Remembering The Hungry Continued from Page L-3 can get involved with to help Mazon reach its goal and feed the hungry. First, there is the three percent plan. Families can send three percent of the cost of a bar/bat mitzvah, wedding party or anniversary party as its contribution to Mazon. At Cong. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses, where Rabbi A. Irving Schnipper spearheaded Mazon in Detroit, there is the Ezrat Mazon project. Since the numerical value for the Hebrew letters which spell Mazon equal 103, congregation members are encouraged to donate in amounts of $10.30, $103, etc. Cramer said there is no end to the creative ways people have been devising to send contributions to Mazon. A bar mitzvah boy sent in $50 dollars from the gifts he received, and his parents were so proud of him, that they matched the gift with their own check. One contributor lost 40 pounds, and in celebration sent $40. A couple celebrating their 50th anniversary sent a check for $50. In Phoenix, Ariz., that city's Federation decided not to serve hors d'oeuvres at its major dinner and sent the cost for them to Mazon. In fact, according to Cramer, much of the money raised by Mazon comes through tributes. There also are two appeals tied into the Jewish holidays. On Yom Kippur, rabbis ask the congregations to estimate the cost of the food they would normally have eaten had it not been a fast day and Cramer said he wasn't loking for big numbers on the checks Mazon receives. Rather he'd like to see widespread participation in the Detroit Jewish community and the national Jewish community. send three percent of that to Mazon. On Pesach, when Jews are reminded to "let all who are hungry come and eat," it is suggested to make a donation based on the cost of feeding one person. Cramer said he wasn't looking for big numbers on the checks Mazon receives. Rather he'd like to see widespread participation in the Detroit Jewish community and the national Jewish community. (Locally, participating synagogues and temples include Cong. Beth Abraham Hillel Moses, Temple Emanu-El, Temple Israel, Temple Beth El and Temple Kol Ami. Cong. Beth Shalom is currently discussing undertaking Mazon as a congregational project.) "What we need is to create a sense of family," Cramer said, "so that you go from your synagogue to another synagogue, from a rabbi to another rabbi, from lay person to lay person and say please join us in this. We want this to be a community-wide effort." On a national scale, several Jewish organizations have adopted Mazon as a community service project. Among them are: Union of American Hebrew Congregations, Central Conference of American Rabbis, Rabbinical Assembly, United Synagogue of America, the Reconstructionist movement, National Federation of Temple Youth and National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Committee. In Detroit, Rabbi Schnipper has taken up the call, when asked by the Rabbinical Assembly to serve as its Mazon chairman here. "I got the materials and then decided to do it," he said. In his congregation, which he estimates has raised nearly $10,000 so far for Mazon, contributors have their names posted on a special Mazon board. In addition to personal checks and the Ezrat Mazon project, Mazon has received $103 from children in the synagogue's religious school, from money raised in a candy sale. The soft-spoken Cramer said almost embarrassedly how proud he was of the program, and is gratified by the response of the Jewish community to it. "Mazon has become the principal vehicle in the American Jewish community, after almost two years of operation in facing up to the terrible scandal of hunger that exists in this country and around the world. We're really very proud of it. What we're proud of is our own behavior and we're proud of the Jewish community's behavior in becoming part of this family that we're trying to create." You Can Help Feed the Hungry Families who would like a brochure about Mazon or who wish to make a contribution can contact the organization by writing Mazon, A Jewish Response to Hunger, 2940 Westwood Blvd., Suite 7, Los Angeles, Calif. 90064, (213) 470-7769. Psalm 100 A Psalm of Thanksgiving Shout unto the Lord all the earth Serve the Lord with Gladness: Come before His presence with singing Know ye the Lord He is God: It is He that hath made us, and we are His, His people and the flock of his pasture. Enter into his gates with thanksgiving, and into His courts with praise: Give thanks unto Him and bless His Name. For the Lord is good; His mercy endureth forever; And His faithfulness unto all generations. Help Sought For Hungry The National Council of Jewish Women, Greater Detroit Section, needs volunteers to help deliver "Meals on Wheels" to the elderly and homebound. Volunteers, women or men, are asked to donate their time one morning per week from about 10 a.m. to noon. They work in teams of two. Twenty-eight people are needed to cover 14 different routes each day, Monday through Friday. The "Meals on Wheels" program, now 14 years old, serves nearly 200 clients who are unable to do their own cooking because of age or illness. Each receives two kosher meals per day, one hot and one cold. All cooking is done by the kitchen staff of the Jewish Federation Apartments, where the food is packed and volunteers begin their delivery routes. Jewish Family Service provides social workers who screen and offer additional services to Meals On Wheels clients. Donate Wheels For Meals To sign up as a volunteer for or to obtain information, about Meals on Wheels, call the NCJW offices, 258-6000. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS L 7 -