Read it and weep: Last night students at the
Hillel Foundation, a center for Jewish students at the UA, played texas
holdem poker to raise money for the Ethiopian Jewish Community in
Israel.
The event, hosted by Alpha Epsilon Pi and
the Hillel Foundation, cost $10 to enter and was open to everyone.
Matt Van Horn, the president of the
fraternity and a marketing and entrepreneurship junior, said he hoped
the event would raise a lot of money for the cause.
"We are hoping to raise $1,000 from 100
poker participants," Van Horn said.
Van Horn also said proceeds from the event
were going toward a good cause.
"Alpha Epsilon Pi's national philanthropy is
to raise money for two Ethiopian Jewish Community Centers in Israel,"
Van Horn said. "Seventy-two percent of Ethiopian Jews live below the
poverty level."
Aaron Pratt, a Jewish Campus Services Core
Fellow at the Hillel Foundation, also said the poker event was a great
way to raise money for Ethiopians living in Israel.
"Israel is kind of a patchwork country of
different ethnicities," Pratt said. "The Ethiopian Jews have a really
hard time trying to adapt, and a lot of times they are very, very poor."
According to Alpha Epsilon Pi's Web site,
today about 80,000 Ethiopian Jews live in Israel, with 55 percent having
arrived in Israel since 1990.
Also, while the Ethiopian community's
quality of life has increased dramatically over levels in Ethiopia, a
great deal of work still needs to be done in order to integrate
Ethiopian community into mainstream Israeli society, according to the
Web site.
Rachel Heinly, a physical education
sophomore who worked at the event, said she thought the poker game was a
great idea.
"It's raising money for a really good cause,
and everybody gets to meet people who also like to play poker," Heinly
said.
Van Horn said along with being a fun game,
poker was a good way to contribute to the community.
"This is a great way to give back to the
Jewish community," Van Horn said. "Poker is the hottest college activity
right now. It's a great way to get all the poker fans on this campus
involved in helping people and raising money for philanthropy."
The event ended just before 9 p.m.
yesterday, and the organization hosted 77 texas holdem players and
raised $770 for the charity.