IUWI LOCAL NEWS The Heimisha Conservative Shul nn 011111 Z011110931 . an inum maws! BETH ABRAHAM HILLEL MOSES Interfaith Symposium Continued from Page 1 FILLS THE NEEDS OF THE WHOLE FAMILY COME TALK WITH OUR MEMBERS AND LEARN WHAT MAKES OUR SHUL SO SPECIAL. YOU WILL FIND A VIBRANT YOUNG PROGRESSIVE HEIMISHA CONSERVATIVE CONGREGATIONAL FAMILY WHICH CAN OFFER YOU THE FOLLOWING: Young Marrieds Group . . . Mr. & Mrs. Club ... Men's Club Sisterhood . . . PTO ... Adult Study Groups ... Youth Groups Cultural Program . . . 2 1/2-5 Years . . . Toddler Programs Independent Hebrew School (The Model Of Our Community) Kindergarten thru Post Bar/Bat Mitzvah Monthly Friday Night Family Worship Services . Shabbat & Festival Services That Will More Than Fulfill Your Every Spiritual Need. ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL YOUNG ADULT MEMBERSHIP RATE AND OUR AFFORDABLE DUES STRUCTURE Call 851 6880 For Further Information Dr. Muzzammiel Siddiqi, Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum and Dr. R. Marston Speight were the conference "leaders." - , L4541' BETH ABRAHAM HILLEL MOSES 5075 W. Maple Road, West Bloomfield IM WI Mail IELLIL 111E ILL 111931 FACTORY SECONDS (150 SERIES) STYLE 3 ZIP CASE 26" PACKING CASE 29" PACKING CASE LARGE GARMENT BAG* REG. PRICE SPECIAL PRICE $225 $195 $218 $235 $425 112 5° $ 9750 $ 107 5° $ 117 5° 52 IN STOCK COLORS • PEWTER AND BLACK AL (1 ) ervu4Oft 1( $2125° Luggage Outlet QUALITY MERCHANDISE AND SERVICE AT THE LOWEST PRICES FOR OVER 40 YEARS 3116 W. 12 Mile (Between Greenfield & Coolidge) Mon., Thurs. & Fri. 9-9; Tues. Wed. & Sat. 9-5 545-7393 HARRISON'S PROVIDES COMPLETE LUGGAGE, HANDBAG AND BUSINESS CASE REPAIR In the very unlikely event that you can purchase anything =Noin=ac we sell at a lower price tell us — We match prices! 36 Friday, September 26, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS where Abraham was chosen to be a prophet, submitted to God and was made imam, a leader." Moses is also a prophet in Islam, the India-born Dr. Siddigi continued, as are David, Solomon and Jesus. "There are no three tradi- tions that have more in common than these three traditions," he told the audi- ence. "Respect and reconcilia- tion mean that when we dis- agree ... we do so with re- spect, with logic." He urged that American Muslims be welcomed as equal partners in interfaith discussions. "Muslims are now your neighbors, just as Christians and Jews are neighbors." Dr. Speight, co-director of the Office of Christian- Muslim Relations for the Na- tional Council of Churches and a Methodist minister, said that the aim of the day was "to manifest unity within our diversity. In America, we seem to glorify in our diver- sity. I welcome the opportu- nity to do the contrary." He warned his listeners that "nearly every similarity (between the religions)) is a potential trap. If we scratch below the surface ... we be- come quickly involved in dis- similarity." One example, he said, is the patriarch Abraham and the nature of his descendants. For Jews, descent from Ab- raham is physical, said Dr. Speight. For Christians, the descent is' spiritual. Yet the "uniting truths" of the three religions are the be- lief in one God and the be- lievers' submission to God, he said. Rabbi Tanenbaum, director of international relations for the American Jewish Com- mittee, dealt with Jewish- Muslim symbiosis: "Nearly 1,400 years ago, Judaism and a segment of the Jewish people then living in Arabia stood beside the cradle of the Muslim religion and Arab statehood," he said. "The Muslim religion and Arab nationhood took form under Jewish impact, while traditional Judai s m received its final shape under Muslim-Arab influences. "When the Arabs retreated from world history — roughly from 1300 to 1900 — the Oriental Jews virtually dis- appeared from Jewish his- tory, thus demonstrating their interdependence," he said. With rising emotion, Rabbi Tanenbaum asked his listen- ers, "How is it possible that the people of God can leave their places of worship and inflict upon one another the most horrible destruction, (and by doing so) destroy God's image?" Our task, he said, in a world behaving increasingly as a garrison, and accepting that condition, is to "return to our roots." Jews, Christians and Mus- lims, he concluded, must "close the gap between what we say we believe in and that which we really live as Chil- dren of Abraham." A shouting match which broke out at a workshop on terrorism's local effects was "only ten minutes out of a 12-hour session," Rev. Oscar J. Ice of the Round Table told The Jewish News. It is an emotional issue, "but the emotion didn't tear us apart," he said. "Our con- viction was this was one of the most pressing issues. If we don't learn to talk to one another, we will only add our psychic energies to ter- rorism." But according to the work- shop's moderator, Rabbi Richard C. Hertz of Temple Beth El, the furor was caused by Muslim participant Donald Unis' "taking over the floor." Unis heatedly compared Jews to Nazis: "I could not get any Pales- tinian Muslims to come here today because they would no more sit down and talk to a Jew in Detroit than a Jew