunion, and
to suggest that the next be held at her
parents’ home in Bethesda: “I can make
sure to be there,” she wrote, “and my dad
can have Rabbi Rabinowitz to schmooze
with.”
Kathleen Wheaton is a freelance writer
in Bethesda.
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