AN OPEN LETTER TO THE COMMUNITY
1984 PONTIAC
FIERO S.E.
z,E(Egt
$6999
1984 CAMARO
SPORT COUPE
iitotet
I $6666/
S PECial
'''.-
..,
1984 CORVETTE
1985 GMC JIMMY
2000 miles, red & ready, leather interior, .
pwr. seats, Bose stereo.
Fully loaded
12,222
ONLY $ 1 8,888
REMEMBER...WE FAY THE TAX!
1981 PONTIAC TRANS AM
This week's sparts car special!
T-tops, auto., air, loaded.
$4995
1983 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS CIERA BRGHM.
Low miles & loaded, Two-tone paint.
$6666
1985 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER
1980 FORD FAIRMONT ..
Runs and looks great!
Fully loaded custom interior.
$2222
$6222
1983 RENAULT
ALLIANCE
1986 ASTRO VAN
_
$2888
Work van, auto., air, 6 cyl.
air, clean in and out!
$111,1111
1985 S-10 PICKUP
1983 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER
3 to choose from
free . bedllner
w/pickup purchase.
STARTING AT $4495
Air, nice car!
$ 4444
1984 MONTE CARLO
1980 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
Summer Svings Special!
Auto., air, Won't last long at
•$7777
$3333
1980 OLDSMOBILE
OMEGA
1981 MERCURY LYNX
WAGON
Auto., air, 6 cyl. P.S., P.B.
02888
Auto. air .
$ 2888
.
1981 CORVETTE
1180 CHRYSLER
LEBARON
Great full size, transportation
$2666
Rely
111/1/
' 0869
Immaculate in and out. glass tops.
leather. aluminum wheels. low miles
$12,222
a/
47 44/uPiviltra ely
WE'RE THE DEALER Y0
CAN COUNT ON TO
ALWAYS BE THERE!
ie
A1 Es TA x
•
EX 171 r/
COMPLETE SERVICE & PARTS DEPARTMENT
OPEN DAILY UNTIL MIDNIGHT
•7 6111 sill
/
mART
y 348-7000
7
MA.
SAt IS
Mon
o,, &
9
Wod
to
FELDMAITAD"
WHERE GAUT CAR A TRUCK DEALS ARE ONLY THE BEGINNING.
42355 GRAND RIVER
Just East ot Nov. RO Noy.
12'qriday, September 19, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
Dear Friends:
My mother, her sister, and
I, then a baby, arrived in the
U.S. exactly eighty years ago
on July 4. We had escaped
our little village in Russia
after a pogrom in which, I
was told, many had been
hurt. We traveled in steerage
aboard a steamer bound for
Boston. As we entered the
harbor, a big fireworks dis-
play for the holiday went off
in front of our eyes. My
mother, knowing nothing of
American traditions,
exclaimed in Yiddish,
"What's happening?" She was
frightened that we were in
the midst of another pogrom.
But persecution has not
been my experience since ar-
riving in the United States.
On the contrary, this country
has given us so much. Both
my husband Morris, now de-
ceased, and I were immig-
rants. We gave what we
could to the United States —
he as a soldier during World
War I, I as a member of the
first cultural delegation from
the U.S. to the German
camps after World War II.
Detroit, in particular, has
been good to us. When my
family came here in 1916, we
did not have much. Detroit
gave us the opportunity to
make something of our lives.
Detroit also provided a set-
ting for my parents to prac-
tice their lifelong commit-
ment to Chabad-Lubavitch,
first at the little synagogue
on Alfred Street. For awhile,
it seemed that many people
had forgotten Chabad. As
adults, we became involved
in the group to revitalize
Chabad-Lubavitch, which
met in our home. Rabbi
Shemtov, who came to De-
troit in 1960 as an emissary
from the Lubavitcher Rebbe
Schneerson, was an inspira-
tion for our efforts. Our
Lubavitch community has
grown since then, as more
and more people became in-
terested. Their support has
helped to establish the net-
work of schools, camps, and
houses that we now have.
Why am I a Chabad-
Lubavitcher? I came into it
naturally. I come from a long
line of Lubavitchers on both
sides. I didn't know my
grandparents in Russia, but I
feel that they lived their lives
with dignity and pride. They
were good Jews. I feel
privileged that I was born a
Jew. It is in my blood, it goes
back centuries.
I am concerned about the
perpetuation of our people.
Our young people today are
searching for something
spiritual. They don't know
where they belong, or to what
they may return. All during
this century, the children of
Jewish immigrants have been
becoming Americanized at
the price of losing their roots.
We saw this assimilation
happen in Germany, too, in
the twenties and thirties, and
we know the terrible price
paid there by children who
lacked the education to com-
prehend their own persecu-
tion. The massive forgetting
of roots in this century has
hurt all of us.
One of the things that the
Lubavitchers have done is to
become visible on the scene
with our young people in col-
lege towns and urban areas.
As an example on a more
personal level, long after I
became involved with
Chabad-Lubavitch, its work-
ers helped my son Isaac to
re-identify his heritage. The
tireless rabbis, their wives,
and even their children, also
visit hospitals, prisons, senior
citizens' homes, and many
other people in need. Their
actions are good deeds done
not for the thank you, but for
the accomplishment of the
good deed itself. Chabad-
Lubavitch respects all reli-
gions and embraces all Jews,
whether practicing or not.
The Lubavitch movement
would like to see more Jews
observing, more Jews under-
standing.
I have lived a long time,
and done many things. I was
privileged to be one of three
artists selected for the first
cultural delegation sent to
Germany after World War II.
In those times the people in
the camps didn't think about
music or poetry. The first
things to be done for them
were to feed and clothe the
body, give shelter, and take
away the fear — inculcated
in them — about survival.
After that, it was important
to provide food for the soul.
This meant different things
for the young and the old
ones. The children could
know nothing of our heritage.
All they thought about was
running, hiding, surviving.
The older ones could re-
member. So I sang Jewish
songs, Hebraic songs. They'
all needed to feel who they
were — that they were not
scum, or parasites, but that
we have a rich heritage that
binds us together, over coun-
tries and generations.
For myself, I know that I
am Jewish in my gut. I feel
good with my Jewishness.
When I was honored on my
eightieth birthday, at which
Isaac Stern performed in con-
cert, it was a great compli-
ment to me as a singer.
Emma Lazaroff-Schaver
* * *
The Lubavitch Foundation
Dinner-Concert honoring
Jack and Miriam
Shenkman and featuring
Pinchas Zukerman and or-
chestra, will be held on
Tuesday, September 23,
1986 at the Masonic Tem-
ple. Tickets are $125, ta-
bles $1250 (tax-deductible
contributions). Black tie
optional. Co-Chairmen:
Paul Borman and David
Honorary
Hermelin.
Governor
Chairman:
James J. Blanchard. For
information call 626-7023
or 548-2666.
LOCAL NEWS
Parents To Hear
Learning Expert
'Dinghy Sharp
Learning consultant Dinghy
Sharp will give a lecture on "It
Takes One to Know One," at 8
p.m. Monday at the United
Hebrew Schools auditorium,
sponsored by PTACH, in con-
junction with the UHS, Akiva
Hebrew Day School and
Yeshivath Beth Yehudah.
Mrs. Sharp, who struggled
with dyslexia herself, has
earned master's degrees in
pre-school and early childhood
education, speech and lan-
guage pathology, audiology
and teaching of the deaf, reme-
dial reading and learning dis-
abilities.
For 37 years, she has taught
in every one of these fields and
has been a consultant to the
Farmington Public School Sys-
tern.
Admission is free and the
public is invited. For informa-
tion, call Simi Grossman,
559-7453; or Tzvi Burstyn,
559-2295.
Zukerman Here
For Lubavitch
Pinchas Zukerman will con-
duct the St. Paul Chamber Or-
chestra when it appears in a
benefit concert for the
Lubavitch Foundation on
Tuesday at the Masonic Tem-
ple.
The concert follows a city-
wide dinner in honor of Jack
and Miriam Shenkman,
philanthropists, communal ac-
tivists and supporters of
Jewish education.
The orchestra regularly vis-
its the major halls and arts fes-
tivals in the United States, in-
cluding Carnegie and Avery
Fisher Halls in New York City,
Washington's Kennedy Center
and Chicago's Ravinia Festi-
val.
It has also appeared interna-
tionally and in the last seven
years has visited Latin
America three times.
In addition to touring, the
orchestra has established a
reputation for innovative pro-
gramming 'that continues to
this day. More than 30 world
premieres have been pro-
grammed since 1980, includ-
ing 25 commissions by the
chamber orchestra. from corn-
posers around the world. More
than 170 works by contempor-
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- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-09-19
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