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Besides Dr. Bahar, she said, the other is Albert Molina, a computer specialist at General Motors. She de- scribed Detroit's Sephardic community as having 70-75 families, mostly from Iran, Iraq, Morocco, Israel, Greece (Holocaust survivors from Salonica), South America, and one from Cuba. On Wednesday night, the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit con- ducted a memorial service at Cong. Shaarey Zedek in memory of the Istanbul vic- tims. Judge Avern Cohn chaired the meeting, and the program included Cantor Chaim Najman of Shaarey Zedek; Richard C. Hertz, The annual stag day Wed- nesday of the Detroit Service Group for Allied Jewish Campaign volunteers was cut short so that members could attend the memorial. The National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council,in New York requested that its affiliates throughout the U.S. hold memorials on Wednes- day, the day of the funeral in Istanbul for the Neve Shalom victims. Mental Facility Continued from Page 1 part of an "interim period," he explained. "I've got 900 patients," he went on to say, arguing that he couldn't afford to offer outpatient religious services to every religious group. He rejected the argument that the facility was dis- criminating against its Jewish patients by offering services that are not Sabbath services. "The service we are offering is basically the same service we offer to other per- sons. I don't think we're doing less ..." "If you provide Sabbath services for Protestants and Catholics, you can do it for the Jews," insisted Rabbi Gordon. He saw the visits to his synagogue as the best solu- tion to the problem. "You'd have to hire a full-time rabbi to get him to serve Friday nights." "I have been going around and around with this issue," said Dr. Brown. "At one time we had a volunteer rabbi come in. We are providing the same level of service to Jewish patients." Compared with the number of non-Jews, he said, NRPH was spending proportionally more on its Jews. "I don't think there's any question that we don't have the money to transport staff to places of worship," said Tom DeLoach, director of public information for Michi- gan's Department of Mental Health. "I think that's the place where volunteers come in." A meeting to discuss the matter was called Sept. 4 by Rabbi Gordon; Bernie El- binger, a Jewish volunteer at Northville; and Richard Vis- engardi, a representative of the Michigan Protection and Advocacy Service, a watchdog group over the state's psychiatric facilities. Dr. Brown was on vacation and did not attend the meeting, but told The Jewish News . that he would sit down with the three to iron out out- standing issues at a mutually agreed upon time. One such issue is the in- stitution's chief chaplain, Father Stanley Kukulski. A Roman Catholic priest, Father Kukulski is accused by Rabbi Gordon and El- binger of interfering in the Jews' spiritual concerns and of interpreting Judaism to NRPH's staff and Jewish patients. Father Kukulski does it in the name of "ecumenism," Rabbi Gordon said. "Ecumenism is a nice Chris- tian word. People think it means brotherhood. But it's a movement toward a world Catholic church, not brother- hood." According to Rabbi Gordin, Father Kukulski wrote a pamphlet, interpreting the holiday of Pesach, which he distributed to NRPH's clergy and staff. The letter read: "Passover is celebrated by Christians as well as Jews, but it is called by its most popular name: Easter." Dr. Brown insists that in- cidents like the Pesach pam- phlet are all in the past. "Father Kukulski has noth- ing to do with the Jewish patients," he said. "I ex- plained to Rabbi Gordon that written communications would come from the rabbi. If it's an issue, we've taken care of it. We won't have Father Kukulski" sending written communications or explain- ing Judaism to Jewish patients, the director as- serted. "I know there are concerns about (Father Kukulski's) philosophy and how he oper- ates," said John Powell, Michigan Protection and Ad- vocacy's director of mental health advocacy services. "There is not the kind of sen- sitivity being exercised as it should be toward the Jewish patients and their needs in that setting.