I CLOSE-UP 1 WARNING` ( YOUR SECURITY BLANKET THESE PREMISES PROTECTED BY • Daughters Of The Commandments Continued from preceding page ALADDIN trV ALAS* 541-5373 "Security is our middk name" RESTRINGING OFF* BRING US YOUR PEARLS AND BEADS • • • • • • • LEEMONS' FINE JEWELERS • 29310 Orchard Lake Road (Just South of 13 Mile Rood) Farmington Hills • 851-0160 Mon.-Fri. 10-6 • Thurs. 10-8 • Sat. 10-5 • • *Limit two strands • • • • • Until 9-30-87 Studio In Harvard Row Mall The SPOT 50°/0-70°/0 OFF ALL NAME BRANDS • Vertical Blinds • Levolor Blinds • Pleated Shades • Wood Blinds 21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd. Harvard Row Mall Southfield, Ml 48076 Free Professional Measure at No Obligation Free in Home Design Consulting Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5 Thursday 10-8 352-8622 • • gram, and attend a minimum of eight Saturday morning services." Fulfilling this requirement was easy for Ilona. "I enjoy going to services," she says. "I go every week because I think it's important to pray. It makes me feel better about myself!' Ilona served as religious vice president of the Shaarey Zedek b'nai mitzvah club, and received a scholarship from the synagogue to spend four weeks this summer at Camp Ramah, a Hebrew-speaking camp in Canada. Are all students as eager as Ilona? "Students differ," ex- plains Rabbi Groner. "Ilona is a fine student who is highly motivated. Many students represent the same level of motivation and achievement as Ilona, but some do not. "Ilona's sense of Jewish pride is einforced by the at- titudes and commitments of her parents. The participa- tion of children is intended to express and affirm their com- mitment to Jewish learning and Jewish life." According to Ilona, one of the most interesting ques- tions in her bat mitzvah folder asked about the significance of having Hebrew names. "It really made me think," she remembers. "I'm named after my great-grandmother and my great-great-grandmother, so I am keeping their memory alive. "We have Hebrew names to honor our Jewish heritage and let people know we are proud to be Jewish." Ilona says she does mitzvot regularly. She said she at- tends services, lights the candles, gives tzedakah and respects her elders. "I call my grandparents every, day and help them when they need it." Ilona buys trees to plant in Israel and has written to her twin in Russia. In addition, she volunteers her time to help the physically and men- tally handicapped at a near- by school. She is looking for- ward to continuing her Jewish education. According to Rabbi Groner, there may be a mitzvah pro- gram at Shaarey Zedek in the near future. "We are talking about implementing a mitz- vah program next year that would possibly included a community service project, a synagogue service project, and a religious school pro- ject." The b'nai mitzvah folder also includes a section for the parents to fill out titled "If I were the Rabbi." Ilona's mother, Carol Gale, syas if she were addressing her daughter as a bat mitzvah, she would focus on Ilona's ac- complishments and her responsibilities to the Jewish religion. "I would stress her respon- sibility to the Jewish com- munity and to the State of Israel. I would affirm her responsibility to keep a Jewish home, to provide her children with the same background she has had and to marry someone Jewish because that is the only way to perpetuate Judaism?' Is a bar or bat mitzvah to- day for the child or for the parents? "Our traditions bind together the generations," Rabbi Groner answers. "We did not create them. The significance of these rituals are not a product of one generation. They represent a continuity of Jewish learning and participation!' According to Marvin Kassof, Shaarey Zedek has of- fered b'not mitzvah for less than ten years. "The coned- tive voice of the membership has brought about an evolv- ing change towards equality," he said. "The question of bat mitzvah and women is a pro- blematic issue. There is no consensus among Conser- vative Jews. The rituals are onoing; they are not fixed!' essica Kirzner attends services at Young Israel of Southfield, an Or- thodox congregation. Follow- ing Orthodox observance, she will not read from the Torah at her bat mitzvah. She will attend services in the syna- gogue and, before the Kid- dush, she will present a Dvar Torah, a presentation about the weekly Torah reading. Her Dvar Torah will include comments concerning her bat mitzvah twin in Russia. She will also express her thoughts about the destruction and rebuilding of the First Temple and relate it to thoughts of her grandparents as survivors of the Holocaust and the rebuilding of their lives. She also celebrated her bat mitzvah recently in Israel, with a speech at the dedica- tion of a grove of trees in her honor, and at a ceremony on top of Masada. When asked what bat mitz- vah means, Jessica replied, "Reaching the age of mitzvot and responsibility. I will be taking responsibility for my actions and be able to fulfill all my religious obligations." "Bat mitzvah is a modern invention," explains Rabbi Elimelech Goldberg of Young Israel of Southfield. "Women have a higher level of spirituality intrinsically, Continued on Page 26 ej