Yeminite Continued from Page 41 Restaurant and Catering Invites You To Enjoy A Memorable Occasion In Our Newly Remodeled Banquet Room Or Garden Room Introducing Our New Fondue Catering Concept In the Restaurant or Your Home TAKE THE DIAMOND CHALLENGE DOES YOUR DIAMOND SOURCE HAVE 682-1347 1990 Hiller Road • West Bloomfield magic ✓ OVER 50 YEARS IN THE DIAMOND BUSINESS? eo' THE LARGEST SELECTIONS OF DIAMONDS IN MICHIGAN? Joy ✓ ✓ 100 ✓ ✓ EVERY SIZE, SHAPE, COLOR AND QUALITY? THE LOWEST PRICES IN MICHIGAN? ALL G.I.A. GRADED DIAMONDS? APPRAISALS, PHOTOGRAPHS & GEM_PRINTS BY GRADUATED GEMOLOGISTS AND DIAMOND APPRAISERS A LARGE SELECTION OF SETTINGS? CERTIFICATE DIAMONDS? ( WE do it aft . fOZ yo u No appointment necessary .. . Come in at your convenience. SE OUZ MAW Buy Direct From The Importer Compare — we will not be undersold EXPERT WATCH & JEWELRY REPAIRING 30555 Southfield Rd., Congress Bldg., Suite 100 Southfield, Michigan (one block south of 13 Mile Road) 645-9200 You see it in each other's eyes The magic of this moment. Your dreams for the future, together. For the past 35 years, two generations of fine photography can help you capture this magic moment .. . GORBALt: studio of photographly 32731 Franklin Road • 626-3666 half high. Rachel pinned it to my head, strapping its gold chain laces around my chin. All this time, I was not allowed to look in the mir- ror, but kept looking at my mother, standing in the cor- ner in her chiffon cocktail dress, tissue clutched in her hand. "I feel like I'm watching a National Geographic film and you're the star," she said. "The lalah' (bride) is ready now," Rachel said, as she went to call my husband so that the ceremony could commence. The crowd gathered out- side in the garden and the music began. Music? The "orchestra" was like no other I had seen before — Rachel, with a large tin can and a stick, and one aging great aunt, with the lid of a pot and wooden spoon. They chanted wedding songs and prayers in Yemenite, keeping the beat with their homemade per- cussion instruments. My husband, in a sparkling silver and black robe, met us at the front door, and off we went, arm in arm. After heaving myself from my chair, we danced and twirled to the tunes of Yemen. In addition to our orchestra, we had hired a Yemenite singer, who came equipped with his own tin can and yardstick. He sahg in Yemenite, which sounds like a mixture of old Hebrew and Arabic. The dance step, somewhat like a "horrah" step, starts off very slowly and then, while the tempo turns into a quickened frenzy, feet begin to fly. Eleven o'clock and every- one is looking at "safta" (grandmother). She is a woman of 94, who has blessed each one of her 32 grandchildren at birth and now, would be giving her eldest grandson over to his new bride. In her hands was a bowl of "henna," the ground-up seeds of the hen- na plant. Mixed with water, this powder turns into a dark brown mud. Nowa- days, women use henna to highlight their hair. The mixture was ready and my husband and I took our seats at a festive white table decorated with red roses and tiny lit candles. Our grandmother arose and, when all the guests were silent, sang a prayer in our honor. She took my husband's hand and put a circle of henna on his palm. In her broken Hebrew, she recited a prayer, explaining that this stain of color placed on him by his family N c=