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Distinctive Artistry Explore a dramatic new wing for Asian art and culture at the DIA named for Robert and Katherine Jacobs. Chabad of Poway victims: Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, who was injured, and member Lori Gilbert-Kaye, who was killed in the April 27 attack.

See page 22.

STRIKES AGAIN

Six months after Pittsburgh, a shooter kills 1, injures 3 at a California synagogue. See page 12


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May 2-8, 2019 27 Nissan-3 Iyar 5779 VOLUME CLV, ISSUE 13

• Olim in Tech Builds Careers • Schmoozing with Immigration Lawyer Ryan Israel • Community article by Polina Fradkin, a former Metro Detroiter living in Israel

ORR VIZNITSER

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44

U-M Hillel and Chabad House of Ann Arbor held a vigil together Monday. RIGHT: Aaron Raimi of Rancho Bernardo at the memorial outside Chabad of Poway.

32

22

18 PHIL RAIMI

VIEWS 5-10

JEWS IN THE D 12 A Day of Terror Synagogue shooting near San Diego kills 1 and injures 3.

18 Hate Can’t Stop Us Former Detroiter who attends Chabad of Poway reacts to shooting.

20 Walk For Israel New location at Adat Shalom for annual community show of solidarity.

22 An Unlikely Hero Stark family owes its survival to Detroiter Herman Osnos.

26 Ethnic Intimidation MSU Hillel intern received anti-Semitic death threats.

27 Fun With Dogs Bring your pooch to this event put on by student leaders.

36 Uplifting Musical Waitress star Richard Kline embraces the message of female empowerment.

ETC. 46 The Exchange 48 Soul

38 Celebrity Jews

53 Raskin

28 Moments

ON THE GO

54 Looking Back

SPIRIT

39 Events/Editor’s Picks

SHABBAT LIGHTS

31 Torah portion

NOSH

ARTS&LIFE

42 Nosh News

32 Subtle Parallels

43 Pita Café

Grapes of Wrath opera explores plight of migrant workers in Steinbeck’s time, encouraging insight today.

Shabbat starts: Friday, May 3, 8:16 p.m. Shabbat ends: Saturday, May 4, 9:23 p.m. * Times according to Yeshiva Beth Yehudah calendar.

44 Antihero Cover photo: Friendship Circle of San Diego Cover design: Michelle Sheridan

24 Here’s To

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May 2 • 2019

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May 2 • 2019

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Online Comments

Antidote to Hate: Keep Showing Up PHIL RAIMI

J

ew hatred in America strikes again. This time at a Poway, Calif., synagogue. Six months after the Tree of Life synagogue massacre in Pittsburgh, Jewish communal institutions have been further “hardened” with bullet-proof glass, steel-reinforced self-locking doors and sophisticated surveillance equipment. Evacuation procedures have been established, escape routes identified. Guns are no longer exclusively in the hands of the bad guys. Now, they can be found under the suits of hired protectors and occasionally strapped beneath a fellow congregant’s prayer shawl. A far cry from days of yore, when expectations of security — if they existed at all — were relegated to unarmed, 300-pound men with deputy fire marshal-looking badges, squeezed into red mini-compacts with twirling amber beacons. After Poway, we still feel vulnerable. In some ways, more so than after Pittsburgh. With anti-Semitism on the rise, we started taking our security more seriously. But the shock of 11 deaths at Tree of Life, the relatively easy access the killer had to the congregants and the absence of competent, armed protection, stoked our angst and accelerated our precautions. The killer in Poway had a tougher time, but still succeeded. One dead. Three wounded, including the rabbi and an 8-year-old girl. Whether the Chabad-affiliated synagogue was “hardened” or not, he gained entry and fired several rounds from his weapon before leaving — perhaps fleeing when confronted by a good guy. Without some extra evacuation training, and a bit of luck, the casualty count could have been more catastrophic. Welcome to the new reality. Hatred stoked by heated rhetoric that is turning angry thoughts into evil actions against our community. Poway reveals something we’ve known for some time … despite precautions, there is risk associated with living our lives.

Readers reacted to the news of the synagogue shooting in Poway, Calif., on the JN’s Facebook page. Ginger Hopkins: Condolences, thoughts and prayers for the family and synagogue. Karen Gilmour: Just reprehensible!! Drew Lewis Pikstein: Please, Lord, make this hatred stop! Susan Averbuch: “In every generation, one has risen against us ...”

Shooting victim 8-year-old Noya Dahan is wrapped in the Israeli flag.

In the coming weeks, we’ll walk for Israel, reflect on Holocaust Remembrance Day, pause on Israel’s Memorial Day and then celebrate its independence. We’ll present lifetime achievement awards, honor day school benefactors and alumni, celebrate 8 over age 80, recognize community activists, fete supporters of high school youth, convene for a blockbuster film festival and listen to an array of compelling speakers. We’ll attend bar and bat mitzvahs, graduations, tot Shabbats, consecrations and weddings. Working with law enforcement and elected officials, our Jewish communal leadership and agencies will continue to improve the safety and security of our gathering places. Meanwhile, what are we to do? Quite simply, keep living our lives openly as Jews — albeit with added vigilance. And whether it’s a community-wide celebration or an intimate baby naming at a synagogue, defy the haters and keep showing up. ■ See stories about the weekend shooting beginning on page 12.

Al Wright: They did catch the guy. It’s really weird how it happened. I believe there’s more to the story that we will know. The only thing to me that really matters is the hatred against the people that were injured and hurt. I’m tired of hatred. I’m tired of the anti-Semitism. It needs to stop. Jim Van Eaton: The shooter was confronted by an off-duty border patrol agent in the synagogue who returned fire at him and he left. Good guy with a gun stops a bad guy with a gun. Phil Raimi: This is our synagogue — words cannot describe the sorrow we feel about this heinous act. Please pray for the family of Dr. Howard Kaye and his daughter for their tragic loss of his wife and her mother, Lori Kaye z’l. Benji Rosenzweig: I used to have nightmares from the stories my grandparents told me about what life was like in Europe in the ’30s and ’40s. We are light years away from that, but the echoes are the same. To compare the two is a stretch, but to think that it didn’t start this way is naive.

The JN welcomes comments online at thejewishnews.com or on its Facebook page. Letters can be sent to letters@renmedia.us.

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May 2 • 2019

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views essay

letters

Remember Yom HaShoah and the 6 Million Kedoshim

P

esach is a joyous Yom Tov for the Jewish people, especially when we sit at the seder table with our family and friends. The children ask the Mah Nishtanah (the four questions) “Why is this night of Pesach different from all other nights?” The father answers because we were slaves in Egypt. The king of Egypt, Pharaoh, enslaved the Jewish people thousands Michael Weiss of years ago. Our generation also had a Pharoah. His name was Hitler. He also enslaved the Jewish people. The Jews lived in Europe 800-900 years and obeyed the laws of the land in whatever country they lived in. On the eighth day of Pesach in 1944, 74 years ago, I was davening with my father when a man came in to tell us that flyers were pasted all over town, two of them on our shul door. It read, “Tomorrow on Sunday, on the day after Pesach, each Jew must leave home and go to the school building.” From there, they took us Jews to

the ghettos such as Budapest, Kiev or Munkacs. Then the Nazi governments of Europe and the volunteers who joined them — Hitler didn’t do it by himself — took us to Auschwitz, Majdanek, Buna and many other camps where we found factories equipped with gas chambers murdering Jewish people … where our parents, our families, our children …. our people … were murdered and burned to ashes in the crematorium. During our history, the Jewish people have had many tragedies, but the Holocaust has no equal. It is and always will be the worst human rights violation in the history of the world. The whole world stood by in silence while 6 million Jewish people were murdered. The world heard their screams from the gas chambers, but they pretended they could not hear. The world smelled their flesh burning in the crematoriums but turned away because they were Jews. On Yom HaShoah (May 2), we remember our family members who died during those awful years. I am sure it is a mitzvah to remember the neshamas (souls) of the 1.5 million children who died; their memories will

An Alternate Dayenu Regarding the “Dayenu 2019” in the April 18 Detroit Jewish News, here is an alternative version: forever live in our hearts. On a morning in May 1945, the gates of Buchenwald opened and in came tanks, soldiers and guns. We thought they were going to level the camp and kill us all, but we found out this was the American army who came to liberate us and give us back our lives. We were like dead people walking, skin and bones. If they would have come a few months later, not one survivor would have been left. Thousands of years ago, God sent Moses and his brother Aaron to Egypt to take His chosen people out of slavery from King Pharaoh and, in May of 1945, God sent the American Army, led by General Patton and Rabbi Shekhter, the chaplain of the unit, to take His chosen people out of the gas chambers. Seventy-five years later I say that unit was led by God and Moses … and the soldiers were God’s angels. ■ Michael Weiss, a Holocaust survivor, is a speaker at the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington and author of the book Chimneys and Chambers.

A Dayenu for this Passover If President Trump had only moved the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem — Dayenu. If President Trump had only recognized Israeli sovereignty over the Golan — Dayenu. If President Trump had only appointed Nikki Haley as Ambassador to the U.N. — Dayenu. If President Trump had only closed the PLO office in Washington, D.C. — Dayenu. If President Trump had only stopped giving U.S. tax dollars to the PLO — Dayenu. If President Trump had only been the first sitting U.S. President to pray at the Western Wall —Dayenu. If President Trump had only cancelled the disastrous Obama Iran nuclear deal — Dayenu. If President Trump had only placed crushing sanctions on Iran — Dayenu. If President Trump had only insisted that the ICC not target Israeli soldiers and diplomats — Dayenu. If President Trump has only banned the BDS founder from entering the U.S. — Dayenu. continued on page 10

Arthur M. Horwitz Executive Editor/Publisher ahorwitz@renmedia.us F. Kevin Browett Chief Operating Officer kbrowett@renmedia.us | Editorial Managing Editor: Jackie Headapohl jheadapohl@renmedia.us Story Development Editor: Keri Guten Cohen kcohen@renmedia.us Digital Editor: Allison Jacobs ajacobs@renmedia.us Social Media Coordinator: Chelsie Dzbanski cdzbanski@renmedia.us Director of Sponsored Content: Cassie Kunze ckunze@renmedia.us Editorial Assistant: Sy Manello smanello@renmedia.us Senior Columnist: Danny Raskin dannyraskin2132@gmail.com

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views essay

Muslim and Jews in America: Parallel Trajectories, Shared Future

T

he beginnings of Jews and Muslims in North America has a similar though not identical timetable and trajectory. Jews came to America largely to escape political persecution and economic hardship in search of religious freedom and a better life. The first Jews who arrived in North America were refugees from Recife, Brazil, where they had lived briefly under a tolerant Dutch rule until an earlier ban on Jewish settlement and immigration was reinstated by the returning Portuguese. Thereafter, the Howard number of Jewish refugees grew steadiLupovitch ly, reaching 3,000 by 1820, 300,000 by 1880 and nearly 3 million by the eve of World War I. The first Muslims arrived not long before the first Jews, not as refugees but as African slaves. Historians estimate the number of North American Muslim slaves between 70,000 and 150,000, between one-fifth and one-quarter of the slave population when slavery ended in the 1860s. In the 20th century, Muslim immigrants, like Jews, were impelled by violence, political persecution and economic hardship to leave

towns where they had lived for generations and come to America. Once in America, Jews and Muslims embarked on a search for acceptance. Jews had an advantage, owing to their relative whiteness. While Muslims were lumped in with other people of color, Jews were seen by the white Protestant elite as less non-white than African Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans, Native Americans and Arab-Americans — provided Jews did not display their Jewishness too ostentatiously. Mass Jewish immigration to America preceded mass Muslim immigration by nearly a century. Jewish immigration from the Russian and Austro-Hungarian empires began at the end of the 19th century; comparable Muslim immigration from the Middle East and North Africa would take place nearly a century later. Allowing for this time lag, parallels appear. These massive influxes of immigrants transformed the Jewish and Muslim communities. American Jewry on the eve of this massive immigration was highly acculturated and Americanized. The several million Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe re-invigorated and accentuated the distinctness of Judaism and Jewish

culture in America. Similarly, the Muslim community in America for much of the 20th century consisted largely of African-American Muslims who, despite their religious affiliation, were seen as American and not a foreign presence. Only toward the end of the 20th century did the number of Middle Eastern Muslims eclipse the number of Muslim AfricanAmericans. Given these parallels, it is not surprising that the large influx of Jewish and Muslim immigrants elicited a similar backlash. Ostjuden, the often-derogatory term for Eastern European Jews, were denigrated as disease-carrying criminals (as Latinos are today). Amidst the “American First” isolationist, anti-immigrant xenophobia that followed World War I, Jewish immigrants were demonized by fearmongers. The Johnson-Reed Act of 1924 effectively banned subsequent Jewish immigration — with catastrophic implications for Jews who would soon be trapped under Nazi persecution. This situation is not unlike the recent surge of Islamophobia that has appeared amidst another surge of “American First” isolationist, anti-immigrant xenocontinued on page 10

Don’t Dilute Study Of Anti-Semitism

I

attended an April 14th symposium by Wayne State University’s Cohn-Haddow Center for Judaic Studies and the Center for Peace and Conflict Studies at Temple Beth El in Bloomfield Township. titled “Beyond Fear and Hate: Recent Ramifications of Anti-Semitism.” Its organizers publicized it would offer a “look at the nuanced history, contemporary trends and future outcomes related to anti-Semitism and other forms of group-based hate.” I was there for the first two hours of the program. The idea of studying anti-Semitism Harry Onickel is good. We can’t fight it if we don’t understand it. One way to not battle anti-Semitism is to treat it as just another hatred. Anti-Semitism is the oldest hatred. It is a virus that mutates from generation to generation. It isn’t just a stereotype or a resentment of Jews. Other groups are stereotyped, resented and hated, but for Jews there are no limits. Jews have been attacked for being both white and non-white, as capitalists and communists, of being too successful and too wretched, for being stateless and for having a state, for being too passive and for fighting too effectively. We’re attacked for being whatever the anti-Semite hates. Anti-Semites project their own pathologies on the Jews. Anti-Semitism is the one form of bigotry that is regularly excused or whitewashed. Some writers have objected to the “weaponization” of anti-Semitism,

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May 2 • 2019

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which as far as I can tell means “shut up” if it’s coming from your side of the political aisle. One of the program’s panelists suggested that the audience suspend judgment on Congresswoman Ilhan Omar and her anti-Semitic tweets until after we read her Washington Post op-ed. But it’s clear that Omar was untruthful in writing, “When I criticize certain Israel government actions …” She was not criticizing Israel government actions when she accused AIPAC and Israel of buying American support and accused Jews of dual loyalty. Only about half of the program was devoted to discussing anti-Semitism. The rest was on Islamophobia, racism and the current plight of illegal immigrants trying to enter the United States. Lumping all these issues together allowed the panel to trivialize anti-Semitism as just another generic hatred. Despite panelists’ claims to the contrary, Islamophobia and the current treatment of migrants at our border are not equivalent to 3,000 years of persecution, expulsions, forced conversions, ghettoization, blood libels, pogroms, massacres and genocide. One audience member pointed out during a short, mid-program Q&A, no good is done by equating Holocaust refugees with today’s Central American refugees in order to score easy anti-Trump points. Jews refused entry into the United States were fleeing genocide and sent back to die in Nazi concentration camps. This kind of comparison belittles the Holocaust and insults the memories of the 6 million. European anti-migrant sentiment was also brought

up. Yes, there is prejudice and anger among Europeans against migrants. There is also a tremendous increase in anti-Semitism being fueled by some of these migrants, and it is combining with native European antiSemitism. Jews are once again escaping Europe, but none of the presenters mentioned that. One panelist gave excellent information on 20th-century anti-Semitism describing Henry Ford’s Dearborn Independent, the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, Father Coughlin and the blaming of Jewish immigrants for crime, a cholera outbreak and communism. Rather than expand on this important thread, he minimized it by insisting that there is a parallel between anti-Semitism and Islamophobia. He went on to describe differences between left and right anti-Semitism, but without mentioning campus antiSemitism or the clear link between anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism. If the aim was to dissect anti-Semitism, this symposium was a missed opportunity. As an attempt to examine a wide range of hatred, it came off as a mostly superficial recitation of some bigotries based on the political leanings of the panelists. With worldwide anti-Semitism rising, it is more important than ever to have a forum to examine antiSemitism in all its forms and include suggestions for battling it. Who’s going to rise to that occasion? ■ Harry Onickel is a Ferndale freelance writer and literacy consultant. He is currently working on a history of anti-Semitism for high school students.


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views essay

Muslim and Jews from page 8

phobia. The fear of Jewish communism in the 1920s and the recent fear of Muslim terrorism parallel one another — each wildly extrapolates from the prominent role that a few members of an immigrants’ community of origin played in violent upheaval to condemn an entire community of immigrants as a threat to stability and the American way. SIMILAR CHALLENGES Despite the backlash, Jews and Muslims searched for social acceptance and a sense of rootedness in American society. This search led them, inter alia, to imagine the arrival of their ancestors in the New World even earlier than the historical record indicated. For American Jews, this meant embracing the (historically unfounded) notion that Christopher Columbus, or at least one of his sailors, was Jewish — or, at least, letters

— Ed Kohl West Bloomfield

Don’t Trivialize Measles At first, I thought Ms. Burstyn’s essay, “Measles: Life Goes On” (April 11, page 5) was just stupid and trivial. But as the

May 2 • 2019

universities in soaring numbers while building an array of lasting Jewish institutions and organizations, including United Synagogue and Jewish summer camps that instilled a variety of religious and Jewish cultural values and a strong sense of Jewish identity and commitment. Muslim-Americans, still somewhere between the first and second generation of immigration, are much closer to the beginning of this process. The un-acculturated appearance of many MuslimAmericans at the beginning of the 21st century recalls that of early 20th-century Jewish immigrants — a large enclave of non-Christians speaking a different language (written in a different alphabet), sporting different apparel, eating unfamiliar food. Muslims and Jews have also evinced a similar pride in the way that their cultures impacted American culture,

especially evident in American music. Jews celebrate the fact that one of the motifs in God Bless America was imported from the Shabbat morning liturgy and that a well-known tune in Porgy and Bess was a variation of the Barechu. Muslims hear the call of the mosque in the music of John Coltrane. Both reflect a common element of American culture and society: a nation of immigrants is more than a useful soundbite, but an acknowledgement of a richly textured culture and society built on a series of waves of immigration from all over the world. The Jewish contribution to American culture produced, among other things, Broadway. The Muslim contribution will likely contribute something just as remarkable. ■ Professor Howard Lupovitch is associate professor of history and director of the Cohn-Haddow Center for Judaic Studies at Wayne State University.

poem

continued from page 6

For all these blessings, we thank President Trump — the most pro-Israel president in American history. As the Israeli ambassador to the U.S. Ron Dermer said: “It is true that in every generation they rise up against U.S. ... But it is a rare thing — a very rare thing — a president like President Trump and an administration like the Trump administration — it doesn’t happen every generation. It may happen once in many, many generations.”

10

crypto-Jewish — thus including Jews among the first Europeans to set foot in the New World. It is not at all surprising that American-Muslims imagined something analogous: namely, the first Eurasian explorers of the New World were Muslim sailors. These were not expressions of Muslim supremacy or Jewish chauvinism; rather, an exercise in embracing and celebrating a new home. The possibility of social acceptance increased the threat of assimilation. Indeed, Muslims and Jews have faced a similar challenge of balancing between the pressures of the melting pot and the need to preserve their own identities. Here, again, a time lag of several generations. First- and, to a lesser extent, second-generation Jews found this balance by sending their children to public schools, who then graduated from high school and from American colleges and

jn

week (and the measles epidemic) progressed, it started to bother me more and more that an individual would make light of a dangerous situation, and that the Jewish News would print the item. Who in their right mind says that “too much information is stressful?” There have been several articles in the Forward about the extreme Orthodox rabbis who are promulgating antivax falsehoods and nonsense to their unquestioning followers. When I was growing up, we saw Drs. Sabin and Salk as heroic members of the tribe because their discoveries saved so many lives. What has happened in the intervening years? — Cynthia Brody Beverly Hills

When We Read The Names SUSAN ROSS SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

When we read the names … Six million are pulled from the grasp of the ovens. Departed souls … eternal blessings … transformed to assume new lives. For with each name … sisters, brothers, cousins, nieces and nephews … Rabbis, bakers, scholars, doctors, tailors, housewives, children … Blessed memories … spring to life. You can almost see them … dancing in the moonlight to the fiddler’s strains … Dancing in the moonlight … when we read the names. Close your eyes and welcome them. Acknowledge them before you … One mother’s softness. A father’s strong arms. A baby’s soft bottom. The fragrance of every Bubbie’s kitchen and every Zaydie’s weathered

chair … The fringes of tallit and the cantor’s soaring prayer. When we read the names … They are present once again. Reunited, they gather as if beckoned from afar. Can you feel them? Hear them? The rhythmic chanting of pious, bearded men. Women and children laughing … Released from the darkness of history’s cruelty to feel cool breezes against their skin. We hold hands with the sun … illuminating a world long gone. And those lost are found … when we read the names. Heads bowed … we weep. Davening, we whisper beneath our breath … “We shall never forget you. “We shall remember you and carry you with us throughout time.” And that is why … We read the names. ■


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May 2 • 2019

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jewsinthed HATRED STRIKES AGAIN

STAFF REPORT

A Day of

A

Terror

Chabad of Poway, near San Diego

12

May 2 • 2019

jn

CHABAD OF POWAY WEBSITE/CHABADPOWAY.COM

Synagogue shooting near San Diego kills 1 and injures 3.

round 11:30 a.m. April 27, six months after the horrific shooting at Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh that killed 11 people, congregants at Chabad of Poway near San Diego were celebrating the last day of Passover. Then, John Earnest, 19, armed with an AR-type assault weapon, walked in and began to shoot, according to Rabbi Yisroel Rabbi Goldstein, who was shot Goldstein in the hand and lost an index finger in the attack. According to Goldstein’s account, he said he heard a loud bang while he was preparing for a Yizkor service. He saw longtime member Lori Gilbert-Kaye on the lobby floor and then he saw the shooter. “Here is a young man standing with a rifle, pointing right at me. And I look at him. He had sunglasses on, I couldn’t see his eyes; I couldn’t see his soul,” Goldstein said. As more shots rang out, the rabbi lifted his hands in front of his face; the bullets striking his fingers. He said he rushed into the banquet hall, toward the children who were playing there, including his 4-year-old granddaughter. Bleeding, he screamed, “Get out, get out!” Goldstein and congregant Almog Peretz tried to usher children to safety. Peretz was wounded in the leg by bullet shrapnel as was 8-year-old Noya Dahan, who was injured in her leg and on her face. Both are recovering at home. Lori Gilbert-Kaye, 60, died in the attack. She was attending the service to say Kaddish for her mother. Then the shots stopped. Goldstein thinks the shooter’s gun may have jammed. Police say that congregant and U.S. Army and Navy veteran Oscar Stewart, 51, ran to the synagogue lobby and tried to tackle Earnest, who fled the scene. Off-duty Border Patrol agent Jonathan Morales fired after the gunman as he fled the building, hitting Earnest’s car. Goldstein told CNN he had asked continued on page 14


Investing in

Israel By Reuben Rashty

S

ince 1951, Israel Bonds has been providing supporters of Israel with a way to participate in the economic support of the State of Israel. Proceeds from Israel bond sales have developed every aspect of Israel’s economy. These bonds are essential for Israel – in times of crisis, when funding needs are immediate, these bonds can be used to efficiently and costeffectively secure capital from the worldwide Jewish community. Our clients have often mentioned Israel bonds as a way to invest in Israel – we took these comments to heart at Fifth Third Private Bank and recently announced we have a relationship with the Development Corporation for Israel – the broker dealer which underwrites bonds issued by the State of Israel in the U.S. – to offer an option for investors to finance the purchase of an Israel bond with a low outof-pocket cost. High net worth individuals can secure a loan from the bank to purchase a $500,000 to $1 million two year Israel bond1 with the bond serving as collateral. Upon maturity of the two-year bond, the loan is repaid and Israel has benefitted from the $1 million investment during that period. Why Israel bonds? From an investment perspective, Israel bonds may offer clients the opportunity to preserve capital, and diversify their portfolio. These bonds can be added to IRAs, trust funds, pension funds and endowment funds. But – more importantly – this allows the Jewish community in the U.S. to directly invest in Israel. These bonds provide options when planning for financial goals, including portfolio diversifications, retirement planning – and make great gifts for weddings, bar/ bat mitzvahs or births. Many Foundations hold Israel bonds as part of their investment portfolio and also gift the bonds as part of their charitable giving to organizations such as colleges and universities, federations and large national charities.

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Warren Buffet also has a strong affinity for Israel bonds. Buffet is such a strong believer, he said if Israel Bonds offered a perpetual bond, he would buy it. Separately, more than 90 states and municipal public employee pension funds and treasury funds have invested more than $3 billion in Israel Bonds. If you are interested in learning more about Israel bonds or have investment questions2, I would encourage you to reach out to Adam Grossman, assistant executive director at Development Corporation for Israel, adam. grossman@israelbonds.com. If you have any questions about Fifth Third Private Bank, please contact me directly, reuben.rashty@53. com. Q Reuben Rashty is a member of Keter Torah and lives in West Bloomfield. He is the managing director for Fifth Third Private Bank of Michigan. 1 An Israel bond: (1) Is not FDIC insured, (2) Not Bank guaranteed, (3) May lose value, (4) Is not a deposit, and (5) Not insured by any U.S. federal government agency. 2 Approval of the loan and the terms of the loan are within the discretion of Fifth Third Bank and ne ither the State of Israel nor DCI can make the decision whether Fifth Third Bank will grant you a loan and on what terms a loan will be made. Private Bank Checking account or Platinum Capital Account required. Other terms and conditions may apply.

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May 2 • 2019

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in jews thed HATRED STRIKES AGAIN continued from page 12

JTA.org contributed to this report.

Rabbis React to the Shooting ALLISON JACOBS DIGITAL EDITOR

The shooting at Chabad of Poway near San Diego weighs heavily among communities everywhere, including Metro Detroit. Several shared their experiences, opinions and personal ties to the Poway community: RABBI HERSCHEL FINMAN Herschel Finman, rabbi/founder of Jewish Ferndale, was at shul around 6 p.m. for Moshiach’s Meal, a custom that ends Passover. While celebrating, a congregant turned to Herschel him, revealing his Finman knowledge about a shooting at a Chabad synagogue in California. “Right at that point, my heart sunk, and the joy of the holiday was sucked right out of me — and, of course, my major concern was what was going on in that Chabad house and what we can do here to possibly help,” Finman says. Finally, around 10 p.m., Finman learned the full story, including that his colleague, Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, was one of the victims. Finman and Goldstein were acquaintances at the Rabbinical College of Seattle. It was a small program, with 14 students living together under one roof. “We basically saw each other 24/7 for two straight years,” Finman says. Goldstein is originally from Brooklyn, N.Y., and has been the rabbi of the Chabad of Poway for more than 30 years. “He is very lively and very dedicated — a person who really wanted to get out and make his mark on the world,” Finman says. “His whole life he wanted to be where he is now.” While he has been praying for Goldstein, who was injured, and the Poway community, Finman has been addressing safety concerns from worried family members and friends in the community. “We’re beefing up our security and being very vigilant in dealing

with this type of a thing,” Finman says. “At the same time, we are providing a place — if there is something that happens in Ferndale, Jewish Ferndale is somewhere people can go.” RABBI MITCH PARKER Saturday morning, Rabbi Mitch Parker of B’nai Israel Synagogue of West Bloomfield addressed his congregation on the last day of Pesach. He was recounting some of the difficult Mitch Parker moments in Jewish history during the month of April. “As I am talking about blood libels that took place around Pesach and things happening in the past, three hours later Jews are getting killed again,” Parker says. As he arrived at shul Sunday for morning minyan, he spotted two West Bloomfield police cars sitting outside. Aside from heightened security, the service at B’nai Israel had a more somber tone. “I usually talk about what happened in Jewish history in a given day. Today, we just sat in silence remembering what had happened.” While he was grateful for the police presence, Parker indicates B’nai Israel has increased security overall since the Tree of Life massacre in Pittsburgh. “We have to make sure that we have adequate security. On the other part, we have to work hard to create a society where people accept differences — where people can appreciate others as opposed to hate.” RABBI NOAM GROSS Rabbi Noam Gross, an educator at Partners Detroit Young Jewish Professionals, lived in Israel for eight years, where violent acts could take place at any point in time. “The idea of attacks on Jews is unfortunately part Noam Gross of the collective continued on page 16

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May 2 • 2019

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PHIL RAIMI

Morales in the past about coming to the synagogue armed because he’s trained, and he wanted trained security. “Unfortunately, we couldn’t afford to have an armed security officer at every service, so whenever we had extra help, we were grateful for it,” Goldstein said. According to the report, Morales had recently discovered his Jewish heritage and drove more than 100 miles each way to the synagogue from his home in El Centro, Calif., a Mexican border city, the rabbi said. After fleeing the scene in his vehicle, Earnest called 911 and turned himself into authorities. He was pulled over and taken into custody without incident. Moments after the attack, Goldstein wrapped his bleeding fingers in a prayer shawl, stood on a chair and spoke to his congregation, he told CNN the day after the attack. He recalled saying, “We are a Jewish nation that will stand tall. We will not let anyone or anything take us down. Terrorism like this will not take us down.” Authorities said they discovered an online letter written by Earnest filled with statements about killing Jews. The letter referenced the recent shootings at the Tree of Life Synagogue and mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, and took credit for a recent arson at a nearby mosque. Goldstein told news outlets that members of the congregation had recently attended a city seminar about what to do in an active shooter situation. He said the training helped “tremendously. They evacuated so well, we had so many exit doors that it was so effective. People ducked down and they crawled out to safe areas.” After he was released from the hospital, Goldstein told reporters, “A little bit of light pushes away a lot of darkness. We need a lot of light now. “And this coming Saturday, I personally feel, I want to appeal to all the Jewish people to make an effort to attend synagogue. We need to fill up those rooms, not run away from synagogue but, on the contrary, let’s fill up the synagogues.” ■

Noya Dahan, 8, is wrapped in the Israeli flag at a vigil in Poway.

Heroic Israelis Several Israelis were in the Chabad of Poway during the terrorist attack on April 27. Almog Peretz, 34, is from Sderot — a town near the border with Gaza that’s been subjected to rocket attacks where residents have only 15 seconds after a rocket alarm sounds to get to a bomb shelter. Peretz had only moved to California from Sderot a few months before the attack, according to reports in Haaretz. He reportedly saved the lives of several children during the shooting attack and was hit by shrapnel in his leg as he ushered them to safety. He told an Israeli radio station he took the children to a building in the back and hid them there. “It doesn’t matter where we go, we have to look out for ourselves. In Sderot, where I used to live, didn’t they also fire rockets at us? I didn’t believe this would happen in a place like this,” Peretz told Israeli radio. Israel Dahan, the father of 8-year-old Noya Dahan who was wounded in the attack, also moved with his family from Sderot a few years ago. “We came from fire to fire. We left Sderot after our house was hit a few times. My mother’s house was hit. I was wounded,” he said. Congregant Israeli Shimon Abitbol immediately protected his grandson when he heard the shots. “Without thinking twice, I lay down on my grandson and protected him,” Abitbol told Times of Israel. “After I counted seven or eight gunshots and there was a lull — I assume the weapon jammed — I took my grandson and rushed outside through a side door; we gathered all the children there.” Abitbol, a paramedic with the Magen David Adom service, also tried to perform CPR on Lori Gilbert-Kaye, who later died from her gunshot wounds. ■


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May 2 • 2019

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in jews thed HATRED STRIKES AGAIN continued from page 14

consciousness of the Israeli people,” Gross says. “Once you get used to that, this almost feels like an extension of that in a way.” Gross further adds that looking at the bigger picture, this is a continued page in the book of a 3,000-year history of anti-Semitism and, as response, communities should band together in solidarity. “This is unfortunately another notch in the belt of our very turbulent history — we can’t allow that to intimidatee us into hiding,” Gross says. “It’s about the power of numbers — banding together and focusing on the things that unite us rather than the differences that divide us. “Let’s all go out there, showing our Jewish pride, standing in solidarity across the nation.”

Free Listing Submission Deadline is May 10, 2019. The Jewish News will honor all Jewish students who are graduating this spring from Michigan high schools in our Cap & Gown Yearbook 2019, which will be published in the May 25 issue. Free listings include a photo and up to 40 words listing your accomplishments. All listings must be submitted online. Go to thejewishnews.com/cap-and-gown to submit your free listing today!

Questions? Email Sy Manello at smanello@renmedia.us or call him at 248-351-5147. 16

May 2 • 2019

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RABBI MENDEL ALPEROWITZ For Rabbi Mendel and Mussie Alperowitz, word of the Poway Chabad shooting came from police officers. “About mid-afternoon on Shabbos, we were playing with our children and heard a knock at our door,” said the rabbi of the Chabad Jewish Center of South Dakota, who lived in the Detroit area for three years while attending the Lubavitch Cheder and Yeshiva-International School for Chabad Leadership in Oak Park. “It was the Sioux Falls police who came to offer us their protection and

Action Needed to Combat Anti-Semitism The head of the Anti-Defamation League, CEO Jonathan Greenblatt, told reporters on a conference call Sunday that President Donald Trump, politicians and tech executives need to be more proactive in fighting anti-Semitism on social media and in public discourse. “They need to stand united against hate and address it not only after it happens but by enforcing norms before there is a crisis and by elevating our shared values long before we have to deal with a trag-

tell us that a Chabad synagogue in Poway had been attacked, with at least one dead and several injured. They didn’t have much other information to share at that time.” For the Alperowitzes, the news was both horrific and personally distressing because Mussie’s cousin is junior rabbi of the congregation. “It is hard to describe the fear we had during the next few hours until the end of yom tov (during which they do not use electronics), knowing that our cousin and his two young daughters were likely in the shul during the deadly attack, but not knowing much else,” said the rabbi. After Shabbat, it was confirmed that their cousins were safe but had been in the synagogue when the gunman opened fired. “Having our own daughters the same age literally made us tremble,” Alperowitz said. “Just imagine the devastating impact this could have on a young child watching the violence. Even if they were not physically harmed, the innocence of every child in that shul has no doubt been stolen. “While we pray for those injured, we feel it is of utmost importance to encourage our local Jewish community to remain strong and proud.” ■ Contributing Writer Shelli Dorfman added to this report.

edy,” he said. “And we desperately need our leaders to stop politicizing the issue. Those who dismiss anti-Semitism when it comes from their side Jonathan of the aisle are only Greenblatt minimizing the issue and perpetuating the problem. “We need the president and the White House to direct [the Department of Homeland Security] to take deliberate action to devote resources to analyzing domestic terror threats. These homegrown threats are equal if not more dangerous than Islamist threats,” he said. ■


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May 2 • 2019

17


‘Hate Can’t Stop Us’ Former Detroiter who attends Chabad of Poway reacts to shooting.

RAIMI FAMILY

KERI GUTEN COHEN STORY DEVELOPMENT EDITOR

Aaron, Phil and Susie Raimi in front of a memorial of flowers in front of Chabad of Poway

“If we let stuff like this stop the Jewish people, we would’ve been stopped a long time ago … We are not going to let hate stop us.” — PHIL RAIMI

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May 2 • 2019

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O

ak Park native Phil Raimi and his son Aaron, 22, stayed up late last Friday night and slept in Saturday morning. Raimi chose not to wake his son to go to shul for Shabbat services and Yizkor on the last day of Passover — that decision may have saved them from harm. “I feel like it was almost Divine intervention,” said Phil, 62, who moved to the San Diego area in 1982. “My mind keeps flashing back to if we had gone to Chabad of Poway and that guy had barged in.” On April 27, six months to the day of the shooting at Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, a teen armed with an assault rifle entered Chabad of Poway (20 miles north of San Diego) and began shooting after making an anti-Semitic slur. Alleged shooter John Earnest injured three people and killed one — Lori Gilbert-Kaye, a dedicated synagogue member who was trying to protect others. In news reports, the mayor of Poway has called the shooting a hate crime. Raimi, his wife, Susie, and sons David, 25, and Aaron know Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, Gilbert-Kaye and members of the congregation. The Raimis live in Rancho Bernardo, about eight minutes from Chabad of Poway. David and Aaron attended preschool there and, although not a weekly attendee, Phil goes to minyan there and other services and programs. The JN reached Phil Raimi as he was leaving a vigil for the victims at a neighborhood church. He drove by Chabad of Poway on his way home and also passed where the suspect’s car still stood behind barricades. He noted the bullet holes. Raimi describes the community

as very family-oriented, a nice community of middle- and upper-middle class families, a mixture of all kinds of people. “How could a 19-year-old kid who grew up here be so filled with hate?” he asks almost to himself. “I suspect he might have been aware of the ending of Passover and saying Yizkor,” said Raimi, a technical writer for a cloud computing company. “There would be a lot more people there than on a normal Shabbat. I suspect that didn’t escape his thought process. “It’s shocking. You go to a shul for so many years. You go for Pesach and Yizkor and get gunned down. It’s crazy. Security has crossed my mind … What would happen if a lunatic came through and shot things up? I am in shock that this happened where I know everyone.” He said Saturday that his wife and Aaron were very upset by the attack; his other son David focused his attention on gathering information on the incident. Family members across the country reached out to lend support as did friends from Oak Park and from his family’s long association with Congregation B’nai Moshe. Driven by the memory of his late father, Saul, who was a Holocaust survivor, Raimi says he feels strongly about not giving in to the anti-Semitic hatred. “For me personally, this won’t stop me,” he said. “We’ve had a difference of opinion in the family; my wife’s a bit hesitant to go back there, but I’m not going to let it stop me. It didn’t stop my father and what he went through in the Shoah. “If we let stuff like this stop the Jewish people, we would’ve been stopped a long time ago … We are not going to let hate stop us.” Raimi also notes that his thinking has changed about the Second Amendment over the years to a less liberal stance. This Shabbat, he said he was thankful an off-duty Border Patrol agent at the shul tried to stop the shooter as he fled. “I am against attempts to disarm people,” Raimi said. “My father survived the Shoah and one of the first things Hitler did was to disarm the population … I don’t want places of worship to be armed camps, but it’s crazy to disarm people — and that’s the way I see it now.” ■

COURTESY ALTER GOLDSTEIN

in jews thed HATRED STRIKES AGAIN

Rabbi Alter Goldstein and his uncle Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein

‘We are One’ Ann Arbor nephew of Poway rabbi shares his family’s reaction. Shortly after the shooting of Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein at the Chabad of Poway, the horrific news made its way to his brother Rabbi Aharon Goldstein of the Chabad House of Ann Arbor. “Someone came into the synagogue on Shabbos afternoon and said they heard there was a shooting at a Chabad,” said Aharon Goldstein’s son, Rabbi Alter Goldstein of Ann Arbor. “Then we heard it was in California. And then word came that it took place in Poway at my uncle’s synagogue. “I didn’t want my father to know about it until after I got more details,” he said. “I wanted to wait until after Shabbos when we could call our family in Poway, but too many people were coming to us with information. When I told my father about his brother, we knew he had been shot but was safe and did not have life-threatening injuries.” When Shabbat ended, they heard a chilling account of what had taken place. “My cousin who went to visit the family said my uncle confronted the gunman,” Alter Goldstein said. “He had stepped into the hallway of the shul before starting his sermon and saw the shooter. My uncle literally went for the gun and was shot. Then the gun jammed. “We need to be vigilant,” he added. “Even in times of relative peace, we need to remember that Jews have always been a target. Our greatest power is being united. Chabad’s greatest idea is that all Jews are one big family. This hit my personal family, but we are all one, everywhere in the world.” ■ — Contributing Writer Shelli Liebman Dorfman


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JERRY ZOLYNSKY

jewsinthed

A scene from last year’s Walk for Israel

Walk for Israel Adat Shalom to host annual event to show support for the Jewish State.

STACY GITTLEMAN CONTRIBUTING WRITER

C

ome rain or shine, Andre Douville hopes Israel supporters will bring their blue-and-white pride for the Walk for Israel Sunday, May 5, at its new location at Adat Shalom Synagogue in Farmington Hills. Douville, who founded the walk 15 years ago with help from his dedicated committee, said the family-oriented day will celebrate all that is positive about Israel. With three modern-day holidays cropping up on the Jewish calendar, including Israel’s Memorial and Independence days (Yom HaZikaron and Yom Ha’atzmaut) and Yom Yerushalayim, Jerusalem Reunification Day, Douville said “May is that Israel time of year.” The weekend is also crowded with other events, including the kickoff of the Lenore Marwil Detroit Jewish Film Festival at the Jewish Community Center and a Yom HaShoah observance at the Holocaust Memorial Center. So, Douville is grateful Adat Shalom is hosting after many years at Temple Shir Shalom in West Bloomfield, where Douville had been executive director. “We loved our relationship with Shir Shalom and the committee for years has thought of changing things up by alternating the walk’s location to different parts around town,” said Douville, who has family in Israel and lived there himself for many years. “We hope our walk along Northwestern Highway will draw more people and increase our exposure to help all people understand the important relationship between the United States and the State of Israel.” Douville said the walk is expected to draw about 2,000 people; he counts on a good showing from the area’s congregations, schools and Hebrew schools as well as other non-Jewish organizations that have shown sup-

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port previously. He also said Farmington Hills police said they will have a highvisibility presence in light of the incident at the Chabad of Poway in California. Adat Shalom Executive Director Alan Yost said he and his congregation are honored to host the walk, which coincides with their Synergy Weekend featuring scholar-in-residence, journalist, book author and former IDF soldier Matti Friedman. “It worked out to offer the community an exciting event and they can also hear a talk from Friedman to begin the day,” Yost said. Before the walk, U.S. Rep. Brenda Lawrence, U.S. Sen. Gary Peters and other local dignitaries will address the crowd. Adat Shalom Hazzan Daniel Gross and other clergy will lead the U.S. and Israeli national anthems. Though Douville understands these are polarizing times in both American and Israeli politics, he said the walk encourages people to put aside differences to celebrate the essence of Israel. The day starts at 10:30 a.m. with a talk featuring Friedman and continues with a free kosher lunch, a carnival and entertainment by Star Trax. The walk will begin at 1:30 p.m., taking participants on a roundtrip stroll up and down Northwestern Highway for a little more than a mile. The carnival and activities go until 3 p.m. Donations of $5 or more are greatly appreciated, Douville said. There is ample parking in Adat Shalom’s two main parking lots. Handicap parking will be in the auxiliary parking lot and be clearly marked. Parking attendants will assist. Participants should expect a security presence with uniformed and plain clothes officers; bags will be inspected. Advanced registration is encouraged walkforisrael.org. ■

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in jews thed Yom HaShoah

A 1938 photo of Walter (left) and Werner rner (right) just prior to leaving Germany. any. Below: Urgent 4/9/38 telegram from Stark ark family in Munich to Mr. Osnos: “Our future ture now depends p upon p your y favor.” or.” PHOTOS (COURTESY OF DR. ROBERT STARK)

An Unlikely Hero Stark family owes its survival to Detroit businessman Herman Osnos.. JUDY GREENWALD CONTRIBUTING WRITER

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magine this: It’s 1936. You’re a 16-year-old boy living in Munich with your parents and your younger brother and sister. With the ever-increasing danger of being Jewish in Nazi Germany, subject to the horrifically harsh Nuremburg Laws, terrifying bands of Hitler Youth vandalizing homes and businesses, and the indiscriminate disappearance of friends and neighbors, your parents make the difficult decision to send you to England. Move ahead to 1937. After experiencing freedom and education at Buxton College, whose headmaster A.D.C. Mason gained notoriety for accepting German Jewish youths escaping fascist tyranny, you still fear for your family’s safety. Using your newfound command of English, you begin urgently writing dozens of letters, desperately searching for someone who can help your family escape to a better life in the United States. Then, in 1938, against all odds, mere weeks before the violence of Kristallnacht would break out, you find a generous Jewish businessman in Detroit who makes the unbelievable promise to provide affidavits for you and your brother, and later, for your parents and little sister. Sounds like the plot of a thrilling World War II movie, no? But for Dr. Robert Stark, it’s the true story of his

family’s rescue by Herman Osnos, owner of the iconic Sam’s Cut-Rate Department Store on Randolph Street in Detroit’s Campus Martius district. And it’s a story of friendship, one that began with the heroic actions of a stranger reaching out to help people in need and has continued over the years. ESCAPING THE NAZIS “My grandparents, Hermann and Klara Stark, fearful over the safety of their three children, made the reluctant decision to send their eldest son — my father, Walter — to England,” Stark, of Greenwich, Conn., explained. “While there, he saw how bad things were getting in Germany, and he started writing letters to strangers or to people he thought might be relatives, trying to get his family out. “My dad wrote one fateful letter in 1937 to Albert Schmidt, a non-Jewish former employee of my grandfather’s clothing store who had moved to Detroit. (My grandfather even gave Schmidt some suits to take with him to America!) In the letter, my dad pleaded: ‘My family is in danger; do you have any way of helping us to get over?’ Schmidt took the letter to his boss, Herman Osnos, who made the incredible decision to help by providing affidavits for my dad and my uncle Werner, people p p he’d never met, swearing he’d be

Left to right: January 1937 letter from Walter Stark (at Buxton boarding school) to Herman Osnos in Detroit, Nov. 4, 1937; letter from Walter Stark (at boarding school in England) to Osnos.

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responsible for them. That’s how they were able to escape in the fall of 1938.” Stark’s father and uncle were safe, but his grandparents and Aunt Lilo were still trapped in Germany. “After Kristallnacht, my family went into hiding in the Black Forest,” Stark said. “Then, in 1939, Mr. Osnos again gave three affidavits for my grandparents and aunt, who also came to Detroit. My family was immensely grateful for the lifesaving actions of this generous man!” Osnos, the son of Russian Jewish immigrants, was born in 1900 in New York and grew up on his family’s farm in New Jersey. He moved to Detroit and began working at Sam’s Cut-Rate, eventually becoming a company executive. He married in 1920, and he and his wife, Helen, had a son, Gilbert. Stark said his family kept in touch with the Osnos family, and they even sent him a gift for his bar mitzvah. He said the two families lost touch after the Osnos family moved to Stamford, Conn., but then, when Stark also moved to Connecticut to begin his medical practice as a cardiologist, he decided to look up Herman to renew the relationship. HERMAN OSNOS’ LEGACY “I found Herman as an elderly man in a nursing home in Stamford,” Stark said. “I visited him once, and then shortly afterward, he passed away. Then when a my m son David had his bar mitzvah, I invited Gilbert and his family to attend. i David remembers that the Osnos famD ily’s i presence almost overshadowed his big b day!” During another visit to the Stark’s house, Gilbert brought a large box with h him. h “In the box were copies of the many letters my father had written m pleading for someone to rescue him,” p Stark remembered. “I learned Gilbert S had h donated the originals to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in

Washington, D.C. During a 2018 trip to Washington, my family, including my three sisters who live in Michigan, saw those original letters. It was very moving to see my father’s handwriting as a 17-year-old boy, and I was so impressed that he could do such a thing.” According to the museum’s records detailing Osnos’ correspondence: “Herman Osnos was a Jewish American businessman who supported many European Jewish refugees in their quests to immigrate to the United States before and after the Holocaust … While working for Sam’s Cut-Rate and during the period of increasing hostility and persecution against Jews in Europe in the 1930s and 1940s, Herman advocated for Jewish refugees’ entrance into the United States. “As an advocate, Herman served as a member of the Jewish Welfare Board and attempted to help as many refugees as he could seek asylum in the United States. Nearly all of the persons requesting help from Mr. Osnos had never met him and had only heard through friends or colleagues that he was willing and able to supply affidavits of support.” “My family was so fortunate to have someone like Herman Osnos rescue them from an oppressive regime,” Stark said with emotion. “Nowadays, we have a similar obligation to help others. Issues of immigration and refugees have always been of special interest in our family. Whenever I read about a dire situation in Syria or Central America, I think about ways we could help. “It was tremendously moving to see my father’s letters in the Archival Collection of the U.S. Holocaust Museum. Hopefully their public display will influence others to do similar acts of lovingkindness for people in need.” ■ To learn more about Herman Osnos, access the William Davidson Digital Archive of Jewish Detroit History at djnfoundation.org.


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in jews thed here’s to

Friends of the Israel Defense Forces MICHIGAN CHAPTER

2019

Women of Valor Luncheon

Drs. Candice Chen and Melvyn Rubenfire have been appointed to Authority Health’s Graduate Medical Education (GME) Teaching Health Dr. Candice Center’s Board as Chen co-chairs, responsible for co-leading the quarterly board meetings of the Authority Health Graduate Medical Education Consortium starting in May. Dr. Melvyn Rubenfire Chen is an associate professor at George Washington University in the Department of Health Policy and Management; she is also a boardcertified pediatrician. Rubenfire is a professor of internal medicine and director of preventive cardiology at the University of Michigan.

HONORING

Joan Chernoff Epstein CO-CHAIRS

- 0K K 4K ) GUEST SPEAKER

Gadi Ezra

THURSDAY, MAY 30 Adat Shalom Synagogue

The Jewish Federation announced that Dorothy Benyas is the recipient of the 2019 William Avrunin Professional Development Award. The award recognizes and honors outstanding Jewish communal professionals employed by the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. Benyas began her career at the Jewish Federation as a senior accountant in 1994 and rose to the position of chief financial officer.

Larry J. Glanz, CPA, APMA, CRPC, a private wealth advisor with Glanz Wealth Advisors, a private wealth advisory practice of Ameriprise Financial Services Inc. in Farmington Hills, has qualified for the company’s Circle of Success annual recognition program. He established himself as one of the company’s top advisors with 24 years of experience in the financial services industry.

Dr. Louis Soverinsky of Bloomfield Hills was chosen as the Volunteer of the Year for Fleischman Residence in West Bloomfield. Lou, often with two grandsons, provides a sing-along program once a month for the residents at Fleischman. The National Association of Food Journalists has named Danny Raskin the next recipient of the Carol DeMasters Service to Food Journalism Award, an award reserved for individuals who have made a significant and lasting contribution to the field of food journalism. Raskin has been writing a weekly column in the JN since 1942.

Farmington Hills, Michigan

s For more information and to purchase tickets, contact: michigan@fidf.org | 248.926.4110

Their job is to look after Israel. Ours is to look after them.

Martin B. Shichtman, a professor of English and literature and director of the Center for Jewish Studies at Eastern Michigan University, delivered the keynote address at the 2019 Official State of Michigan Holocaust Commemoration, in the rotunda of the State Capitol in Lansing.

Irene Butter, a Holocaust survivor, author of Shores Beyond Shores: From Holocaust to Hope My True Story, founder of the Raoul Wallenberg Medal and lecture at the University of Michigan, and co-founder of Zeitouna, an Arab-Jewish women’s dialogue group in Ann Arbor, received the 2019 Robert S. Northrup Humanitarian Award at the Rotary Club of Ann Arbor’s meeting April 24.

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jewsinthed Medved to Keynote Breakfast for Israel

Ethnic Intimidation MSU Hillel intern received anti-Semitic death threats. KERI GUTEN COHEN STORY DEVELOPMENT EDITOR

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Jewish student intern at the Lester and Jewell Morris Hillel Jewish Student Center at Michigan State University in East Lansing was urged by Hillel staff to report anti-Semitic death threats he’d been receiving via Facebook messages last October, according to Robyn Hughey, Hillel associate director. Hughey said staff learned about the trouble when some of them began getting Facebook messages, too. “While we were not scared for our lives, we were worried for our intern’s safety,” Hughey said. “We put additional security into place to ensure the safety of our students. When we initially received the messages, we did not know much of the backstory and our students’ safety is our first priority. We quickly learned that our staff, students and building were not the target — the accused was focusing his attention on our intern.” Using court records that included a personal protection order, the Lansing State Journal reported April 25 that Jack Hurlbut, 19, of Eaton Rapids was jealous his ex-girlfriend had moved on to a date with a new man — the intern, who is from Metro Detroit. The threatening messages escalated. Hurlbut also called the Hillel twice. “The accused called the building twice and spoke with Executive Director Cindy Hughey both times,” Robyn Hughey said. “The

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second time was when she told him she would call the police if he called again. All contact with him and our staff then stopped. This was in November.” Robyn Hughey also said Hillel’s executive director “has been fully cooperating with the police and prosecutors, which is why she has not given any public comment.” According to the State Journal story, one of the messages referenced Hitler. The story said the first message appeared the day before the Tree of Life Synagogue shooting Oct. 27, 2018, in Pittsburgh, where 11 people were killed and seven were injured. The intern filed a complaint Nov. 15 with the East Lansing Police Department, which led to Hurlbut being charged with ethnic intimidation, a felony punishable by up to two years in prison, and malicious use of telecommunications services, the State Journal reported, adding that ethnic intimidation is not a charge commonly used in the state. Since 2014, 160 people have been charged with ethnic intimidation in Michigan, according to the State Court Administrative Office. Criminal charges were filed in a hearing in late January, the State Journal reported. Hurlbut was due to appear back in court at 2 p.m. April 30 for a pretrial hearing. He is currently free on bond; his attorney declined to comment last week, the story said. ■

Jewish National Fund (JNF-USA) is hosting the Breakfast for Israel in Detroit at Congregation Shaarey Zedek on Tuesday, May 21. This complimentary event will feature a talk on Israeli innovation by guest speaker Jonathan Medved, a social entrepreneur, philanthropist, investor, and the founder and CEO of OurCrowd. Registration will open at 7:30 a.m. and the program will begin promptly at 8. Medved has been called “one of Israel’s leading high-tech venture capitalists” by the Washington Post, and was named by the New York Times as one of the top 10 most influential Americans who have impacted Israel. OurCrowd has raised more than $440 million for more than 120 portfolio companies since its launch in February 2013. “Jewish National Fund’s continuing investment into Israel of hundreds of millions of dollars goes way beyond their forests,” says event co-chair Rabbi Elimelech Goldberg. “Medved will present his astonishing work with OurCrowd and focus on the next level of Israeli innovation. It is a great opportunity for people to hear more about the innovations in the extraordinary Israel science/economy space.” Proceeds from the breakfast will benefit JNF’s vital work in Israel. Registration for the Breakfast for Israel is required by May 10 via jnf. org/detroit. For details, contact Kim Levy at klevy@jnf.org or (248) 324-3080.

Help End Hunger Forgotten Harvest is partnering with the Harold and Kay Fund, which will match donations up to $50,000 made through Mother’s Day, May 12. This partnership between Forgotten Harvest and the fund enables donors and the community to double their impact and make a difference in the lives of families in need. “We appreciate all our donors, volunteers and partners like the Harold and Kay Matching Gift Fund that continue to support Forgotten Harvest and our mission to reduce food insecurity for families across metro Detroit,” said Kirk Mayes, Forgotten Harvest CEO. “Mothers, grandmothers and women help change so many lives, and at this time of year we can work together so they can continue to do just that.” Donate at forgottenharvest.org/ donate.

Yom HaShoah Commemoration The Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Campus will host a Yom HaShoah commemoration Sunday, May 5, at 2:30 p.m. The event is free with complimentary parking and is presented in cooperation with C.H.A.I.M. Children of Holocaust Survivors Association in Michigan, Hidden Children and Child Survivors Association of Michigan, the Shaarit Haplaytah Organization, and Program for Holocaust Survivors and Families of JSL. Also, you can volunteer to participate in the worldwide Holocaust memorial project, Unto Every Person There Is A Name, by reciting the names of Holocaust victims at the HMC May 2 and May 5.

Sheila Landis To Headline Greenbaum Concert Sheila Landis and the Brazilian Love Affair will be featured at the annual Cantor Sam and Mona Greenbaum Concert at Congregation Beth Shalom in Oak Park at 4 p.m. Sunday, May 19. A light meal will be served after the musical program. Award-winning Detroit vocalist Sheila Landis’ musical career began in 1973 with a Top 40 group called the Vineyards. In 1981, she formed her own record company, Shelan, and has been issuing an album on that label virtually every year since.

She met her musical and romantic soul mate, guitarist Rick Matle, in 1990. They work together as a duo, trio and with their six- to eight-member band Brazilian Love Affair, which enables Landis to express her long-standing romance with Brazilian music, bossa nova and samba. Tickets are $12 for adults and $6 for children ages 4-12. Children 3 and under are free. For reservations, call (248) 547-7970 or email cbs@ congbethshalom.org.


jewsinthed

Fun with Dogs Bring your pooch to this event put on by student leaders. STEFANI CHUDNOW SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

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o you want to donate to great causes and enjoy a fun afternoon at the same time? On May 11, you can do both at the third-annual Bring Your Own Dog (BYOD) event. Brought to you by the Bloomfield Hills High School Student Leadership group, this event includes a rescue dog adoption center and a no-leash zone for dogs to play, as well as a fair where many local businesses will be represented, such as Pet Supplies Plus, Premier Pet Supply, Ruff Life Photography and more. As a member of Bloomfield Hills High School Student Leadership, junior Rikki Goldman came up with the idea for the BYOD event in her freshman year of high school. “A friend and I wanted to create a dog park event because there are no good dog parks near us,” Goldman said. “Because our student leadership class offered us the opportunity to create a large-scale project, we were able to make our idea a reality.” Bloomfield Hills High School Junior Class President Lexie Finkelstein, added, “We were united by our mutual love of dogs and serving the greater community. Our original goal for BYOD still stands today: supporting local dog shelters with fiscal donations and awareness, supporting the local small business community, and uniting the community through a fun and charitable event.” The $3 minimum admission to

BYOD benefits Detroit Animal Care and Control as well as Detroit Dog Rescue; the latter is Detroit’s only no-kill shelter. “We have so many programs at Detroit Dog Rescue, from caring for dogs who have cancer to our outreach program in Detroit where we’re reaching out to neighbors and supplying them with dog food, spay and neuter programs, and vaccinations,” Detroit Dog Rescue Executive Director Kristina Millman-Rinaldi said. “It really is community initiatives like BYOD that keeps our movement moving forward, and we love when younger kids get involved because there is so much they can bring to the nonprofit sector.” The event will also host the Impasto food truck and face painting services for additional entertainment. Bloomfield Hills High School sophomore Ben Silberman, who’s working on the PR for the BYOD event and serves as the executive tech adviser for the Student Leadership group, wants everyone to know that they don’t have to necessarily be dog-people to stop by BYOD. “You don’t need to have a dog to attend,” Silberman said. “If you’re a cat person, great! Everyone is welcome at BYOD.” The BYOD event takes place Saturday, May 11, from 11:30 a.m.4 p.m. at 26425 Wellington Road in Franklin. For more information, visit byodogteam.wixsite.com/byodogpark or email byodogteam@gmail.com. ■

2019

AWARDEES

William Davidson Lifetime Achievement Award

DR. LYNDA S. GILES The Sylvia Simon Greenberg Young Leadership Award

CAROLE BENEZRA

RABBI HAROLD S. LOSS

The Mark-Lis Family Young Leadership Award

MATTHEW RAN

The Frank A. Wetsman Young Leadership Award

DR. ZACHARY LISS

Wednesday, May 22, 2019 7:00 p.m. The Berman Center for the Performing Arts Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit 6600 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield, MI 48322

Dessert reception following | Dietary laws observed

Register at jewishdetroit.org/awardsnight

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moments Naomi Bernard will become a bat mitzvah on Saturday, May 4, 2019, at B’nai Israel Synagogue in West Bloomfield. She is the daughter of Mechelle and David Bernard, the sister of Becky, and the granddaughter of David and Margaret Leduc, and Etta Bernard and the late Helmut Bernard. Naomi is in the seventh grade at Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit in Farmington Hills. For her mitzvah project, she is volunteering with Repair the World PeerCorps.

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Spencer Jack Goldberg will be called to the Torah as a bar mitzvah on Sunday, May 5, 2019, at a private Rosh Chodesh service at Knollwood Country Club in West Bloomfield. Joining in his celebration will be his proud parents, Stacy Goldberg and Dale Goldberg, and his sister Sloane. He is the loving grandchild of Phyllis and Richard Canvasser, and the late Herbert and Irene Goldberg. Spencer is a student at Berkshire Middle School in Birmingham. Among his many mitzvah projects, he found it most meaningful to collect items for the Michigan Humane Society to help pets in need. Jordan Ian Jerome will lead the congregation in prayer on the occasion of his bar mitzvah on Saturday, May 4, 2019, at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield. He will be joined in celebration by his proud parents, Julie and Allan Jerome, and sister Gabrielle. He is the loving grandchild of Lillian and the late Irven Jerome, and the late Ilene and Gerald Morgan. Jordan is a student at Abbott Middle School in West Bloomfield. Among his many mitzvah projects, he found preparing and planting crops at Temple Israel’s Garden of Mitzvot to be the most meaningful.

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Peyton Alexandra Kaplan, daughter of Robyn and Glenn Kaplan, will lead the congregation in prayer as she becomes a bat mitzvah at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield on Saturday, May 4, 2019. She will be joined in celebration by her siblings Hannah and Sammi, and proud grandparents Linda and Stanley Beltzman, and Linda and Raymond Stone. She is also the loving grandchild of the late Martin Kaplan. Peyton is a student at Walnut Creek Middle School in West Bloomfield. At her middle school, she tutored students who have struggled in class, her most rewarding mitzvah project. Livia Spiro Moray, daughter of Monica and Jon Moray, will lead the congregation in prayer as she becomes a bat mitzvah at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield on Saturday, May 4, 2019. She will be joined in celebration by her brother Jared Pazner and proud grandparents Nadele Spiro, Elaine P. Spiro and Henry J. Spiro, and Muriel and Bernard Moray. Livia is a student at Detroit Country Day School in Beverly Hills. For her mitzvah project, she volunteered for Art and Soul Dreams, an all-volunteer nonprofit dedicated to connecting families to children as part of the Michigan foster care and adoption system. Joey Soffer will be called to the Torah as a bar mitzvah during Havdalah services at Temple Shir Shalom in West Bloomfield on Saturday, May 4, 2019. Joining in his celebration will be his proud parents, Randee and David Soffer, family and friends. He is the grandson of Josephine Fridson and the late Ernest Fridson, Eileen Soffer and Fred Soffer. Joey is a student at Warner Middle School in Farmington Hills. As part of his mitzvah project, he collected food and donations for the Michigan Animal Rescue League.


moments Jacob Hayden Solomon, son of Julie and Michael Solomon, will chant from the Torah as he becomes a bar mitzvah at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield on Friday, May 3, 2019. He will be joined in celebration by his sister Sarah and proud grandparents Joanne and Larry Pevos, and Harriet and Elliott Solomon. He attends James R. Geisler Middle School in Commerce Township. As part of his most meaningful mitzvah project, Jacob volunteered at the Friendship Circle in West Bloomfield for both the Sports Buddy program and the Miracle League Baseball program.

Reid Benjamin Smith, son of Karen Benjamin and Jordan Smith, will become a bar mitzvah at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield on Saturday, May 4, 2019. He will be joined in celebration by his siblings Carter, Graham and Piper. Reid is the loving grandchild of Norman and the late Barbara Benjamin, and Gaye and Martin Smith. He is a student at West Hills Middle School in Bloomfield Hills. Reid played piano for the Fleischman Residence and the Brown Center in West Bloomfield as part of his most meaningful mitzvah project.

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Dr. Nelson Hersh Dr. Marsha Beattie Dr. Amy Isenberg Licensed Specialists for Children & Adults

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ancy and Alan Simons of West Bloomfield are thrilled to announce the engagement of their daughter Helene Rachel to Jeffrey Ross, son of Dana and Howard Feldman of Dallas, Texas. Helene graduated with honors and distinction from the University of Michigan with a B.A. in psychology. She then earned her doctorate in psychology from the Chicago School of Professional Psychology. She is a clinical psychologist with a private practice in Denver, Colo. Jeffrey graduated from the University of Denver with a B.A. in finance and a master’s in accounting. He is a commercial real estate broker in Denver. A May wedding is planned at Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield.

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obin Willner and Arthur Slabosky of East Lansing are thrilled to announce the engagement of their son Gabriel Zakai Willner Slabosky to Allison Marie Zeff, daughter of Patricia Sullivan of Evanston, Ill., and the late Robert Zeff. Gabriel holds a degree in economics and works for GreenPath Financial Wellness as a financial counselor. Allison holds a degree in music and teaches music at Star International Academy. An October wedding is planned in Detroit.

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moments

Brownridge-Baum

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aulette and John Baum of Novi are delighted to announce the upcoming marriage of their daughter Stephanie Rachel to Sean William Brownridge, son of Filomena MacLean and Elizabeth and Lawrence Brownridge, all of New York. Stephanie and Sean graduated from the University of Michigan. She went on to receive her M.D. from Wayne State University School of Medicine. Stephanie is completing an OB-GYN residency at Lenox Hill Hospital and will continue with a fellowship in reproductive endocrinology and infertility. After completing his J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, Sean clerked for the Honorable Karen Valihura of the Delaware Supreme Court. He is employed as a corporate associate at Kirkland & Ellis LLP, specializing in M&A and shareholder activism. Stephanie and Sean will be married in May at the Pierre Hotel in New York.

Markose-Klein

D

r. Steven and Mrs. Diane Klein of West Bloomfield are thrilled to announce the engagement of their daughter Leslee to Abe Markose, son of Mrs. Beena Markose of Des Moines, Iowa, and the late Mr. Dilip Markose. Leslee graduated from the University of Michigan with a bachelor of arts in education and received her master’s degree in linguistics from Oakland University. She is a teacher with Oxford Community Schools. Abe graduated from Iowa State University with a bachelor of science in mechanical engineering and received his M.B.A. from Michigan’s Ross School of Business. He is a marketing manager with Wacker Chemical Company. An August 2019 wedding is planned in Downtown Detroit.

HOW TO SUBMIT ANNOUNCEMENTS Mazel Tov! announcements are welcomed for members of the Jewish community. Anniversaries, engagements and weddings with a photo (preferably color) can appear at a cost of $18 each. Births are $10. There is no charge for bar/bat mitzvahs or for special birthdays starting at the 90th. For information, contact Editorial Assistant Sy Manello at smanello@renmedia.us or (248) 351-5147 for information or for a mailed or emailed copy of guidelines.

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spirit torah portion

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Outside The Walls

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n intrinsic element of human to cry and to shout, to wail and to nature is a seeking out of shake their fists at the God who promsacred space. It’s something ised them milk and honey, not loss built into the fabric of who we are. and mourning. It is the freedom to be Monotheists and polytheists, unsettled to the core that creates agnostics and atheists, may something powerful, something disagree when it comes to theologically, philosophically the vocabulary we use or the and existentially challenging accreditation we give to those and, yes, something holy. holy spaces, but there is a near Because holiness requires consensus that some places some quality of transcendence, carry with them a different the whole notion of sacred space Rabbi Yoni energy, a sense of awe, of wonand place takes on a dimension Dahlen der, of making us rethink the in Judaism, where we find that Parshat world as we know it. sacred element not just in the Achrey Mot: synagogue and in the beit midThough one would think Leviticus that I, as a rabbi, would have a rash, but also in the hospital, 16:1-18:30; in the shivah house and at the proclivity to talk about sacred I Samuel space from a solely Jewish cemetery. 20:18-42. context, to speak on the power We find the Divine in (Shabbat of the synagogue and the beit moments when we let go of midrash, my personal experithe tethers that keep our hearts Machar ence has led me to a somewhat Chodesh) hidden from the public eye, different conclusion, one that I when we sing songs around the think about every time I read Shabbat table, when we dance this parshah of Achrey Mot. with a celebrating bride and groom, I believe, truly and deep in my heart, when we see our children finding their that the sacred comes not just from own sacred space, their own sacred the impressive, not just from towertime. ing structures or incredible natural Our mishkans, our sacred places, landscapes, but rather from a sense go far beyond synagogue walls. They of growth, of education, of learning are, in fact, wherever we allow them something important when in a space. to exist, wherever we choose to open In Judaism, our sacred spaces have doors of growth and vulnerability, time and again reinforced this nuance. where we come together as family, as Our holy sites have not simply been community to experience the deepest revered monuments, but rather points anguish and the highest joys of life as of communal ingathering in times of we know it, and where we allow ourjoy, celebration, tragedy, loss and grief. selves to turn off our busy brains, to sit The Israelites were tasked with in the present and to feel. moving forward after the tragic loss of As we march forward into the freeAaron’s sons, but they were also tasked dom given to us through the holiday of with changing their entire understand- Passover, may we embrace every holy ing of life as they knew it: In the wilplace on the path ahead. May we gathderness, in the open space of redemper the strength to learn and grow with tion, in freedom, even with God by that holiness, and may that growth be their side, there exist incomprehension, contagious throughout our families, confusion and uncertainty. our city, and throughout klal Yisrael And yet, it is the freedom to live and and all of God’s creation. ■learn from that tragedy that brings this community closer together, that allows Rabbi Yoni Dahlen is a rabbi at Congregation the men, women and children of Israel Shaarey Zedek in Southfield.

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arts&life theater

Subtle Parallels

SUZANNE CHESSLER CONTRIBUTING WRITER

L

A scene from the opera Grapes of Wrath

KEN HOWARD

Grapes of Wrath opera explores plight of migrant workers in Steinbeck’s time, encouraging insight today.

yricist Michael Korie believes that every new work of art should speak to the issues of the day but not in an obvious way. Composer Ricky Ian Gordon agrees. Together, they worked that goal into the development of an opera, The Grapes of Wrath, based on John Steinbeck’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book, carried into John Ford’s movie adaptation, about the plight of migrant workers. While the storyline takes place during the Dust Bowl and Depression of the 1930s, when displaced Oklahoma farm workers sought daily sustenance and opportunity in California, the two hope their musicalized production encourages insight into the desperation and strivings of today’s migrant workers. The writing team will be in Detroit for the technical week and opening of the opera, running May 11-19 at the Detroit Opera House. Plans are in the offing for at least one of the show’s creators to hang out in the lobby and talk to audience members reacting to the production. “I like the dawning of awareness, and I feel that people begin by watching a work that they think is historical as it catches up on them that very little has changed,” says Korie, whose other projects, with a range of composers, reach from musical theater that includes Grey Gardens to opera that includes Harvey Milk. “Some people respond to the issue of immigration or a wall. Other people respond to a sort of hidden power that runs the system. Others respond to family tragedies — loss of jobs, loss of income, loss of hope. “It’s all very relatable because [the characters] are based on real people whom Steinbeck lived with. He followed them on the road for years as he kept his journals.” The commission for the opera, reduced to two acts as presented by the Opera Theatre of St. Louis, originally was the idea of Minnesota Opera. The project launched with Gordon, who brought in Korie. Together, they set up some general ideas, but lyrics preceded music. “There was a moment in my life when I suddenly realized I wanted to continued on page 34

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arts&life theater

NONFICTION OPERAS Both Gordon and Korie share a special interest in nonfiction opera. While Gordon brings a sense of grief experienced through loss of family and a longtime partner, Korie brings a sense of politics and news experienced through a stint in journalism. Both have brought their Jewish sensibilities into opera development. Gordon worked on Morning Star, about Jewish immigrants in early 20th-century New York, and 27, about Gertrude Stein. Korie, in writing the opera Kabbalah with Stewart Wallace, traced the history of mystical interpretation of the Bible throughout the diaspora after spending months in Israel with Kabbalistic communities. With religion and history in mind, Gordon and Korie are working on an opera about anti-Semitism, a story of the past and an alarm for now. The Garden of the Finzi-Continis adapts the book written by Giorgio Bassani and film directed by Vittorio De Sica taking place in Italy before World War II. In transforming Grapes of Wrath into opera, the team made a change to the storyline. It has to do with the loss of a character. In the book, the character disappears and is assumed dead; in the opera, the death becomes

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JOANNA MORRISEY

a personal sacrifice to benefit family by removing a burden. Both men, entering their 60s and active in the New York gay community, readily tell about mothers as exemplars of people establishing careers in the arts. Gordon’s mom, Eve Samberg (stage name Saunders), was a singer-comedian who entertained in the Catskills, where he joined her as accompanist in his teen years. Korie’s mom, Janet Indick, is a sculptor often working with Jewish themes. Gordon studied at CarnegieMellon University and Korie attended KEN HOWARD

write opera,” says Gordon, whose earlier attention had been given to art songs and musical theater. “I sent 16 of my songs to opera companies and said I really want to write an opera. It was very fruitful because Houston Grand Opera commissioned my first opera, the Tibetan Book of the Dead. Next was Minnesota Opera and Grapes of Wrath.” In choosing a lyricist, Gordon approached Korie based on stage achievements. Gordon defines the collaboration effect as “ballad opera” with the use of a chorus for background details. “Steinbeck wrote journalistic chapters in between his story chapters,” Korie explains. “He would write about agribusiness or weather and kind of erect barriers that his characters would run into in the following chapters. “I converted these chapters to dramatic music with Ricky [using the chorus] to dramatize and set up the obstacles like the dust itself, the [exploitation at] used car lots and the eviction process.”

GREG DOWNER

continued from page 32

Lyricist Michael Korie

Composer Ricky Ian Gordon

A scene from the opera Grapes of Wrath

“I like the dawning of awareness, and I feel that people begin by watching a work that they think is historical as it catches up on them that very little has changed.” — MICHAEL KORIE

Brandeis and New York universities. Gordon’s visit to Detroit extends earlier professional travels to the state. He has conducted master classes at Michigan State University and the University of Michigan, where he recently delivered a commencement address for graduates of the School of Music, Theatre & Dance. Although Grapes of Wrath is sung in English, it will have supertitles to give additional clarity to the lyrics.

“I like to be involved with the supertitle projections, so they don’t distract,” Korie says. “I want audiences [essentially to experience the opera] through the music and acting. “It’s up to the librettist and composer these days to write dramatically sound works, and supertitles force us to be better in that regard. Now that everyone can read it and understand every word, it better be good.” ■

details The Grapes of Wrath runs May-11-19 at the Detroit Opera House. $35-$160. (313) 237-7464. michiganopera.org.


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arts&life

SCOTT MARTINEZ

theater

Christine Dwyer and Richard Kline in a scene from Waitress

Uplifting Musical Waitress star Richard Kline embraces the message of female empowerment. ALICE BURDICK SCHWEIGER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS.

R

ichard Kline, best known as the ten by Adrienne Shelly (see sidebar), neighbor Larry in the 1970s and tells the story of Jenna, a waitress and ’80s sitcom Three’s skilled pie-maker trapped Company, is starring as the in an abusive marriage. details owner of Joe’s Diner in the She finds herself pregnant Waitress is at the musical Waitress, playing and dreams of a way out. Fisher Theater, Detroit. A baking contest nearby at the Fisher Theater from For tickets, call (800) May 7-19. offers her a chance to move 982-2787 or go to “I had to learn a slight away and rebuild her life. broadwaydetroit.com Southern accent for Joe provides encourageor ticketmaster.com. the role, and I am from ment for a new beginning. Prices start at $39. Queens, New York,” says “In the show, I am Jenna’s Kline, who joined the road support and I can easily company last December. relate to that because I have “The show is set in a small town in the a daughter myself,” says Kline, whose American South.” daughter is 35. “For me, the fatherly Waitress, based on the 2007 film writinstinct is easy to portray.”

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EARLY YEARS Kline, who grew up in a Reform Jewish home, attributes his desire to become an actor to his family. “My sister is three years older than me and she studied ballet. Seeing her dance made me want to perform,” Kline says. “My father had wanted to be an actor during the Depression, but he had to help out the family and instead became a tradesman. My mother was a bookkeeper with a beautiful voice. They both loved the arts and that had a big influence.” Born and raised in New York City, Kline moved to Los Angeles in 1976. In 2005, he moved back East and, about seven years ago, began teaching a drop-

Adrienne Shelly’s Legacy Waitress, the Broadway musical, was inspired by the movie written, directed and starring Adrienne Shelly, whose birth name was Adrienne Levine. Raised on Long Island, N.Y., her father, Sheldon “Shelly” Levine, passed away when she was young and, as a tribute to him, she took his first name as her stage surname. Sadly, Adrienne was brutally murdered Nov. Adrienne Shelly 1, 2006, by a 19-yearold undocumented Ecuadorean construction worker working in the same building as her Greenwich Village office. She was survived by her husband, Andy Ostroy, and her then 2-year-old daughter, Sophie. Ostroy established the Adrienne Shelly Foundation, which awards scholarships, production grants, finishing funds and living stipends to artists. In her honor, the Women Film Critics Circle gives an annual Adrienne Shelly Award to the film that it finds “most passionately opposes violence against women.” The movie Waitress, which also starred Keri Russell, Cheryl Hines and Nathan Fillion, was released posthumously in 2007. The musical Waitress officially opened on Broadway April 24, 2016. It starred Jesse Mueller with music and lyrics by Sara Bareilles.

ADRIENNE SHELLY FOUNDATION

Kline’s five decades of acting began after earning an undergraduate degree from Queens College in New York, an MFA in theater from Northwestern University and serving three years in the military, including two years in Vietnam. He acted in college and graduate school but made his professional debut in the Lincoln Center Repertory Company in 1971. He went on to perform in regional theater and made his Broadway debut in the show City of Angels in 1990. He was in the national touring company of Wicked and stood by for Nathan Lane in a show called November. He also starred in the one-man show Boychik OffBroadway. Among his more than 75 television credits are Gilmore Girls, Judging Amy, That ’70s Show, NYPD Blue, LA Law, Mary Tyler Moore, Maude and The Americans. He’s been seen in almost a dozen films including Barry Levinson’s Liberty Heights. He also directed Noel Coward’s Present Laughter in Los Angeles, where he won the L.A. Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Direction. He became part of sitcom history when he landed the role of Larry Dallas, Jack’s friend and smarmy upstairs neighbor on Three’s Company. “It was a dream working on that show,” says Kline, who keeps in touch with co-stars Joyce DeWitt and Pricilla Barnes. “I started in a one-shot guest appearance as the upstairs neighbor. I guess they saw chemistry between John (Ritter) and myself because that led to a five-year deal — and a few years after that. It was truly like a family. John led the parade with his humor and graciousness, and it rubbed off on everyone. It was a terrible loss when he passed away.”

in acting class in Manhattan. Kline says he’s looking forward to coming to Detroit. “It’s one of the places we will be stopping for more than a week — it’s a two-week run,” he says. “I am hoping to explore Detroit and even go up to Ann Arbor and visit my friend Vincent Cardinal, chair of the musical theater department at the University of Michigan.” Meanwhile, Kline hopes when the audience walks out of the theater, they will be uplifted. “There are a lot of people who were or are in a bad relationship and can relate to Jenna,” he says. “But the show has a happy ending. Here is a girl who breaks free from an abusive, unhappy marriage — and it’s very empowering. It’s all about female power, and that’s a good thing.” ■


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AT THE MOVIES Opening on May 3 is Long Shot, a romantic comedy/drama starring Seth Rogen, 36, and Charlize Theron. Rogen plays Fred Falarsky, a brash reporter for a liberal alt-weekly. He loses his job and, shortly thereafter, runs into Charlotte (Theron), his old babysitter, who is now the Secretary of State. Fred charms her with his self-deprecating humor and his memories of her youthful Halston Sage idealism. She decides to run for president and hires Fred to punch up her speeches. They begin a romantic affair that threatens to torpedo her campaign. Advance reviews are very good. Most say the leads have real chemistry and that makes their film romance plausible. Also opening May 3 Ed Asner is The Samuel Project. Emmy and Tony winner Hal Linden, star of the hit series Barney Miller, stars as Samuel, a Jewish grandfather who connects with his teen grandson for the first time when the grandson makes Samuel the subject of his senior year art project. Samuel tells his grandson of his narrow Seth Rogen escape from capture in Nazi Germany when he was a boy. His grandson turns the story into a very good short animated film. (Plays Birmingham 8 Theater for one week. Also screens at 1 p.m. Sunday, May 5, at the Lenore Marwil Detroit Jewish Film Festival, JCC). Zoe Levin

NETFLIX OFFERINGS Bonding is a seven-episode comedy series that began streaming on Netflix on April 23. Peter, a young gay man, acts as a bodyguard/assistant for a friend of his, a grad student who moonlights as a dominatrix. Tiff, the dominatrix, is played by Zoe Levin, 25.

Levin was born in Chicago and went to a Chicago Jewish day school through the fourth grade. Her family then moved to Glencoe, a heavily Jewish suburb. She began performing at the nearby Skokie Jewish Community Center at age 8. In 2014, she got her first notable TV role in Red Band Society, a short-lived Fox series about a group of seriously ill teenagers. Bonding is Levin’s first starring role. She told the New York Post that her transformation into a dominatrix wasn’t complete until she was fitted for an all-black, body-hugging costume: “I felt like a completely different person. The boots and the heels and the corset — it’s like her armor; she’s ready to go into battle.” Levin also learned how to crack a bullwhip. This is not a show for everyone. The script, the Post reports, has Tiff (Levin) “barking orders at submissive clients who pay to be humiliated in all sorts of creative, surprising and visually eye-popping scenarios.” Ed Asner, 89, has a supporting role in Dead to Me, a 10-episode series that begins streaming May 3. Christina Applegate plays Jen, a sardonic widow set on solving her husband’s recent hit-and-run murder. She bonds with Judy (Linda Cardenalli), an upbeat person she meets at a support group. Judy holds back on telling Jen something that would rock Jen’s already shaky world. Also starting on May 3 is The Last Summer, an original Netflix film. The plot is familiar: High school grads wrestle with love and friendship during their final summer together before heading off to college. Halston Sage, 25, has a large role as Erin, one of the grads. Sage co-starred as Alara Kitan in the first two seasons of The Orville, a Fox sci-fi series. ■


on the go FRIDAY, MAY 3

MICHIGAN INSTITUTE RSVP due for May 20-21. NCJWMI’s first Michigan Institute, a two-day opportunity to develop and strengthen advocacy skills, at the Radisson Hotel in Lansing. RSVP: NCJW-MI, 26400 Lahser, Suite 306, Southfield, MI 48033. $75 registration fee; with hotel, $135. Info at 248-355-3300, ext. 0 or NCJWMI.org.

SHAKE, RATTLE & TWIST 11:15 am, May 3. At Adat Shalom Synagogue. Parents and grandparents spend time with their babies/toddlers, age 3 and younger. Older sibs are welcome. The group will sing songs and braid challah. Free for Adat Shalom members and $3/family for non-members. Reservations are required: Debi Banooni at dbanooni@adatshalom.org or 248-6262153.

LUNCHTIME LEARNING 11:45 am, May 2, 9 &16. Rabbi Aaron Bergman will present “The History of AntiSemitism” at Adat Shalom Synagogue. The program is free and open to the community. You may bring your own dairy/parve lunch. Drinks and dessert will be served. Reservations requested: Sheila Lederman, 248-851-5100, ext. 246, or slederman@adatshalom.org. NIGHT OF LEARNING 7 pm, May 2. An adult education experience at CSZ’s Berman Center for Jewish Education, 27375 Bell Road, Southfield. “Dramatizing in Music: From the World of Opera to the Broadway Theater” with Martin Herman. Free. Info: 248-357-5544. FILM PREMIERE 7 pm, May 2. Call Me Bill: The William Davidson Story will premiere during the Detroit Jewish Film Festival at the Berman Center in West Bloomfield. A special free kickoff event for Jewish Historical Society. detroitjewishfilmfestival.com.

URBAN CRISIS DISCUSSED 1-3 pm, May 3. The Society of Active Retirees presents a free special program, a panel discussion on the “Detroit Water Shutoffs: An Urban Crisis” at the Birmingham Temple, 28711 W. 12 Mile Road, Farmington Hills. GRANDPARENT SHABBAT 5:30 pm, May 3. At Temple Israel. The temple and PJ Library host a multigenerational family Shabbat experience. Celebrate with music and prayer and family stories plus a Shabbat dinner. Cost: $15/adult, $7/child (ages 4-12), children under 4 are free. FAMILY SYNERGY SHABBAT 6 pm, May 3. Adat Shalom will host Shabbat Rocks, a lively musical Shabbat, co-led by the youth of Adat Shalom. Free and open to the community. Shabbat dinner immediately following a talk by Israeli journalist and IDF veteran Matti Friedman, appropriate for sixth-graders and up. Supervised activities are available for kids. Dinner: $13, children 3-12; $25 adults; $56 for family. Registration at adatshalom.org/synergy-shabbat. Info: 248-626-2153 or sshapiro@adatshalom. org. continued on page 40

West Bloomfield native Alice Frank’s show titled “Fire and Water” opens May 3 and runs through the end of the month at Lawrence Street Gallery, 22620 Woodward, Ferndale. Frank has taught and created art for more than 45 years. The show consists of fired metal, some with silver, platinum and copper fired into them. Frank uses an enameling process, which is achieved by firing pieces at 2,000 degrees. Other pieces are cut by hand or with various kinds of torches. Her work runs the gamut from whimsical to ethereal. Check lawrencestreetgallery.com for details.

MAY 3-19 Village Players in Birmingham will bring alive the classic musical, Guys and Dolls, complete with gangsters and gamblers, missionary dolls and showgirls all set against the backdrop of Broadway, with weekend dates (Friday-Sunday) through May 19. The cast happens to feature a fair number of Jewish actors, including Emily Miller, Mitch Master, Tobie Scheibel, David Carroll, Jeff Weiner, Ellie Haenick, Stephen Sussman and Jillian Felch Frederick. Tickets are $21. Shows start at 8 p.m., with 2 p.m. matinees on Sundays. Go to bit. ly/2ZsPllp or order by phone at (248) 644-2075.

MAY 4 BEN PLATT Ben Platt comes to the Fisher Theatre at 7:30 p.m. May 4 in a concert promoting his new album “Sing To Me Instead,” in which he chronicles his relationships as a young gay man. Platt came out to his family at 12 years old and publicly in 2019, through the music video for his song “Ease My Mind.” He created the role of Evan Hansen in Dear Evan Hansen (and won a Tony, a Grammy and an Emmy), starred in the Pitch Perfect movies and blows everyone away with his voice. Platt, a former camper at Camp Ramah in California, told the Times of Israel he credits Conservative Judaism’s camping movement with helping him “decide for myself what kind of Jew I would be.” His father is the producer Marc Platt. Tickets are $58 and up.

Mother’s Day Weekend May 11th 10am - 6pm May 12th 10am - 5pm Presented By:

ART RECEPTION

GUYS AND DOLLS

TONY AWARD ON YOUTUBE

THURSDAY, MAY 2

ART TALK 11 am-noon, May 2. At West Bloomfield JCC, art historian Wendy Evans will give an introduction to Jewish artists. Cost: $5. Info: 248-432-5467 or rchessler@jccdet. org.

MAY 3

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on the go continued from page 39

MAY 5

SATURDAY, MAY 4 SOULFUL YOGA 10 am, May 4. Join Rabbi Rachel Shere and yoga instructor Mindy Eisenberg to study Torah and practice yoga at Adat Shalom to rid yourself of “internal chametz.� No yoga experience is necessary. Free and open to the community. Dress comfortably and bring a mat if you have one. Info: 248-851-5100.

SUNDAY, MAY 5 MEDITATION & MINDFULNESS 9:30 am, May 5. Adults are invited to join Rabbi Aaron Bergman at Adat Shalom Synagogue. The class is designed to help individuals find their internal spirituality and realize that Judaism can make them happier. There is no charge. Info: 248-8515100. RELIGIOUS SCHOOL OPEN HOUSE 11 am. SHORESH, Temple Shir Shalom’s Religious School, will host an open house for interested PreK to sixth-grade families at Hillel Day School. RSVPs appreciated, but not required: shoresh@shirshalom.org or 248-406-4255. KLEZMER BAND 3 and 4:30 pm. Beyond the Pale, rooted in Klezmer accented with other musical styles played on mandolin, clarinet, accordion, violin, percussion and bass, takes the stage in the Main Library Meeting Room at the West Bloomfield Public Library, 4600 Walnut Lake Road. Seating is limited and opens a half-hour prior to the performance. GOLDA’S BALCONY 7 pm, May 5. Berman Center in West Bloomfield. Filmed stage performance of the life of Golda Meir. Talkback with David Fishelson, producer, after the screening. $13. detroitjewishfilmfestival.com. YIDDISH CLASSES 2:30-3:30, May 5. At the Downtown Synagogue. A language and culture course teaching Yiddish through the artistic and political movements of (mostly) 19th- and 20th-century Ashkenazic Jews. Eight sessions led by Ollie Elkus, Yiddish translator. To

YOM HASHOAH DAY 2 pm. At Holocaust Memorial Center, 28123 Orchard Lake Road, Farmington Hills. Info: 248-556-3178 or katrina. finkelstein@holocaustcenter.org.

enroll: email programcoordinator@ downtownsynagogue.org.

MONDAY, MAY 6 JCRC/AJC ANNUAL MEETING 7-9 pm, May 6. At Max M. Fisher Federation Building. The guest speaker, Yael Aronoff, will discuss the April 9 Israeli elections. Aronoff is the Michael and Elaine Serling and Friends Endowed Chair in Israel Studies, director of Jewish Studies at Michigan State University and an associate professor at James Madison College.

TUESDAY, MAY 7 DONOR DAY 10 am-3 pm, May 7. Adat Shalom Sisterhood Donor Day. Complimentary Coffee Corner until noon, speaker and luncheon at noon, boutiques until 3 pm. Carolyn Normandin, regional director, Michigan Anti-Defamation League, will present “Anti-Semitism: Information is Power, Important Facts and Discussion.� Info: the synagogue office at 248-851-5100 or visit adatshalom. org/events/donor-day-2019. ‘SIMPLY DANCE’ 11 am, May 7. Continues May 14, 21, 28 and June 4,11,18, 25. Led by Christine Stewart at the JCC. Cost $7. No partner needed.


The Grapes of Wrath

MAY 8 WEDNESDAY, MAY 8 CABARET TIME 1 pm, May 8. Shaarey Zedek Seniors will host a one-woman cabaret featuring Diana Turner at the synagogue. Refreshments will be served. For more information, contact Janet Pont at 248-357-5544 or jpont@shaareyzedek.org.

Ricky Ian Gordon, DPNQPTFS Ă• Michael Korie, librettist

“A strong reimagining of Grapes that packs a dramatic punch, and pleases harmonically!�

—St. Louis Post-Dispatch

4BU .BZ Č´Č´ BU ȺƴȽÉ„ 1. 8FE .BZ ȴȧ BU ȺƴȽÉ„ 1. 'SJ .BZ Č´Čş BU ȺƴȽÉ„ 1. 4VO .BZ Č´Čą BU ȞƴȽÉ„ 1. At the Detroit Opera House

HISTORY LECTURE 1 pm, May 8. “The Jews of Italy.� At Beth Ahm, 5075 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield. Videostreaming group COMEDY SHOW presents the second in a series of 8 pm. At Ridley’s Comedy Castle in Royal Jewish history lectures featuring Prof. Oak. Creators and stars of award-winning Henry Abramson of Touro College in Yiddish-ish web series “YidLife Crisis.� Brooklyn, N.Y. Free and open to the Part of the JCC Lenore Marwil Jewish community; no reservations needed. Film Festival. $25. Ages 21 and up only. All welcome. Informal discussion Info: jccdet.org. follows. Info: Nancy Kaplan (248) 737-1931 or email nancyellen879@ att.net. STAND WITH TRANS 7-9 pm, May 7. At Temple Beth El in Bloomfield Township. Learn from others who have walked this path with speakers and panelists. Coffee and dessert. Sponsored by the Jewish Women’s Foundation. Register: standwithtrans.org/upcomingevent/be-the-light. Info: Roz Gould Smith, 248-739-9254 or roz@ standwithtrans.org.

THEATER OUTING 8 pm, May 8. Center Travel invites you to attend Waitress at the Fisher Theatre. JCC members $126/nonmembers $136. RSVP: Marilyn Wolfe, 248-432-5471 or mwolfe@jccdet.org.

2019 Spring Opera Season Sponsor

TICKETS:

MichiganOpera.org PS ȽȴȽƲȞȽȺƲȺȊȝȊ

This project is supported in part by an award from

Compiled by Sy Manello/Editorial Assistant. Send items at least 14 days in advance to calendar@thejewishnews.com.

Birmingham Farmers Market Opens for the Season The Birmingham Farmers Market’s 17th season kicks off Sunday, May 5, in Public Parking Lot 6 (660 N. Old Woodward). Spring flowers, fresh produce and live music will enhance the event. The market will be open from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. every Sunday, May through October. Opening Day attendees will enjoy complimentary canvas Farmers Market bags (while supplies last), balloons, live music and activities for children. Visitors can also enter a drawing at the information booth to win Birmingham Shopping District gift certificates and tickets to see Waitress at the Fisher Theatre. This season the Birmingham Farmers Market welcomes new vendors: Brightmoor Farms,

Creative Loops Studio, Eight Plates Farm, First Bites, Jamu Juices, Motown Freedom Bakery, Nan’s Butter Factory, Pasta E Pasta, The Rochester Fudge Company and more. Birmingham Shopping District Operations and Events Manager Jaimi Brook recently completed the MIFMA Market Manager Certificate Program. Brook is one of 309 individuals who have been certified since the program began in 2011. “MIFMA’s program offered an opportunity to network with other market managers from across the state and share ideas,� said Brook. “I look forward to using my training to enhance the Birmingham Farmers Market this season.�

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COURTESY NEAR PERFECT MEDIA

nosh news

Sweetwaters Coming to Troy

Como’s Returns to Ferndale Como’s is scheduled to re-emerge at the corner of Nine Mile and Woodward in Ferndale with a completely renovated space. The fresh Woodward Avenue façade sets the tone with subtle brick signage alongside the original neon sign soon to be accented with natural wood trim. The patio will be rejuvenated with colorful highlights and murals created by local artists. Chef owner Zack Sklar will debut his take on Detroit-style deep-dish pies. Built on the foundation of naturally fermented dough, he will use quality ingredients, ranging from house-made sausage to imported cheeses. Gluten-free and vegan pizzas will be featured as well. In addition, the menu will showcase pastas, sandwiches and Sklar’s latest incarnation of the build-your-own-salad. Two bars will serve cocktails, wine and offer 20 beers on tap. Two evenings of festivities are planned with proceeds from the events benefiting local charities: Pre-Opening Event on Friday, May 3, for friends and family will benefit Brilliant Detroit, a literacy nonprofit created by Peas and Carrots co-owners Jim and Carolyn Bellinson; and a Grand Opening Saturday, May 4, “Como’s Coming Out Party” benefiting Ruth Ellis Center and Ferndale Pride — the evening will include a silent auction. Limited seating for both evenings is available. To donate silent auction items or reserve seating, contact rsaruna@ peasandcarrotshospitality.com or call (248) 929-2921. ■

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Troy will soon be home to Sweetwaters Coffee & Tea at 774 W. Big Beaver Road near the Somerset Collection mall. The 1,700-squarefoot café is set to open this spring and will offer a globally inspired menu featuring premium coffees, teas, pastries, sandwiches, salads and more. Franchisee owner Stephanie Beck was drawn to Sweetwaters’ community focus and local Michigan base. “Sweetwaters began in Ann Arbor over 25 years ago and has developed deep roots here in Michigan,” Beck says. “It is important for me to support a local company and give back to the community I grew up in.”

The Sweetwaters’ brand focuses on community engagement, such as hosting events and partnering with nonprofits. Most recently, Sweetwaters won the People’s Choice Award for Best Beverage Category at the Boys and Girls Club annual “Taste of Troy” event. The Sweetwaters menu includes signature drinks such as the Ginger Lemon Tea, Dragon Eye, French Vietnamese au Lait, Napali Brew, Thai Iced Tea and Red Moon coffee. The grand opening will include events and week-long promotions that will be announced on Sweetwaters’ website or on Facebook. ■

High Five Fridays May is National Burger Month and Hazel, Ravines and Downtown co-owner and Executive Chef Emmele Herrold, 2013 Detroit Burger Brawl champion and finalist from the Las Vegas World Food Championship, Burger Division, is serious about burgers. The Token Burger is always on the menu at HRD. The restaurant recently debuted its High Five Fridays, which begin at 10 p.m. and last until close every Friday. Offerings at special prices include a fizzy highball from the state’s first Jim Beam High Ball machine, oysters, shots of Maker’s

Mark or Hornitos, Miller High Life beers and cheeseburgers. Hazel, Ravines and Downtown is located at 34977 Woodward Ave., Suite 100, in Birmingham. ■

Pinky’s Rooftop Opens in Royal Oak Pinky’s Rooftop, a new concept from Adam Merkel Restaurants, has opened in downtown Royal Oak on the second level of 100 S. Main St. (formerly Red Fox Rooftop). It offers an eclectic, vintage vibe with dining and lounge seating in a lush rooftop outdoor garden. Pinky’s Rooftop was inspired by an old restaurant and speakeasy in Detroit located at Jefferson Avenue and Grand Boulevard near Belle Isle called Pinky’s Boulevard Club. “Pinky’s has its own distinctive personality showcased through the menu and decor,” said Adam Merkel, owner of Adam Merkel Restaurants. “Our goal was to bring a stand-out, one-ofa-kind experience to Royal Oak’s dining and nightlife scene.” The menu, created by Merkel and culinary director Craig Myrand, features American and Asian-inspired small plates and seafood, with signature dishes such as Sashimi, Black Truffle Ramen and Short Rib Wonton Tacos and craft cocktails like Pinky’s Ice Pops, Turning Japanese and The Buddha. The restaurant, designed by architect Ron Rea, seats 83 guests inside the garden-themed outdoor rooftop, a 27-seat all-season patio and 44-seat outdoor patio, with all areas serving craft cocktails and shareable small plates. Beginning May 4, Pinky’s Rooftop will begin offering a weekend brunch, available every Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m.–2 p.m., with regular dining hours to follow. For more information, visit pinkysroyaloak.com. ■


nosh dining around the d

Pita Café

FINE CHINESE DINING Chicken Ghallaba

“A wonderful adventure in fine dining” ~ Danny Raskin

COURTESY OF PITA CAFE

T

wo surprises awaited me when I last visited Pita Café, my favorite restaurant in Oak Park. Since 1991, Lebanese immigrant Ali Chahine has offered a menu of reliably delicious and authentic Middle Esther Allweiss Eastern food and Fresh Juice Ingber raw juices at his Contributing Writer per, onions, tomatoes and carrots. The Pita Café restaudish was aromatic and slightly peprant on Greenfield Road, between pery. I brought half of the large porI-696 and 10 Mile Road. Downtown tion home. Lamb, beef, salmon and Birmingham, north of Maple Road, is shrimp are other proteins available, or his second location. order all-vegetable ghallaba. So, Surprise 1: Oak Park’s Pita Café A Starter Combo offers three classic has a Jewish manager. The young man appetizers: hummus, baba ganoush is Adam Tabak, who graduated from (spelled ghanooj here) and the aforethe former Andover High School in mentioned garlic sauce. Spread them Bloomfield Hills and earned his busion thick, slightly sweet pita bread ness management degree at Central pouches, delivered hot from the oven. Michigan University in Mt. Pleasant. The comprehensive menu ranges His family belongs to Temple Israel in from lamb chops to salads to rolledWest Bloomfield. up sandwiches to the shish combo. Tabak has worked nearly a year Many meal combinations simply at Pita Café. He agreed with me that consist of adding flavorful it has some of Metro humus or smoky baba to Detroit’s best Middle something else. Pita Café Eastern food. Which Pita Café’s high-pow25282 Greenfield, leads me to Surprise 2: ered juicer presses ripe Oak Park I’m crazy about ghallafruit and vegetables into (248) 968-2225 ba, a stir-fry entree he healthy drinks. “The AND praised but I’d never carrot, orange, apple and 239 N. Old Woodward, tried before. beet combo is our most Birmingham Like most with a favorpopular,” Tabak said. (248) 645-6999 ite restaurant, I stick with The Middle Eastern pitacafe.com tried-and-true items. ambience at Pita Café $$ out of $$$$ According to Tabak, starts with appropriate these are also the most instrumental music. popular: lemony crushed Chahine created a sense lentil soup, juicy deboned chicken and of old Lebanon with cracked sandchicken shwarma sandwich lined with beige walls, stone floors, wooden whipped garlic sauce. inlaid furniture and large brass More recently, I discovered majdra, antique pitchers and coffee pots. browned lentils and cracked wheat Dramatic chandeliers feature metal topped with sautéed onions and bell caps with descending strings of served with plain yogurt. So yummy! colored beads. The back dining room I also recommend the cauliflower is entered through an archway framed sandwich. in stone, repeated in “window” room But I was missing out on ghallaba, a dividers. slow-cooked dish unique to Lebanon. Busy Pita Café is open daily in Oak I first had a garden salad, complePark, but not Sundays in Birmingham. mented by its vegetable oil-based herb Groups are easily accommodated. dressing. I chose rice for my side. Servers are attentive, helpful and Then: ghallaba — seasoned pieces of friendly. ■ chicken, fresh mushrooms, green pep-

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ately eliminates most of the menu. For example, not one of its five “Noods and Suchâ€? dishes is without pork, shellfish hroughout my childhood, my or non-kosher beef. In addition, those grandparents owned an office with food allergies will find little on furniture business that operated the menu they can eat. Almost every at 231 W. Nine Mile Road in Ferndale. item has either gluten, nuts or shellEvery other Saturday, my mom took fish somewhere in it. Even if the dish me and my brother to visit my dad looks good outside of those allergens, at the office. We’d spin around in the Antihero doesn’t supply (or welcome) fancy chairs and play hide-and-seek many practical substitutions. under the desks. We even used to ride I found three things on the menu the rusty furniture elevato order that were tor from the top floor to kosher-friendly: roasted Antihero the basement, something baby carrots, grilled avo231 W. Nine Mile Road, that probably wouldn’t cado and salmon poke. Ferndale be allowed nowadays. I While the avocado and antiheroferndale.com loved that store dearly. salmon needed additional (248) 307-7383 More than a decade seasoning to pull the dishOpens at 4 p.m. later, that same building es together, the carrots is occupied by Antihero, were on the opposite end a Japanese pub. Walking into the build- of the flavor spectrum, on the verge of ing where we spent a lot of time, my being almost too spicy. In an attempt parents and I were in awe. Outside of to make use of what seasoning I had, the freshly painted tin ceilings and the I ended up dipping the avocado and upstairs office, the place was unrecogsalmon in the spicy sriracha that covnizable. ered the carrots. Sleek and luxurious, Antihero’s I can honestly say that Antihero interior decor is one to behold. Spiky is a great place to have a drink and a chandeliers hang from the bar’s low couple of appetizers with loved ones. ceiling, and wooden floors and furThe atmosphere is young and fresh, niture create a sense of cohesion that the interior decor is stunning, and the really make this pub aesthetically alcohol menu is positively delectable. pleasing. Among all the aspects of its Antihero is not, however, a place for design, the coolest, by far, was the artpeople with diet limitations to have a work on the walls, cementing Antihero full-course meal. as an establishment for artistic invenWhile I find it complicated to tion. While the menu was limited, the describe how it felt returning to a siginterior design worked hard to make nificant building from my childhood, up for it. it’s easy to say that my family was Antihero also shines is with its bar impressed with how Anithero transmenu, listing a variety of tasty and formed our rundown office furniture exotic drinks. Unfortunately, Antihero store into a gorgeous Japanese pub. is lacking in its food menu. While I hope that Antihero expands its its one-page list of food selection is menu to include more allergenunique, its limited selection might be a friendly options. I would love the challenge for pickier eaters. chance to make more happy memories If you’re someone who doesn’t eat in the building that brought me so non-kosher meat or fish, that immedi- much joy as a child. â–

T


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the exchange community bulletin board | professional services

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soul of blessed memory

IRENE BURG, 89, of Southfield, died April 22, 2019. She is survived by her daughters, Andrea BurgKushim, Susan Burg; son and daughter-in-law, Steven Eric and Iphigenia Burg; grandchildren, Michael (Juliana) Kushim, Jonathan, Simone, Josiah and Shayna Burg; many other loving family members and friends; her devoted pet, Chico. Mrs. Burg was the beloved wife of the late Seymour Burg; sister of the late Helen Tatarka. Interment was held at Clover Hill Park Cemetery in Birmingham. Contributions may be made to the Michigan Humane Society or to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Dorfman Chapel. CHERYL FEINBERG, 64, of Farmington Hills, died April 21, 2019. She is survived by her sisters and brothers-in-law, Susan and Robert Yashinsky, and c. 1972 Lisa and Dr. Richard Garfinkel; nieces and nephew, Alyse Yashinksy, Carly Yashinsky, Samuel and Jaclyn Garfinkel, and Carrie Garfinkel; great-nephews, Benjamin and Max Garfinkel; many loving cousins and world of friends. Ms. Feinberg was the devoted daughter of the late Selda and the late Seymour Feinberg. Contributions may be made to American Civil Liberties Union, 2966 Woodward Ave., Detroit, MI 48201, aclumich.org; Jewish Vocational Service, 29699 Southfield Road, Southfield, MI 48076, jvsdet.org; Special Olympics, 4084 John R Road, Troy, MI 48085, somi.org; Southern Poverty Law Center, 400 Washington Ave., Montgomery, AL 46104, donate.splcenter.org/sslpage. aspx?pid=463; or Jewish Community Center, Windsor, Ontario, the Ansel and Celia Wagenberg Family Endowment, 1641 Ouellette Ave., Windsor, ON N8X 1K9, jewishwindsor.org/donate. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. DONALD FOX, 85, of Phoenix Ariz., passed away peacefully April 15, 2019. He was born and raised in Detroit. He was a founding partner and c. 1957 CFO of Perry Drug Stores and lifelong employed pharmacist.

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DAMON KEITH, a federal judge in the Midwest, died April 28, 2019. In 1964, Mr. Keith helped found one of Detroit’s first AfricanAmerican law firms and was named co-chairman of the Michigan Civil Rights Commission. Later, he became a federal judge, a chief judge for Eastern Michigan and then he joined the Sixth Circuit Court. In 1995, he assumed senior status on the appellate court. Judge Keith was President Lyndon B. Johnson’s choice for a district court judgeship in Detroit, with jurisdiction in Eastern Michigan and then as Mr. Fox was a devoted and loving husband for 63 years to Joan Nancy Fox, who passed away Jan. 13, 2019. He is survived by his children, Ken (Rosalyn) Fox of Buffalo Grove, Ill., Rick (Ilana) Fox of Tsoran, Israel, and Erika (Steven) Freeman of Phoenix; beloved grandchildren, Liat (Shai) Drach, Natalie (Steven) Klumb, Tal Fox, Laine Fox, Shani Fox, and Aylah and Lindsey Freeman. Contributions may be made to American Friends of Bar-Ilan University (afbiu.org) or Wounded Warrior Project (support.woundedwarriorproject.org). Services were held at Mt. Sinai Cemetery, Phoenix. JOEL FRANK, 61, of Farmington Hills, died April 18, 2019. He is survived by his mother, Carole Frank of Farmington Hills; brother, Barry Frank of Farmington Hills; sisters and brother-in-law, Judy and Arnie Goldman of Farmington Hills, Nancy Frank of Farmington Hills; nephew and nieces, Kyle and Melissa Goldman, Ilana and Jonathon Margolis, Marlee Goldman; great-niece, Talia Margolis; many loving caregivers. Mr. Frank was the cherished son of the late Max Frank. Contributions may be made to JARC, 30301 Northwestern Hwy., Farmington Hills, MI 48334; Yad Ezra, 2850 W. 11 Mile Road, Berkley, MI 48072; Kenny Goldman Fund at the Jewish Community Center, 6600 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield, MI 48322; or to a charity of one’s choice. Interment was held at Hebrew Memorial Park. Arrangements by Hebrew Memorial Chapel.

President Jimmy Carter’s selection for the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, presiding in Cincinnati over cases arising in Kentucky, Ohio, Michigan and Tennessee. In a 2016 ruling in an Ohio case that restricted early and absentee voting, Judge Keith accused two Circuit Court colleagues of scorning AfricanAmerican voters and the memory of black people slain in the struggle for voting rights. He incorporated into his opinion photographs and biographies of 36 victims, including the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Read more about Judge Keith’s remarkable life and legacy in the May 9 issue of the Jewish News.

PAMELA BETH FULLER- SMALL, 56, of Petoskey, died April 8, 2019. She is survived by her husband, Michael Small; parents, Sheldon and Harriett Fuller; brother, Dale Fuller (Rachel Shultz); children, Amber Lynn and Alex Jacob; grandchild, Hunter Mattson. Contributions may be made to Karmonos Cancer Center or a charity of one’s choice. PHYLLIS SANDELMAN GARLOCK, 99, of Southfield, died April 23, 2019. She was devoted to family and friends. She never missed a graduation, an athletic event or any other activity that involved one of her grandchildren. Mrs. Garlock taught physical education in the Detroit Public Schools and was committed to exercise and an active lifestyle long before the medical establishment began touting its benefits. She was an enthusiastic Michigander who particularly loved her home in Southfield and her vacations in Charlevoix. She was active in National Council of Jewish Women and at Temple Beth El, especially the Einstein Scholarship committee. Her greatest passion was for her husband, Joe, with whom she shared 75 years of mutual devotion. Mrs. Garlock is survived by her daughter and son-in-law, the Honorable Nancy and William Edmunds; son and daughter-in-law, David and Barbara Garlock; son-in-law, Robert Cheek; grandchildren, Ben Edmunds, Nate and Jenna Edmunds, Jon and Laura Cheek,

Laura and Aaron Lianso, Amy Garlock, Jackie Garlock and Stephie Garlock; great-grandchildren, Darren, Andrew and Evan Cheek, June Edmunds and Reese Lianso; many cousins, nieces, nephews; her wonderful caregivers, Karen Holloway, Jackie Harris-Cary, Yvette Harris and Shalonda Dawkins. Mrs. Garlock was the beloved wife for 75 years of the late Joseph Garlock; the cherished mother of the late Judith Cheek; the devoted daughter of the late Isear and the late Birdie Sandelman. Interment was at Beth El Memorial Park. Contributions may be made to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. ANITA GLASS, 88, of Oak Park, died April 24, 2019. She is survived by her sons and daughter-in-law, Gary and Doreen Glass of West Bloomfield, Steven Glass of Sylvan Lake; daughter and sons-in-law, Andrea and Dr. Allen Stawis of Oak Park; grandchildren, Shevy and Yossi Zigdon, Malkie and Josh Rosenbloom, Ari and Atara Stawis, Rachel and Tzvi Unger, Ani Glass, Gabriel Glass; great-grandchildren, Zevy Zigdon, Binyamin Zigdon, Kivi Zigdon, Chaim Zigdon, Aviva Rosenbloom, Yehudah Rosenbloom, Kayla Rosenbloom, Lily Rosenbloom, Ahuva Stawis, Rivky Stawis, Sruli Unger, Ariella Unger, Miki Unger. Mrs. Glass was the beloved wife of the late Harold Glass. Contributions may be made to The Spot, c/o Detroit Chesed Project, 30553 Southfield Road, #520, Southfield, MI 40875. Services and interment were held at Hebrew Memorial Park. Arrangements by Hebrew Memorial Chapel. SYLVIA HUBERT GOLDBERG, 103, of Southfield, died April 22, 2019. She is survived by her son and daughter-in-law, Leslie and Barbara Hubert; daughter and sonin-law, Roberta Segel Goldstein and Melvyn Goldstein; daughter-in-law, Vicky Hubert; grandchildren, Howard and Mary Beth Hubert, Mark and Charlotte Hubert, Michelle Hubert, Michael Hubert, Nicole and Todd Fink, and Amanda Segel; great-grandchildren, Alex, Max, Molly, Rachel and Lauren Hubert, Breanna Weddle, Brooke Hubert, and Madelaine, Aerin and Andrew Fink; great-great-grand-


daughter, Lillian Weddle; loving nieces, nephews and a world of friends. Mrs. Hubert Goldberg was the beloved wife of the late Milton Hubert and the late Jack Goldberg; the cherished mother of the late Richard Hubert; the dear mother-in-law of the late David Segel; the loving sister of the late Rose and the late Lewis Manning, the late Ethel Kantor Kort and the late Nathan Kantor. Interment was at Machpelah Cemetery. Contributions may be made to Adat Shalom Synagogue, 29901 Middlebelt, Farmington Hills, MI 48334, adatshalom.org; Karmanos Cancer Institute, David S. Segel Colon Cancer Research Fund, 4100 John R, Detroit, MI 48201, karmanos.org; or to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. MADELYN GRUSKIN, 94, of West Bloomfield, died April 26, 2019. She is survived by her son and daughter-in-law, Ronald and Wendy Gruskin; daughter and son-in-law, Debra and Max Ernst; grandchildren, Jeffrey and Romy Gluck, and Lisa Gluck; great-granddaughter, Liv Alexandra Gluck. Mrs. Gruskin was the beloved wife of the late Ben W. Gruskin; the devoted daughter of the late Isadore and the late Dora Widenbaum; the loving sister of the late Morris Widenbaum, the late Victor Widenbaum and the late Eleanor Blazofsky. Interment was at Machpelah Cemetery. Contributions may be made to Ernst Cardiovascular Center, c/o William Beaumont Hospital, 3601 W. 13 Mile Road, Royal Oak, MI 48073, beaumont. org/services/heart-vascular/ ernst-cardiovascular-center; Temple Israel, Jeffrey Surnow Memorial Fund, 5725 Walnut Lake Road, West Bloomfield, MI 48323, temple-israel.org; to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel.

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Some days seem to last forever‌ We’re offering one that actually will. You can honor the memory of a loved one in a most meaningful way by sponsoring a day of Torah learning at Yeshiva Beth Yehudah.

During the coming week, Kaddish will be said for these departed souls during the daily minyan at Yeshiva Beth Yehudah. Your support of the Torah learning of our children and our Kollel’s Torah Scholars brings immeasurable heavenly merit. Please call us at 248-557-6750 for more information.

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ESTHER S. KALISH, 97, of Coral Springs, Fla., formerly of Oak Park, died April 10, 2019. She is survived by her children, Richard (Esther) Kalish of Coral Springs, Keith (Karen) Kalish of West Bloomfield; grandchildren, Staci (Marc) Faber, Kacey (Marc) Weiss, Nicole (Chad) Hubbell, Randi (Don) Wilenius, David (Melissa) Kalish, Shawn (Miriam) Laing, Chad (Lauren) Laing; great-grandchildren, Ava and Jack Faber, Joshua and Alexis Weiss, Zachary McIntosh, Mia and Emery Hubbell, Samantha and Emmett Wilenius, Paul and Rowan Kalish, Harry and Maia Laing, Zoie Laing. Mrs. Kalish was the beloved wife of the late Al Kalish. Interment was held at Menorah Gardens and Funeral Chapel, Southwest Ranches, Fla. Contributions may be made to a charity of one’s choice. THEODORE “TED� RICHARD KELTER JR., died on April 28, 2019. The world is minus one of the truly great old-school guys now. During his 93 years, he accumulated many titles: son of Irene and Theodore; brother of Don; husband of Janet (who lovingly survives him); father of Ted, Kim, Sunny, David, Kay, Adam and Michael; stepfather to Julianna and Dahlia; grandfather to 16; great-grandfather to 19; lifelong friend with so many, including Ellin and Bill Perlmutter, and Harry Lieberman; businessman; community leader; charitable visionary; sportsman (He was there when the Lions won in ’57 and again for all three Giants World Series wins). Everyone who knew him will think of him and his wonderful life with a big smile and a small tear. Private services were held in San Francisco. DR. LAWRENCE E. LEE, 82, of Birmingham, died April 17, 2019. He is survived by his wife, Sylvia Lee; son and daughter-in-law, Dr. Howard and Vi Lee of Cross River, N.Y.; daughters and sons-in-law, Sandy and Sherwyn Labovitz of Birmingham, Margo and Ethan Lowenstein of Ann Arbor, Dr. Karen and Tony Raden of Evanston, Ill.; brother, Dr. Robert Lee of Bay City, Mich.; grandchildren,

Alex Lee, Elijah Lee, Max Lee, Ruby Lowenstein, Jasmine Lowenstein, Joey Labovitz, Lily Labovitz, Theo Raden, Levi Raden. Dr. Lee was the dear brother and brother-in-law of the late Dr. Martin, the late Sue Lee and the late Helen Lee. Contributions may be made to Michael J. Fox Foundation, Grand Central Station, P.O. Box 4777, New York, NY 10163-4777; Hospice of Michigan, 43097 Woodward Ave., Bloomfield Hills, MI 48302; or to a charity of one’s choice. Interment was held at Machpelah Cemetery in Ferndale. Arrangements by Hebrew Memorial Chapel. CHARLES SIDNEY LEWIS, 92, of West Bloomfield, died April 27, 2019. He is survived by his wife of 65 years, Marcia Lewis; son and daughter-in-law, Scott and Karen Lewis; daughter and son-in-law, Nancy and Steven Fine; grandchildren, Erica and David Herc, Michael and Rachel Lewis, Allison and Derek FineJackson, Rachel Fine and Jeremy Fine; great-grandchildren, Ian and Emma Herc; brother-in-law, Ernie Gilbert; his caregiver, Cecilia Early. Mr. Lewis was the loving brother of the late Carol Schwartz. Interment was at Beth El Memorial Park. Contributions may be made to Hebrew Free Loan, 6735 Telegraph Road, Suite 300, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48301, hfldetroit.org; Jewish Senior Life of Metropolitan Detroit, 6710 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield, MI 48322, jslmi.org; or to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. MARION LITT, 92, of Novi, died April 18, 2019. She is survived by her daughter and son-inlaw, Arlene and Larry Simoni; son and daughter-in-law, Stuart and Terry Litt; grandchildren, Brian Litt and Aaron Litt; many loving nieces, nephews, cousins and friends. Mrs. Litt was the beloved wife of the late Bernard “Bernie� Litt; the devoted daughter of the late Samuel and the late Bertha “Buddy� Dolnick; the loving sister of the late Bernard Dolnick. Interment was at Clover Hill Park


Cemetery. Contributions may be made to Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, 24359 Northwestern Hwy., Suite 125, Southfield, MI 48075, jdrf. org; Susan G. Komen for the Cure, 200 Friberg Pkwy., #3020, Westborough, MA 01581, komen.org; or to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. DR. GERALD “JERRY� H. MANDELL, 90, of West Bloomfield, died April 23, 2019. He is survived by his wife of 66 years, Beatrice “Bea� Mandell; children, Marshall and Jenna Mandell, Ruth and Alvin Kwaselow, Donna and David Grossman, Steve Mandell and Loren Levy, and Michael and Melanie Mandell; grandchildren, Keith Mandell, Shayna Mandell, Hayley and Justin Cykiert, Nicholas Timpa, David Kwaselow, Lindsay and Josh Fisher, Sam and Lindsey Grossman, Brian and Tess Grossman, Laura Grossman, Rebecca Mandell, Daniel Mandell, Juliet Mandell

and Dara Mandell; great-grandchildren, Shoshana, Sadie and Gabriel Grossman; brothers and sisters, Seymour and Marlene Mandell, Rosalie and Martin Jaeger, and William and Teri Mandell; sisters-in-law and brother-in-law, Bernice Hollander, Floreta Bloch and Louis Bloch. Dr. Mandell was the dear brother-inlaw of the late Martin Hollander. Interment was at Machpelah Cemetery. Contributions may be made to Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, 2265 Livernois, Suite 410, Troy, MI 48083, detroit@cff.org; Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinsons Research, Church Street Station, P.O. Box 780, New York, NY 10008-0780, michaeljfox.org; American Diabetes Association-Local Chapter, 20700 Civic Center, Southfield, MI 48076, diabetes.org; or to a charity of one’s choice. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel.

MERTON ROBBINS, 87, of Novi, died April 24, 2019. A member of Adat Shalom Synagogue and its Men’s Club, Merton was also a member of the Masons and loved old cars. He is survived by his daughters and sons-in-law, Amy and George RobbinsDickstein of Farmington Hills, Linda and Brad Hammer of Newton, Mass; son and daughter-in-law, Greg and Michelle Robbins of Farmington Hills; brother, Gerald Robbins; grandchildren, Brian Dickstein, Margo Dickstein, Laura Hammer, Jon Hammer, Cara Robbins. Mr. Robbins was the beloved husband for 58 years of the late Helene Robbins. Contributions may be made to Adat Shalom Synagogue, 29901 Middlebelt Road, Farmington Hills, MI 48334; Jewish Senior Life, 6710 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield, MI 48322; or to a charity of one’s choice. Interment was held at Clover Hill Park Cemetery in Birmingham. Arrangements by Hebrew Memorial Chapel.

MARCY RUBINOFF, 88, of Novi, died April 21, 2019. She is survived by her son and daughter-in-law, Allan Rubinoff and Susan Karcz; daughter and sonin-law, Kathy and Robert Lieberman; many other loving family members and friends. Mrs. Rubinoff was the beloved wife of the late Dr. William Rubinoff; the devoted sister of the late Stuart Handelman. Contributions may be made to the National Council of Jewish Women. Arrangements by Dorfman Chapel. ESTELLE SELTZER, 88, of West Bloomfield, died April 20, 2019. She is survived by her sons and daughter-in-law, Michael and Lori Seltzer, and Eric Seltzer; grandchildren, Justin and Lauren Seltzer, and Kaitlyn Seltzer. Mrs. Seltzer was the beloved wife of the late Bernard Seltzer; the loving sister continued on page 52

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soul of blessed memory continued from page 51

of the late Virginia and the late Raymond Sharkey; the devoted daughter of the late Samuel and the late Gladys Wider; the dear cousin of the late Betty and the late Martin Hersch. Interment was at Machpelah Cemetery. Contributions may be made to Jewish Family Service, 6555 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield, MI 48322, jfsdetroit.org; Jewish Hospice & Chaplaincy Network, 6555 W. Maple, West Bloomfield, MI 48322, jewishhospice.org; or Jewish Senior Life of Metropolitan Detroit, 6710 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield, MI 48322, jslmi. org. Arrangements by Ira Kaufman Chapel. ROBERT SIPHER, 62, of West Bloomfield, died April 19, 2019. He was a resident of Charach House, a group home in the JARC community. He will be fondly remembered for his loving presence, sweet smile, love of Chinese food and bowling. Mr. Sipher is survived by his mother, Ann Sipher; sister and brother-in-law, Lynn Sipher and Scott Mann; brother

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and sister-in-law, Joe and Mary Sipher; many nieces and nephews. He was the son of the late Allen Sipher. Contributions may be made to JARC or Vivace at the Birmingham Temple. Arrangements by Dorfman Chapel. GLADYS “PEPI” SWEET, 90, of Farmington Hills, died April 19, 2019. She is survived by her son and daughterin-law, Paul and Laurie Sweet; daughters and sons-in-law, Carol and Ken Holtzman, Linda and Martin Schonberg; grandchildren, Julie (Paul) Merryman, Marissa (Nate) Heeren, Lori (Munk) Andres, Michael (Ammie) Sweet, Jamie (Conor) McCarthy, Emily Schonberg (fiancé, Chris Giles); great-grandchildren, Noah, Olivia, Emory, Nolan, Emilia, Milo, Delilah and Theodore; sister, Violet Greenberg; her devoted caregivers, Theresa Peterson, April Reynolds; many other loving fami-

ly members and friends. Mrs. Sweet was the beloved wife of the late Arthur M. Sweet; the sister of the late Alice (the late Sam) Bernstein; sisterin-law of the late Ralph Greenberg. Interment was held at the Machpelah Cemetery in Ferndale. Contributions may be made to the Alzheimer’s Association. Arrangements by Dorfman Chapel. HARRIET M. WALLACE, 88 of West Bloomfield, died April 21, 2019. She is survived by her grandchild, Hillary Wallace; sisters-in-law, c. 1998 Dorie Wallace and Renee Wallace; many other loving family members and friends. Mrs. Wallace was the beloved wife of the late Arnold Wallace; mother of the late Michael Wallace, the late Martin Wallace; grandmother of the late Zachary Wallace. Interment took place at Clover Hill Park Cemetery in Birmingham.

Contributions may be made to Marfan Foundation. Arrangements by Dorfman Chapel. SHAY CELIA ZIFF, 15 of Bloomfield Hills, died April 20, 2019. She was born in Pontiac on Jan. 23, 2004. On May 18, 2004, at four months old, Shay received a heart transplant, her “gift of life.” She was a freshman at Bloomfield Hills High School. To know Shay was to love her. Shay leaves behind her amazing sister, Brooke; her mom and stepdad, Lisa Ziff and Karl Krueger, dad and stepmom, Adam and Nancy Ziff; loving grandparents, Lenore and Dr. Stan Dorfman, Marjie and Steve Ziff, and Barb and Bud Keller; and a huge following of family and friends. Interment was held at Clover Hill Park Cemetery in Birmingham. Contributions may be made to the Shay Sends a Kid to Camp Fund at the Friendship Circle. Arrangements by Dorfman Chapel.


R Danny Raskin Senior Columnist

Quelling the ‘Greektown in trouble’ rumors and other assorted happenings.

Saganaki from Pegasus

umors will never stop … Ones about Greektown’s restaurants in trouble are among the latest falsehoods … They might have come because a couple places closed for remodeling … Greektown rumors have been a lip-mover since the early 1800s after German immigrants developed it as a residential community and then began to move out of the Downtown neighborhood into areas further away … But then newly arrived immigrants moved in and established businesses … By the 1920s, Greektown in Downtown Detroit became primarily commercial … and still is … Most of the Greek immigrants moved out but not their restaurants, coffee houses, bakeries, etc. … Detroit’s Greektown still receives much nationwide note. One eatery, New Parthenon, was bought by the Jim Pappas family, owners of Pegasus … and its former owners are now assisting in running their Northwest Uptown Parthenon, which recently celebrated its 29th anniversary in West Bloomfield. (Bet you never knew that Jim Pappas also had a delicatessen … It was back in 1975 on Cadillac Square in Detroit, and he called it Pickle Barrel.) THE FLAMES FROM oodles of Saganaki Opa! were enough to bring out the fire department … But it knew that Uptown Parthenon, West Bloomfield, was whooping it up on one of its Greek Nights … The music from a huge speaker was loud, a gent played an exciting

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xylophone, a gent was singing, Herman Leader whooped it up, standing atop a table with lamb chops in both hands; smiling Lana Mini elegantly danced with graceful belly precision; and servers like Ted Stavropoulos were as fast as the flames … as the event date also came out on Uptown Parthenon’s 29th anniversary. SURE, SHE MOVED … But not far away … Judie Koploy’s Slade’s Gift Shop is now just across the hall, still at the Orchard Mall on Orchard Lake Road and 15 Mile, West Bloomfield … Or maybe Judie wants to be near Shangri-La at the Mall and continue eating Cholada Chan’s yummies there. GINOPOLIS’ SMOKEHOUSE has been feeding folks 40 years in Farmington Hills, but it isn’t the end of that name … Peter Ginopolis will run their Ginopolis Smokehouse in Brighton, Mich. … as Ginopolis Smoke n’ Pit BBQ … and will still have those delicious Montgomery ribs … Ginopolis Smokehouse in Farmington Hills will remain open through June and July. REAR VIEW MIRROR … Lelli’s Inn on Woodward, Detroit. where its owner, Nerio Lelli, was as round as a ping pong ball and head chef of his own restaurant with mouthwateringly out-of-this-world food … superb dishes that elevated pasta, steaks, veal, etc., from the mundane to the superb … like a huge family porterhouse steak for four, broiled and sliced at the table. DOWNTOWN DETROIT Buddy’s

Pizza will open around October or November of this year … It will seat 200 plus 30 on a patio and full bar … Location of Madison Building, owned by Dan Gilbert’s Bedrock near Grand Circus Park, is the former location of Angelina Italian Bistro. OLDIE BUT GOODIE … The man was lying across three entire seats at a concert. When the usher noticed this, he whispered to the man, “I’m sorry sir, but you’re only allowed one seat.” When the fellow didn’t budge, the usher became impatient and said, “Sir, if you don’t get up from there, I’m going to call the manager.” The man just muttered but once again did nothing. The usher marched back up the aisle and, in a moment, returned with the manager. Together the two of them tried repeatedly to move the disheveled man, but with no success. Finally, they called the police. The officer asked, “All right, buddy, what’s your name?” “Fred,” the man moaned. “Where you from, Fred?” asked the officer. With a terrible strain in his voice, Fred replied, “The balcony.” CONGRATS … To Jon Isenberg on his birthday … To Mallory Sharpe on her birthday … To Aaron Stone on his 28th birthday … To Mel Kerman on his birthday … To Ellen Shaffus on her birthday. ■ Danny’s email address is dannyraskin2132@gmail.com.

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or p ri re w bie was gi niver oliti rece 911 confe cou le adler wa dr try last week to confer with bly a ki ts an sol cutiv rning side d is je 1 vi a party in ily ou d se the s in deorld jewaders ki n the w than evof jewrythe coim dr of thethe w ived iconfe e statuest lib easur fello r ed a ed com degree ven an sity of cal econivom coun nnial e sh who r e dicsage a es r coun e todam of nc min o this u n may the results these de president of the committee american leaders on the status the troit du ry w on the stwith of th ise couner befo m our by ho illino s denasurethe ex e m n pre llow an world aurice briti s rl y in war as tion cil ma tee ho arr k to on the a g s de ill coun ri established in 1906 re e dele knwoe are ofconflict try is inin 1914 albion norary congress is an y e en me welcom th ma h fo airm re welfa to ere of world jewry will be a guest liberations bring a generous which was th niza state nia pe n ca gatesel and we ne amer troit is cil ng th be a guatus bly colle he be mit ss w wee ders ill b ssion nd d st igna h dram h ic ch p r lur a re tr an ed for the protection of the civil ed s to deci o s d lca n cost lculable wing asthe futico n rga a di re fundof fede e sessio est in detroit during the sessions may natio ican he to have sion measure of hope and comfort and religious rights of jews atire s ce gan prac ge in 19 th s e ho mater m e o nite s vu and vitto gates extremely brew the we do lity se er arra s and rationsans g can nn he se tic the council of federations and 4 to nal bien 37 co un to our fellow jews every throughout the world other of jew ia pe mderi mliberatiothnse results e assems tomay bewpo sam the uthe s ann the in con s of nged will sp an e pub rved e ish co n and pl and m its h jew and will speak 1941 nial ngregaiotio funds ss la welfare biennial si ea ea by re is s c pessimistic w ib br as where li on ho in oard goldmere atjetional pros k c rally co w e a ac in thes re of ficers re-elected were hon abram toaousufe pr tel stat ngressthe am e nual reached cordin uncil m n drmcyain ple for ray th oral a dinner arranged by the ameri ed h an hopeg a gene the d ab th re e e s u p b h s e nc s —pa e at governor luren g su ler ay th ominen elkus honorary vice president dickinson e at 6 peri wherur few nd ry an e to thacouncil rouse presid rus ad eaceour counattr of dthe d giv e thebly ofp tion t yo of ric the a re exec meetin can jewish congress at 6 p in d cou fundangedgress aned ge llois ig are ric g of nday atto a dec incle amer t na whjep itte utive prediction michigan in a message ad judge irving lehman and louis e new york.—the y ricoom which ent of ler w we e ame home eedsan jewse in thm m.00derast tha full of ted ss of omsse3 z ders w tio m the lfare arr con ud go ic d statler i a hotel th lc fo s jews re th bo m n na an n pe to in ve will e o hunion eveic e an id jewis l lead one million r h th ring all se for th was es the coas re-ele we l a ish fe tru be kirstein boston vice presi that the d indie isrepo have prominent national leaders of dressed to mr srere welcomes al leong res we innew com tionsade up ar en g lo is thedetroit ryrtal can n cw is of micrnor lu b ers eurotheyhebrew th the coming ottee prote tablishemmit cted ns tlenr ationish c ice p ress etonera jew nds te wilplrofit tito liedesdorf in europecawithin e om dents and samuel over cincin this t will uis lipskh congr see as follows of dr rica -jcongregation hig re a d n je to ericnas american ugho american jewish congress the delegates sta nad ro outright rligio clct 300 co nati g l fu sta nd niza o of fr throd re me on council may the d in tee at abiennial gives me sincere pleasure treasurer sol m stroock chair year as a result ent jew ky v add g wh dinne be presen y vice ess essed to an in n dic utmur ca otel in if ion am including louis lipsky vice pres the pa a th ngre s th e nd n h life a atio national 1906 a n of the for leg cil are ur h rom can lipsent to sin e un theionazis rent by nnia m a messakinson ficersughout thus ritogh aven ga mrsich mayr reserv t to ad pres the delega is pir hope4 toh th 1941 thue the executive committee der and starvation to a deci ident will be present to address to welcome the delegates of the man e 16 ism ns llin t welf in o sure er org e civi ri s p ts ic wish a jewaccording body by nger ge te r srer dr be m atio bie il nath re occupied e is kn an pag b me uispre atiso y ca en tay lea cinc sunday at the of assembly of the coun presided the morning session in the territory delein am l the lp wh r an this dinner reservations for generaljewish sion ade b ns fo ess to w gives s as fo e welco ad ju elkus-elected world of jew erdr e a ing lo e searvnte b presid the s th p r mem y je reached gate by liber own asd conthe woan spevak save ction ica m gs— he unitnual nahum y ca r gener elco judge lehman presided at many was me si llow other s innati 20 co d d is dge honora were pectmade meeting mes calling and n by cmad ow of s bo you federations and to the may s of n of cil e al gr unc e ungioantioany thinclud t will ber1re m made ti be ru a in ju which ow lli m s or ed 0 ncer e iv an ohio ngre st ope in m y gexecutive of k theead n your the luncheon which followed goldmann emrn r pres ng ci al as e the de ing chairman than 2, da albe ess en div e to at d of e plea gate selfcincinnati kirstirving le ry vicehoprn abram visi gre a lete de e hboard ct congrega nathan spevakow president welfare funds trust that sem mrs iden e thngre il m i iden dinn ay bspeva ivisio or m the ss rt le g l o is im e 00 v t to m te to su of th ga the of io fe c de s ex c es a hm h je committee e nd n p ir 0 6c e rs o ministrative t de m n be full of richard rothschild chairman h scus the stein 6402 n of th welfa wish bly of tes of re tr nts an in bost an an ident ishprese ss of the women division of the stay in our state will pla gup ttin see trem for thover to w c ounc a de n this ich e dw300 byare ex ch troit chld com made undi a en d 402tary ress congress 1941 s deveand lo profit to all of the survey committee pre worldinjewish secr d sa e pleasure ea or throughout st re th th d ap in io and th c o er re fe the and je h a e -6 congress re pess g p both s tions ay to a mrs k lo or e n su cr 6-6402 re b e l n te m m fu d ry g g et 6 cr on a 9 10-y e w rs n o lopm mee e nia in vice p uis rs bo in ou nds eratio coun man rer so muel e demeased perlzweig on t thas 6559 r th ary imis ely peaweig the ear chair t th sented a report on the educa dr maurice resi rd scanada n ent t e 3union orld is feldstein secretary the your member organizations io lm ns ocra servsection m the rwess tein se the c th pl h cknown lie trus r st n pr e cong the ajuda tic th ge bie acconday a the rlzparent the british man is in cy ice to reprog e w wis f thbody wryd albert ti f ra of liberal s ti 20 oh your easure ate will t that yoand an esided e execut stroocdesdor that ew york ress d th pethe harm detroit chapter the congress thewho har idy s os th d jemore ligio m organization 41 d su the cinnagrega ocong feldapter cincinna see committee page 2 f in one tethan .— greetings—page 16 n je arrived k ur c e 2,000 se se iv same ro d be a ju an ch m un ta ri e u america see n in ct th rl th ism on r e d em o s eu 1 rt a nitie wo nn ion on s se p y w ion prog sdelegates n tocherry 6559 ber ord profit full of the lu ge le e morni comm air ye ropemillion je e pred operunited aroex 17 and che ng of in cin con and s albe it cnhat5inu in the a visitors e and itt ar uroay beare nd ng lt states gani atiove see gr d o cas m ftoy 65 9 ws iction a rece ith pres ram ing mu in thoeldattend tro vol no eeti oard r 300 nss vulcania ps a ill re zatioto all richar ncheonhman pr sess ee de as a re with n a a decli f ethe the the eetin aboard m 1941 iden nt ste rr will e ste meet in ve ed g toope o ca b so r owjudr ns whic esidedion rs gniz p pected su of th d gs— lutio relig goldmann milton h w i coeny and ve p oout th is kn lrt iouscall perl rre te h ro in th and star lt outhe com die e 0 che for cot n eridevelopment page nte co e o ing toiefdiscuss u h ioic grou sent e surveythschi h follow at m tright ing dia whic nazof th nal eca m10-year vatio 7a t ra 2,00 zweig aremhere atwthe frolared reense th is on the chunion orldinvitation anye territory ed a re co ld ch de roug io ps me tureprogram e ich ed n at a im to bo alexan 16 s e 1 en mu congress an ere und lib than ext oble in oc by was port mmit airman goldm der pr the fu tooreligion ard jewish miltamerican m thin whand that is thtakeservice skthp m e th ernm ecord christihlin dec one s unisme idenetiincreased mad cupiedthe naz r see rejews tee pre m ofto s r a fr a tht body moreors aremeeof on home an man bring i• p on -e of d the d id oi program h to fo e co le ls by n by g is democracy to m m a m s union t n g th b the in tr e it ager cted w mm em ca n aren erica visit 1941 ent la alex and of s as be gov troy r m that cou that in com ose to accuesy is bein pharmony manas rethe ry feone w ativechairmandr nahu er ittee p e educa worlis america p ander the e thtionwith president -eleneeds w d m and the lopm ram d s e e to d ag rd a r o d s a o ct th jewry je am n je forbeco age pirations ed to ls ion d s g ales le entrarecent dr m wish co th e ch of and radio fro wo y roosevelt erican ereuropean mm of the m call s of de sta daypean de m ingate atten dev r pro ion anm ld 13 the indthe selfevery cating a osit freely d of ether the ip ittee p co e d au e repose a they u 2 y hopes pa c ri to m e s he g that n o groups the ric bo religious g o th le n a p e ra tr operation in m an gr rtmen brew c t of th d st e e un ard oit mic pa vo ge they de cted to cuss0-ye reli prog ent ke ow scho l d sh perl ess an frie t wh t beprin ayers e liveeuroworld help sam the e american t ofthe co ate irm ad ion com tak ngre higan ol which ss— solution n an problems mee pe to dis n 1 ice to ion resid o oci reaff in coura carr a tria as a rs no ocenthe betr thesid st ta erthr syna of gatio non-jewish munity in e organibritish zweig chd by plottingbo and ting extejewish gre ass frida ir on mthalexander go nsio for victory re-elected to o es stan is ca e themilton to serv i fied atte r innrs of for inge uniod serv e un h p for cs in guelifens prie said -en dis ent ction ov air n atjewish radio priest takes stand beside the 17 arrested on charge con y may from y mayaboathrde unitezation se vert m ty o we y or rthyebvictory ar ar thto save r c to board ofeemanagers th not em ave re rica pre d mgive cinna er to io w pe is buyd o cy th y wit call up s eetine unio thbuy e an and it 0 ce o an3.0 hrow d besmidesesage cassidy s ease government ti e complete lin movich hation f amer the d am ever guil t follpy destruction 10 19 gothe ssd statesho arrivethe cra on cent us gro blem d rad s nu n g de of h th la alexander overthrow m o a to ju milton ti ex 4 incr al u s g p n zw e re s st th rm o le h ec n hco foity any tha am sin an d eig 40 ldmanvulcan place hope gio pro cte ce hedefense dem ha elt re couly disn w s form was re-elected to the board b degle i•oit ived e o1f 7gre c ri m myy are re u ldinin utive who la v char g alex advertis anscrisis n usl ed cpcaunts destroy reli orld -ele ar e 17 n o e a records ti ia ti in a f v it to e av st v g s d n defense rr ti an th a fr in c and drowedrewee les co speaking ro an ga e om il 10 to o the the himself e am here is osetion w r re ers e who de paof managers of the union of sav ings in this pa r is kng cofor to bri rles un risti of chri thishris vigo ly ve ain at th d m zioneisstged o savings rou ugh fron er unthe to denizatrn p dperlzweig ropera tion xandmeanag er of odard direct emis per irecte sestamps rikct cha ro ic ch ests d on in of c ore thin y cert ollers the until d e sp r ga lin— american hebrew congregations owas t invothst llo myself from that christian fronters a michi n cha s oion en t t am ng hoican jew e invita erl prin ecio ndly lin no n as le of r m corn o b ntr nd can m is ghstamps ted n st dofinthe 10 ce department of synagogue and hlv 39thjewish the rev charles coughlin not disassociate tion rev eekpecifthe arre unitees rg solu a r 17 new yo y am ued pira erica th me to ish cong s riaffdeis m t disathssedprristeptrhe tion m d and e b onfs a eri and ad saries victe n arithificnch e mrepresent nts sin 19 cou and er movement reaffirm every word coughlin declared recognizing em tio two e theilton mboard alex d to th nion the st wthe s d inni ress linqu an states gove rkergsin echarg 40un caensispite thunche eir cnoam-a rtisat world e ne th the35 er st ctin ovem o munities cass e plo gle co ocia ncip n reco ica school extension at the annual who last week roundly dis which have said in advocating -3 d co sect bonds openve ing an the ho ns tr byclyth 6 thcongress e op see m te mys g then al 19 s to e ro d lolvch rnm byaenarje re sian w euro eds ane jews ions py also that in one sense the wiserds m cte e u gati nd ho wlaega caworld d ign la nd ththe pro s fath bonds meeting ted in the idy tting he pes son coun t en mpaokjewish der the union executive avowed the specific christian e daea ers ent the st re-encourage the ing elgu pean d th of t on 26last unts r 3.00 pe v orkja a f frest sp nuar ythe lp sof itshifochnanha in a nual reaf ton -ele f th ngre e a l waveole of th taxegoldmann ig ty that inid position to communism toonecharunw ill be is on critici in his se the arrests of its formation firm sess jewrye as om eaw ciat tfr ited ch r ye yayrnmen rmoner acco e 17 p cistsfy both this ontie ve co mun whichthat they re carry board meeting just held in cin front involved inby the e jews he was n stated mil was regers ow co agogu annuade th fo of rm ev n to at america of ke sa nv io th e r christians ze ff ar io rm er o th ge io ishope d jewry am ny of at ch li li les n fr id en d st a n r at anv ichfr european cinnati the united new re h ce of th s on la ects ri ia ation 17 new yorkers freely choose to bepridenti igannewgove is se spap of th sid and esid n an in tio may ity jew the am pose chief nal re e fo e mens e re adnvoof worth prce spap d seyear on in this crisis for the preserva trial w-e i•oitman n hebt of sy at thexecuttim erd on instam st su oxnt h new sts harge ited vil ncip ristia ared d be charges ent per e 30 ri 7 s er is n government n st gi o d in u in on may in s er im 1 ca h te er states rk pl n ve advertising ic aroused at ia nc subscription be single copy rv mr a c th th america in counsellor that of is ri co ar co oi ne atisth ottin 22w tin an christianity aam n th ed 3.00 n fro erra m te h e c th accused cl ed as r asssteps10c n e gjew ug e mplet to sa and noican detroit michigan 1942and ameri fied as a friend of the e tion ofapril faer of erica men sion iode 34 72 n etr in s ge yoatrkelrey st with mrtake 1—no 2 sta ason ized t arrk on the un k his ppro-c lin de y sta g to 0,00 creisca ish hlle rbicaaou 1,s00ofaccounts tion oftoch allia alex immediate o stat and4 to n they l inad e de n-jewcom ve jew is known as the man treason in his sermon last sun canism more vigorously than ever its to alexander 0 be a d is te r ic whether h o po not 0, m t an am part xten e un st held ss r matters e n ca ri n th un n je e al fi g it ov es fo ri 00 h th o on de um rte rs e ce newspaper trofor ani w d to on todca gove derth ws char 0e po ish so stia u accounts despite io plan stru r thig m tr y cr c y is psmdm e will re r is af rs to e t stan which rsed arepp a of that clear ayorm de ool e thng ju it teade atn2: who directed in 1935-36 the day criticized eh prsc fromrow haveges 17lesdesp this thinly veiled cam guilty or innocent be they arn m life fr h ity30 to thrnm mfuture embe tak llor man da the renew verthro esherorrybe po speaplace ho ction dcon t an an fr any co na 17 fi the g of pl e ite arrests in w h county n si ti recent e ay the en p of vi he co li th pub s an n zie michigan principles nazi e c be the by ith tio e e om from cook go pa an e th them and state lease r paign launched va pe on e cu e of e n r p king s eeti me certain d gna o ol au ld n ti dent followers of the in trian oc ro th un en tr ig dm e iscoth be w il worth 30 amon n in to ernm chris long to in tria cou as th 6 th advertising campaign for de men in new york on charges lyem ans n th k easchte m rd eddpolic dil fr to come sense th izl ing dsaerlzweig in which n in n usm ordotookpiite unit hthey e licists and their controllers to of christianity or the betrayers centration camp th e unug r him ing -3 nty me ttinggsovin rithu invado n do ists laro slristes an chh vely eri o of asfoth land o eveal of th eely ian ffrgehi tio coug m venileth eo theblyot b n sion rm linquent taxes he was the foun plotting to overthrow the united villify both the name and the s vi bonanati dvertis know 1935 cou r de plojoin se lean not av llify s ith m nece ss er fiers them my place is by their side live today r d thedjuby d m tres e ych w cari hlinlia government and took his bl choo unism wop ofbeplo ci thewrye dir lf and d a is prin w se do nristiarthele 3rt in ookign fo ni european jewry feels olngsinceon nclestatenldas t an h and they are released or con repo that rist co principles toci bo 0aidnill m gu matas a friend se is onmed this pro-american e unoitiesit je of the jewish center asso states 39 jew ect said wth rteia d anthye npraz ro ideeieinr contro an ander cted and cis pl a fouge with the christian front pro-christian frontiers father until tr hpubntin play ch sneve d he n anto ta hile fu the churc cass der ilty ters no w of thto be re noisth emisr sra thv sum ningo e nd victed this can and should be done with iden e atejeca ciation and served as its first stand ee x ed th jewsainsne na wasco o-ichries wmphasch llersote the e world l deaue ssone tere wrs crve mst ith ap t whe oru wfaore id a e t wel owrthe re f ther ale o dir e repld re e an while do not belong to any coughlin declared inisthpr repr coarn r a firsd ldbjesw to st ughlsiostnian th president mr alexander is affili ine ntt fopor th n st w ofteth aders meeting oiisting io deba arrive ded le cuse ti ch ss m atr is dbth n sa ic nofice pthro it ham therac b ens c le eos li in fo o an is i ig am ie w ei an n ri of n llo h fr wh s rs o rt e h congress—page de christian rt ch the do rt ith il of h ho f unit rk coughlin—page in xi vi temple n e 13 d n f ct u e o it g see decl beth s h c tio erom eg nttwbe ew d see ey matis th ff itiescou thn e hc ristiawer v e se pe engesreent andon p ated with detroit s ess s nsis aun take my stand beside the ican thmgeictoadth slaves ing its berlin d poles statedbco eeth isdera ofarth coughlin said nevertheless do perio be ely at am oflu ede e tifa dress ool rsan ing dth is nitysarofe th r fect k r eunro d a em ss ey t taxjew and taaf erse eth rb m ke member ai a union r el l o m y c ei po fe ad e n m o fa to b 5 em im ia ly e h ise in e at re pr th f g e ar in 5 lis th s y le co of h ta use jewry gstam port u cil e rabl 0 er0ica m peeanothnatm ns achineciplath cute or ntisl th mayrplth r dan ervis ndmp com linqun sen group to high sch erin rated t cruc here the e ca each ant d er jeweseasily dih and je an im,0 ac the be victin rivke d d es e pl te the mos r federatio coer of ththanedjesrwalexitarin med0 reay be jewrye regist prob eting et stingu wish rgo of sess wea to be derbe fo e rle large ed ey ar ee d icsi is ri by an veth trayerasnd lethaser prese rin ions of theadder stion nt m trdu dean a fuer iate p their arou o ber ges rele join in ties perp under stor s mo discu men foproviding y suf thde w lems con e th epte aves ture d rased e themad eir si d ce e e e g he back g yellowishablsl as re le s e ill s ia s d in nt ok e re ed m tr s c w ci d d ss e or ntra nday th ange si in h mey sp da wec d cr w y ro frm ed at ld hila orse patc d is itorie detroit en see co ibution crea th om osse s while chrewan it stnor tionfaca m 0 gr toed fo pre code live to ro sibilit ho are toting emi whi d je rrible at her terrby o conv th s se d e n the po hes one th orris m th u re io s on ill an d r a lli da p th m e gh o n e ee s sp f th le w re ap naz te r n thu e ot nged ar les lin— edugeros yre npgincolib tings germsoon as ed ians crea e ho era i co ork and ar rsdae allied ions w ofaoul a u e re have am zionis gulies the wnhi ra page proxim d the-oper p l an th christagainst th poland tin si n ce th e er an in o t se cl je ss g d ch is a y y e in all cedewith thof the mill tyrants of scope wn at rg ot ic ive fo in erthey crea cr re ca tr co elny an n je se in that un wish cam ly byto groups the slavesains arriv hes th llowinag this wee anizatietary of tio of rging the thus ab otests e jews inblic mee wish cong ristian sunday 2 e fa r relief ry d0shperwd s uc ar pr el tr sh o m n ou e la e k ad pu t th ch no es je fa paig fo contr less a ort e e he farb en ld enfe els th cons see co sent azi stor 20 closeare he eaks on dres and sage of n f sumsg under thilities agains le the erican gether with thwisatr this ye dottne guest th and re ngres been m tro ly guarrded the approa gr sed n sp on the rre various as tion ll the pros ar the 92ib5u,0 ment i rur of the am uncil to held 2 auditoriummichi ferin n possib ith no s—p chin the oc eetingthe 194 parts opers ded behalf have—dr chaim n nazap rt and je epo 00sqover t enouover -settle by age ged to stated ency and tion of the g con casion to w sen sessio gratio lestine re hool brownting other 0 an to be gh last ch temmunity co uota last 13 as po s are tary to w privile ld jewrywish ag iza tin that thgerman had high sc s pa the ke ss ill zionis ventio of zations detr ne camp y co an the bly is mee assu or the je for apar e pole sepa ible ea ptg drea oit ne mbly tee of the coiam ho t organnizin ish g organi technical r prentis dr b divisdrive he rate t assem ader in w re su simil this president of t orgs hands t of ent r ws po ell is p in burneamed m that nven rdes a io quarch group as muc s to id en is ke ss at re a ad on es n id ne g le na cc ea r th ca zi et s po s hi in te es re se pal sp ed to the w se was wed tion es slee ates the ea mun reedmartel pr pingh hunstrictions rs deleg their intedof camps for com cre or n ci b tstand n the pr the worlde wish that s ahead l the gr alls of more states exte with gr n in s wel l fe d ou ity ap tio ai al pr iga ga ion gu rt m nd o ou ite at pe sk begu th of ut an gn na it ry 65 hung ests to al eat plea sacr un be the nd the de than welco h ther mich ederun marsh frank troit federa ity cound n to eizmlean ary ificefor unprecals to th ine ande him with difficult ta for natio d re and l the de sure ith 0,00 ar ho dre ev w e an w as ra il m st ill es th w e en p sm de e nu ta e mm is se ite n w am e as anti- feel 0 jew w b church eden e co ing in or pa to m the cker the m ed in the mbled legate that ga e re amer ent e un natioal conven jew rs will s ha stars me in no happere come ted rn ed of thee for we welcoth e fu y s pishlith en cons of the der to r tuentative pl s in thll consider pelle love dead at y n movem were the qu bopr oy s of fole se legisl pres speake council govelast year o be el d iet light tion be streng ide of theople c atll effect ve detro al wo tion of the 15anthd ent idered entire quassure lf hidd rnm lay and fo re es ale em te daniel tion of t ence ada wiraising w en by ies ion ad of best it hear rkers the jew ota the from en fr night to beamto rove gu pe detroi may confer e to de buda t acco the hu no friemy ch rgotten fundmmunity or w crisis min om m w wholaes ngar opt thei wishe tiest gr allian ish o affiliae associas mayor the jewish rdin pest in an ndly ildre y sigh year co serv ds the of this eetin ce in th omen drfor worimldum in hithch s for r ian g on the to stop icatornciey for th unionidsta spokes the nd coming him as ions ay they alien ar t divi e su vo n ha je evde advi fu iv num legislat e de h at ations the su gs and an erlibsier n to land ces nal ion all that their wice to wd no ho ber liberats and m leading tow horribly a subssion ofccess of e succee wry ic trajeffries or r the re rebirt cc de lia ol d lu an nc es e je ee th ha me of ho we ch d sk the ca s of pi arm 6,00cribing the campa pected in th nce has e its ince vern rd may thith succesin israel gnity to the illed ws th s reduce wods the pr me w erish ng withthem no mot e edwa for go e also ex e jewish ta 0 ptio cr e prof d th w r unity ann ere worke serv its 65,00 ign men essio e of the jework fo ken an n entir oportioafts g th gentno kind her d dile ris ha nedea maninson ar twis now th wis 0 qu over activ the six ed to ns tin e hung eetin bbitmor weizmnday n r my d dr crowp e sunn le ha father ted gr te security an to afters npresident e pa h peop re arian of jew per cent tr e throug h homthe upbu dick ess the m ll be rae in su y da nd ings velo r regreater stimulatota by lt of ibut da ildin rt h jewis our elan of jesu popu s to all soul beeam that ys addr esmen wi es ovitz r of the w of th e th mid s d ation g heonr hadassahz the jeions by the gene tio unte over th cess in ac n to dr had recaadme the was mor rkened maz nalis ish do is decree lation the ta rslo e spok philip wish its m restor ed masse repon erican lds 33rd chapteamerica p er w ew rous pales ctor ts ar wei gath soul as r ead ki e than l am e hu ee chapte le ss rt m or es ha n em to of e s ca la ra ai o ch nd ad m g t kth er n ke of ve w h ch ha ite shud e nig wa en re beof thechloapterreofssthand jat of the le atio bers con stat ings onrs will end themeet lihoo been de cts en yers jo ds effo dre ht r w one w to kn de r mrs y presid nal mittee eetin d prived gineer ur the rts for adingnal funtoward thge mon resum vol l cong ow hr the to fear ith he ho knew am addr ler prom caish esiden cil onorar ternatiowife nazi m da r grew n rous ef lo of th s etc tin leon bl the esta part d by ell fir sound the mor in n the w s plan e vice-pr headess thes inent sp y at e their un je ro in ei enniza e co um bl tio n de ity r mga e on m of mar ning the fir ghetto live uted the alli colonishmen the orld the prs of di e daily m eakershotel wore the wav etosthme disapestoples the ellmishancommunest speakeprr incipal glea chin y fa or tioge st step the w y in to th ha ogre vision a a k ee t pr t w n g n co of m g at n al th es ill ce of tin o en oj m tin gu pal ss add starve e yello ect e cons ha in jew iliar e jewis towar penhag fe ing n was gion posinp own presidganizatio l ball of th s will re gs an the own th upon all ittee streetet w pahopeless w h gh d th d fo en ish la umm s contr es ta su take nazi arpage d po eir so br rally is knals in or re war wish comm 33rd et5to e cr bo hich spea tornffered w r bread tch of refuge st orin the crysdillac ho licita rt on my n by humor of the week was ion ib nator this ing liber je fects direct gates copeew tive achir and to je pridat ker ittee e ignace from ith th as my the sa tions le spse dr sieg in d6 the in weekly sermonetteentereledarne page in fund g dele eon book-ca sunday eaker atthe lead in the jeevemen wish e to jeofw erican vadn prod comm d to deay en lost d jew ated dark my ch ose so fr next m e the p m on thedbi munitywelcomin al am wish t in pa cons he e ofss born utive presente page sist ul drea r was edsucho re 6 mark also de ild g je for th editorial me in de annu as on direc uction ied ho onday sund or com lest true m fr ren s across ers do na ts for its serves jew its exec had 12:15 rvations ade by report on nmar pagewnisaz venth h7 isyoffic congreine18 ak89ehoheols oftehi man om women page do was m the se t 1911 high tional al ine vueh tor at managff m govern e statemen h cu ai dr na astor in the se uncil d nual may be w n k l er ia dr h p re d be fo ea hi m an or a of go so y e an te ay 28 rese ic ls sc ea co ne ty fa a to th lianc d ua ch th co m ns gueappe m s ci ho d se a mm ents page mingl med m that onemusic may theathe jung and strm mak h david the coand wel -end gates ceive y e un mmen ere heart brea pe thatuntry to re in the unity grad unity fo sessio bly cial al an th ager und ized cheon rs ralp page furn7 777 was community builders llege re onomvalad ited pa datio e e head as m in getim co 8 all th e ho ai d to radi ter in e vo liv ed withe preciowus tions is week t of ls comr assem rmean no wakking or comm bion copolitical ecois and ing m 6-6021 lestin n com ish na lead o ere je b e labo d lk ers wth12 er mer congregational news essdibleth foracouer vo officia impo ish federadetroit th presiden n e co penne than zi page of going stea pl nd ing in the e wish r organizareth hice nd m y w announceerlin an s m alship in ity of illin ch erinncre state ies in neral quar ere to time ee we froho o'con pe roo workietnge list ofhead wnse drea ere federatio ent tpo tions g te fi lar ry d ts page the ld th dy everan sports be gu r of lo onday ill te13 city andaders headtss and com cond 37 thm fundsraham srlfa al ge jew rs ld m nan itt r the sc e univers honorage m note may vario mou dollars of the po est lessne unite ck in m in 19 w follorestoratat made its eay your 15 in pale with tydanish je annu the se commcertified ity le ovemen ors have spirit—page ab sh we reonal stategates main us 13 deutsch on passover lawe aftepean total d jew the in 13 speak to th given an n colle tice gees wsiththe mar ss germ wed ion of pica see fa venth e council elfare mun waynting st to insure or annu stine rect y of thew monthseu ic m tings to the jewi in a pers e dele is th k ha t io l os ac te s ro di an re rb listening page or youth w h th the se civ ee t re 12 an al pr pr ay an alb re lo 14 na al st wa d se gr rt ac by y h a appea sts cree ve re rd :15 of st hi ized m d in con nd— ntin d ov tant ity fundnding ross am gan the as oit ting to th a fe major circulation eia zi ruth fic s plac hal e ad ofpage repo sembl rations anthis satu of th degree he be berg detr y dr the l page ne harm t but e this a served mun in exte o will attend our boys in the war ee n the jo g the erseas an ls 15den seas anti- ing the y page eam w worlonies int d with meetbreak of clared th or ris issue ed n for re e co ing here nace he in 1914 of grte h fede jewis infamnounce ige 20 page uspo oks forwaran 16d of br the our childrenoncorner d open dist mbine eeds re fu e over join legates wh tici ou com in st h ct de ad byy m h la page ou d sent esta othe brave an rally— the through void decree unds jan 27 the war on con the de the united paributio d effo pre t lo 17 e ws in s nu letter box an andming sev confli was recr ar rhoo ed d good untry ismails public w ian re night detroieasure rth to ef rem co se et ou whi national lestinen commrts of d ects d non-all marria as repage r co t con lestin e activitiesg thteo which writ fect theater ly the see refu appe ittee ges ported 18 jews gratnplto the fose the effeds pare in foldch are de s mbly oftions waldman the de ity of page jewisten espe fuge strictly confidential al t gee happithis conflic he til 18re ess open since be as ne c fu tw ria tio ta ra an vo d ci as e h ee pa ee e n ge st e sk o al de th se d ted f se ru 28 an s an cree fo 1930 pagen je20 erty in are of thwe do00its ws pictorial page 1940 chro ally fo ion an annu wish fe s the ase mitt abpa ties cy and ction in f relie to th rvice d prov rbid r th struct describedaim weizm allie nicle enth cil of je we for jew not g as nd agen uctiv e de oral 19 ides s inte 17 d jewis inte ch refu resettl europef and e three with no s coun lfare fu en prod licies vinced asknowin ial and m at will be rmar by dr e jewish pickett em ge h ca rest troit n-jewhaving harsh pe we co th nce state e adjustent in paimmigre mpa s ve be and po im of war le mater pray th try er and bli session eri s th relatio nal ent un es ha ign d men lestinrationn ts ciar e am ess lead presid letine clare e decr nships t sem ovemen oved to becom incalculab hope an r our co y s ary thmmittee see naz pa pr m jewis of th the m in the e and congr ee stip secret the day costs wepossible fo s for e ner is—p d h ca e 1940 ajor unite ted es u firs have ors forry ice co enstein ac in ive to rl ec rv d ut gr o pe -el be se n ec m ich w w age ex t prize pa wh s re may ain co detr bene d ed nt fact jew a ends dress on lo ely erican ler wa mittee we ne s oit a porta good of m trav brillian ign can fri solom of the am com to ad detroit to to re cyrus ad e com in 1906 ion s lliedfi before extrem t scho on was elled wid ever l and decis m dr en essabe 100 se and airman stributione presi ed in da gates imvis se civil the n chair m than htesofesth se etic y to tablish t of b educated ely lar who the as presidtwa vice ch joint di ive vic n of the jews ldman e com morewise coun ope ates to pess be awa of new je has ofe of bern erlin p ser e predictione jewish and execut ho otectio m go ke th rativ con the deleg de which ge 12 wish rded rightsrot nin eher mhe e pr play en inte in ec e switzeerugiae univerffman theserous jewish un of the drofnathhue admin..list mittee ns—pa g .—thjews will di tw ld e for threligious wdor ed am rest g d g tio lts ra rk o si n on e ne co to o in y th rl 4 su ra tie cy ab ge yo is om -w bl ry e n91ident er prize ee s e re ing a is bein com ong cons her fede man the wo ed in th so ic and and ughout th were ho1 mfort es br may thns new e millionin the gh ks sta cloped ur ec er with eff see gd conf s d dr hociologsyliteraturspecializan thro ted e pr louis et and co ery mittee o arriv to conf e status and co rants ith tri t m euro ect re-elec rary vic d eratio of hopejews ev i thateuon be an y pri ia wri e ar ing his ngre of tem irmants is on wh rope w lt ouby the nazisr gress wh peanffman and philo weekders on th a guest libea ficers s hono hman ane pres re t s va in te p su a ga st h su an fo n m ge w le y t la w is re te oun tion th g le r th d secr so tr conf be m acdo n ed by a as f in vic elku ra camr of se be r fello at ced sh by e essay pi ions e irvin boston liedesdor r year asd starvatio ican lea ry will m arde phy son judge n theq p tw cond be te1934 esubest litderioarcritaw mayion mea irmation the de cont aarey th el amer rld jewring the sessns and t to oure ai nahu ry occu an dickin teinsamuel leng ald uest thkirsan essa y brics awd the n an o ock chittee der e territo ade by drof the ad st troit je est spon zedek de 16 ha ns to m or con ses be of wotroit du federatiospeakee whe or luren message ad ro d d th io ar ur st oa ad w th e m di es m so w n d e s as s m eri govern gan in a welcom dent er sol mutive com ssion inmany wasn chairman ee of thby rected lafi dcas line e dr ish sio red th first pr on im oned in de uncil of and will am for su been se onm chro e s n e leo leo m fr an mitt d oduc by d fari wt in bmitt pri michi mr srere ws sure treasur the exec morningesse t the core fundng ent nicle to contes ed by th 6 p ided at goldm tive comngress an air ed r hof ri an ing es as the an n fran of llo plea t th see ca send the an pr jews s in be fmant welfa er arracongress at a of te klin an sed to es as fo d d says weig ch the e man wed the mpai qulo inistra ish co to d their e cont rne of th mple d rab esn perlz of drhes delegat me sincereates of th presidedge lehm hich follo man m ld jew pa in ra tionon palco a dinn es ial gn— and jewish ler ders h bi air com e wormaurice itish sectioonarrived exe the be page ther e detroit jepers to tants are ti bbi mor m her ra hour th ressicthe givese the deleg the cound and juncheon wsc bienn can attgnational lea m hild ch pr sten e br tion wh congw shm th on sh ris ad 17 an the lu tel in in th e genc wish the ed m mbly of barr ons on m in cut tional 10 hoom roth mmittee uca dran the ni ns yo l essahe wishy vice pres to welcoas aa an za age e le y 50 s ur tio ci je ito m ay se pr by ho r re n ra es ch ed 0co rd an e es ga ys pr m of con o ads word ronic r ive ca tom of ques 1 broughuse of l n e y at de ha or sk sed rvey ess the at cou greg d me united st lcania perl ion n rthecamericauis lip ent to addr r genera jewish fe trust thatfull of ric the su report on th lim satis zedek le pt w sa tio th un t e te 2 ill ai e a re d ns it tio lo th vu est re s fo of th es o ng factio on th have pag st ele ssann and vitation tive n alan iams la dire rth hav e prom ns folling cil of fund will beit to all sented a havecongrega mfay includi ill be pr in therd the m e the b that ee inen rvatio gat w it is to in by ca nt welfareour state d profzations beinn over th ex oys judg e been colm colo grahamborite cted ress t aboa gold mmitt detro n hebrewal council deci ident nner rese at the cong es g se firm e in ade preside stay in ea ed es sure an gani cent macdonial secr cons and see co ica ation and girl ni rd e here jewish jews of o g to a e an this di may bespm profin the colected to ucators in th etar erva co amer nal bienn s inshown by na sess evakow n of the both pl ember or an co t in zweig ar erican to the ge 16 in nvictio ldt ree sio nt e as ac is co d cons ga y ma way whichnathan natio 19 your m tioacsunday at th me s and th colo g arm ns of h ted the am l ecra the co ne unsamuel est they t as ntes a41 gs—pa en divi02 or mrs je rding re rs n larg tion wry and the t bring ho 4 to pached supe lec iversi cour nial secr s in ea ws fo greetin are the cinnati ga m the wom 6-64cretary e need class an je in the e th re to g of rin e-s p pe r se ss le n et ty os tin ss ch ro of se n ica re e te se es e re sio mee vin o eu ey repo se nden intim of the pa ary de case in cin cong brew m amer eengrefeldsteinr the cong a cosh sr plan cale em t of bernard th d bco f the ated n lestin fend tions nual ive board er 300 a an th ra sc ica at pi is e rt te s th er n-jewi ed w e himel hools the un ov aacs time th ap igrati e as albe hope execut e up cond e am nor to fr at now courts the ite hoch m and th hout th known da detroit ch 59 the be ich thsh and no o madthroug an of ed thos to redu ee men m d he sh life fro d ion is er help wh cong emned b n e new ce al ju ucat of the de rs e longneitherd 00 cherry 65 ity jewisave jewi isratelh th tions daan 2,0 the un ly un lib io th e th y m tr ress n d in jail e oit bo e to e body nv sent tion e than cana ew yo tion e period co ee jewnis be aw winner tting may giv ard struc in n f begaicted ences of parent ica mor ors are ext r lo o e de of e d p rk qu t in e let pe h er ct nw th .— ire mr the co and is mee am th comp place ho visit univ arded we cont mself who d for thwilliamith the qu ism ingates and the 1941 ent of ersa poelaprovisingress the am s charge priced g for hie direct emrn hvelopm ram l jewis set of est will e poss were se s who es dele d to attehnd icde cabl nd in onal godispatch erican th jewish coent h en the es speakin rv num og ed on cassidy at a eg ve pecte will entir sion of ing teber of je in weig as cyclop ne uss ar pr ew up n and er scw represress anno ram pr ngers rnmened to arrest ws e perio firea e 39 perlz rm spo mv and ed stat in be give th ing to diion 10-ye to religioograe on otes ng unce gove r saries of ththe world d of rms dus for th t the 17 es tin fran t of pr ish co at the camone of n tw e runner ia the un kes th ring e a ce the service union es ps agre rnmenment th g agains see p -up eside vernmenthe sere the le o-w o anident ng munities world jewated thje b sedcy ry ar rs t e co izi pr th t a w h ea in em d te ab th ee at m le me e ad e t cr ur gn rd in ocra e an stine ic ent on go ks te the p t the rebel thes mann st pean to ar no op ed ingo reithcall for coin rect sy of higan ing pri stay n dem harmonyow —pa ald of euro be arousetod oy recod w ristian frclared recoe theabba grat range with jew seekinolish heskes st chaim weizmann cent us groupsms io kam or of caseymou throug vate ge w fo destr lectem that ch ns in de pe d may priestt ta rthrow io is in eveltmre p ka the in n of jewr larg ish le g by mp r tilc hptha lig 16 to oble one se ism is on chief ho erica e steps anill re e coughl re pr e io pr fro europe e in p ir de os ve elf d s rd h e iz ad ph jewish o they messages bring rof communities the of un at world ti roeration t world -elected ra ew wallo hin d tio e ys y wo be w weizmann from the from scale ers of jewish for the en at am mediat to chaim restor pendence n thethtwo to ca ter m m ever cating as inne ree comm famous pola is thleaders n also s be id op coey i cia e o im ture which sa n to n r m to zi so er re n m s d fir io ke tio r vo nd report f ed m e as present se er g af nd i e se an na lu th ta p w bo e se d his the co irl of th oo silver will uel on th of the world o manag of dhee cu to thforfor jewish which still have a free voice t dis agency president a fupalestine once alexa ge they posit and the so to ficent veresaid -einncadouralondon the pro py o m thewhich y he cond she e coun m le freely chofofthe in no the acthey be plan a ka fro n m em of hl ll rr r t ard d ov ir l f w o ug ca d in p em de vi ar milto m tr w r ia experiences in europe to the jewish community ha re men co y sion the ca an ar hillel detroit on april vin acqu phreeill be seon an ill go organization cam of cleveland to erva tr bo frien se th silver ethe they abba to bo mof and y dis which s ion that national es ericaprzionist ired d m alexd to the io for lis t was tr al polisblegram d as a rs not whnt itte visit to detroit be inciples leantration n of amd charle undl tian its format to by the ne nt to ka e of am te ansm wry feels ce today eri fie m h miltons re-electe the unga with country is xpected that weizmann also will make a return atthe thc passage stahteambass noce thpalestine tions e mr ti w cam n to amev e pr trayersappeal—await of united e revweek ro in an je c chris of christianscrisis fortythand itted govern d chairman p doneto this th re ifi wa e er s of y or pe of be be it liv ec ng er ad ilt o p s sts lc st ro d ni ld rs e is co sp i•o manag an n thfrom re e just hin minwith the count or eu the during his stay in this country asly shou of america jews portugal llowe ty or thby the gosid mb gu nt fo ew nagogue an al who laed the to thto the po ou the ar united on in thchristia wetheir tonpress ge 13 are eager n and of ican hebr vigor d in by sy of co de christianiplaceas iled ca lisbon gto his gorequest jerz is ow the arges lveer annu y peounited this ca tion sm ss—pa more thinly ve rtain pu amer rtment of n at the utive avont invo sed or ch my rk s that tock ve m un bern relea congre e rs tohe eof them depa extensio ion exec cin fr new yo rnment on last sunts canispite this hed by ce tro eehe ey are th worth rnmen see ard is wh de nt hlle th on ol 17 s gove t transm i t ld in gove e cable y of go t in til th the un nstin serm r accoun17 paign launc their co me andica scho be g ich ge rnm gram od-w angersit g just he io state in his wspape er n un ed beeaacs the ent s andth the na in—pa ill o-am ther vict istfy r mr treason ized ne rests ofarges hl ess mboeeard meetin pr to lic llo st spe ug s bo fa at se th itic is n ch ar co an y cr un th ti tiers ited villi ciples see po wes that e polish cent rk on the m e da sing co e see ake cinna the this pr s prin ristian fron la the renew yo row the un hi m adverti known as -36 thty h t e n of o d—icph o ch r took e th 35 an in 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BAR & GRILL

Appetizer with purchase of entree • max value $9.99

Black Rock Bar & Grill OFFER EXPIRES 6-17-19.One coupon per

table/per visit. Not valid with any other offers. Not redeemable for cash. See store for details.

ANN ARBOR

CANTON

PORTAGE

HARTLAND

NAPERVILLE

TAMPA

ORLANDO

3776 South State Street

41601 Ford Road

550 Trade Centre Way

10100 West Highland Road

2740W. 75th St.

702 N. Dale Mabry Hwy.

8965 Windemere

734-992-7625

734-927-7800

269-459-9427

810-632-5500

630-445-8648

813-321-3577

407-217-7170

DAVISON

WOODHAVEN

NOVI

UTICA

TOLEDO

BRANDON

FT. LAUDERDALE

1015 N Irish Road

22753 Allen Road

44175 W 12 Mile Road

12515 Hall Road

5501 Monroe St.

804 Providence Rd.

6200 N. Federal Hwy.

810-652-6688

734-307-7335

248-465-7777

586-488-1747

419-720-7625

813-445-4111

954-368-2525

www.blackrockrestaurants.com


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