Kadimah residents, left, gather for a house meeting. The home, below, is located in a quiet Southfield neighborhood. Moving Forward That's what Kadimah means in Hebrew. And that's what a group home is helping its residents do RAMONA GRIGG Special to The Jewish News 0 n the outside, the Rabbi and Mrs. Solomon Gruskin Home looks like any other neighborhood dwelling. A stream- lined multi-level on a quiet street in Southfield, this could be the home of a large and active family It is, in fact, just that. The Gruskin Home, otherwise known as Kadimah, is a group home for the mentally ill, and is a pilot project of the Kadimah Jewish Association for Residential Care. Six live-in residents share the bright, spacious living quarters, each with a room of their own. All six of them sat together one Thurs- day evening — the night of their regular weekly group meeting — and talked about Kadimah. Several of the residents hung back, prefer- ing not to be quoted, but Mikhail, a handsome, intense and articulate man, sat at the head of the long dining room table and read from a spiral-bound notebook: "Kadimah makes it for several reasons," he said. "The staff are very warm and caring people. They give us chores such as cleaning and cooking so we'll be better prepared to go into an apartment and inde- pendent situations. "They take us on activities .. . and also make sure we have our medications so we do not end up back in the hospital. For those rea- sons and more I feel more (group) homes and apartments should be bought to help others like the men- tally ill adjust to society and its problems. "And this Jewish home, Kadimah, (helps us solve) those problems very well indeed." Mikhail lays down the tablet and looks intently at the visitor. "That's the way I feel," he says, and I just wanted you to know that. I don't know where I'd be without Kadimah." At another end of town, a mother of one of the residents (who asked not to be identified) echoes those same feelings. "My son had been in many, many group homes before we finally got to Kadimah. And when I first saw it, at the open house, I became so emotional that tears were streaming down. my face. It wasn't only the way Kadimah looked — bright and cheery and comfortable — it was the sense that there was real humaneness there. "The other homes he'd been in were shabby and dark — depress- ing — and he's always had to share a room; sometimes two, three, four people in a room with only one drawer each for their belongings. "But at Kadimah they're like family. It is a family And it hit home for us one weekend when our son was here for a visit. Many, many times when he would come home we would have a real battle on our hands getting him to go back again, but this particular weekend he said, even before it was time for visit to be up, You know, I think I'd like to go home now.' " Kadimah president Janet Aronoff says the home, open since August, became a reality "through the power of prayer, I think." Three years ago, Rhoda Raderman and Faye Menczer, asso- ciates connected with the Jewish Vocational Services, got together Continued on next page 77