Socializing after the discussion are, from left: Miriam Huffstutter, Irwin Levy, Louis Kamber and Pauline Katan. The Singles Chavurah is both a learning and socializing experience JAN LOVELAND Special to The Jewish News fitting in the home of Shani S Kerman on this hot Sunday evening, one might not be- lieve that the 40 or so single adults gathered there are listening with rapt attention to Rab- bi Elimelich Goldberg speak on the Torah. It's a serious talk: he has managed, in the last few minutes, to touch on the history of the Hebron area in Israel, the role of yeshivah students in the Yom Kippur War, Arab Xenophobia, and thousands of years of Jewish history; he has thrown in several jokes which stir the crowd into laughter. Despite a whispered side conversation going on in the kit- chen, these might be 40 children get- ting their earliest lessons in Judaism. Instead, these people have come to re- learn their past in the Singles Chavurah, an organization whose mailing list numbers 150 unmarried men and women. The Jewish singles scene has grown in every dimension in this com- munity. But the chavurah has a distinctly different purp-ose from the other activities provided for those looking for Mr. or Ms. Goodbar. Says Judy Broder, the group's president: 106 FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1987 "It's clear that there's an interest in the community to study Torah, to get together in a non-threatening en- vironment, to come and learn!" Adds David Kruger, who assisted Rabbi Goldberg in organizing the group in 1985, "I felt that we needed an opportunity to get people together under more spiritual circumstances, (to give them) an opportunity to ex- plore Jewish ideas and values." Broder says that the group is not successful because of the number of serious relationships that it has fostered. The success, she adds, is that "people come away with more knowledge of the Torah." From a casual survey of the crowd, it is clear that participants have primarily come to hear Rabbi Goldberg. He is a natural speaker, one who takes the most complex point and makes it at once clear and entertain- ing. His witty eloquence no doubt ac- counts for the rise in attendance from an initial handful to the current 40-50 attendees per meeting. Rabbi Goldberg speaks on topics that might fill a self-help book: "Judaism and Human Sexuality," Judaism and the Single Parent," "The Torah's Guide to Self-Esteem" and "Being Alone' with Yourself!' But these pop psychology titles belie the serious religious and cultural Bob Mc Keown Turning On To Torah The chavurah holds meetings in members' homes. messages woven into each. For exam- ple, on this particular night, he gets into a serious discussion of intermar- riage and individual loss of Jewish identity, a topic that he later says comes up frequently. "We're losing Jews," he explains to the group, his voice emphatic and serious. "Historically, that battlefield is more overwhelming than the one with the missiles!' From that point of departure, he launches into a history of the sectarian Judaism practiced in the U.S., concluding, "Sects are not as meaningful as the unity of the Diaspora. "How often do you confront your Judaism? How often do you use it?" he asks, bringing the global back to the personal level. He concludes the session by calling Judaism both "a sense of looking backward and a sense of looking forward!' For each person in that room, there is something in his words to take away from the evening. "What we try to do is to reach everyone, regardless of backgrond," he later says. "The real purpose of the group is to allow singles to feel a part of a vibrant Jewish community, to educate them about Judaism and to introduce them to 3,000 years of Jewish history." One woman, who is attending the group for the second time, says she came back because she likes organizer Broder and enjoys the rab- bi's talk. "I think it's really important for single people to keep an identity, since Judaism is so family oriented!' she adds. A first timer who wished not to be identified, says his interest in dating brought him to the meeting. "I en- joyed it — the rabbi did a good job," he comments. Another first timer, call- ed the evening "fantastic. .It spurs discussion and provides a means of communication!' - Jerry Stein, who describes himself as "single for most of my adult life and Jewish for all of it," started attending singles programm- ing tvio years ago. He came to the chavurah feeling that dances and other activities weren't "cutting it for. the over 45 crowd!' As a delegate from B'nai B'rith to the Jewish Communi- ty Council, Stein had taken it upon himself to advocate for more funding • for singles programming within the Detroit community. He enjoys the chavurah, but emphasizes that "the thrust of most people here is to meet Jews, not to hear° the rabbi:' Sybil Glaser has been coming to the group for over a year and disagrees with Stein on the reason for its healthy attendance. "I like to