Pi" FRONT Detroiters Share Selves During The Holiday Season DAVID HOLZEL Staff Writer T he whole idea is to share your- self for the holidays?' ex- plained Marcia Davis, spokesman for the Holiday Project, which will sponsor some 20 visits to Detroit-area nursing homes during the month of December. The program, which operates year round, goes into high gear during the Chanukah and Christmas holidays, according to Davis. Groups of 15 to 20 people will pay calls to seniors' facilities, including Prentis Manor on Dec. 20 and Borman Hall on Dec. 22. The Holiday Project boasts a volunteer force of 250, including about 50 Jews, but more volunteers are always needed, Davis emphasized. Davis and her husband, Donald, are enthusiastic about their work with local elderly. "From these visits have come, for us, year-round relation- ships," she said. She explained that they have found elderly Jews scattered in pockets outside northwest Detroit: on Grand Boulevard and Jefferson Avenue, for example. For these elder- ly, who often have no relatives and face almost hermetic isolation, a Jewish visitor is a special blessing. "One woman said to me, 'Can you tell me if you can still go out and get corned beef to eat?' " -Davis recalled, emphasizing how cut off these Jews are from the rest of the community. Although the Holiday Project visits Jews on most Jewish holidays, the emphasis is on Chanukah, despite its status as a minor holiday. "Chanukah seems to be a big one pro- bably because of the association with Christmas?' she conceded. Other organizations also sponsor nursing home and hospital visits dur- ing this season. A group from the Jewish Welfare Federation's Young Adult Division will visit Sinai Hospital and Borman Hall on Christmas Day. On the same day, about 50 members of the Jewish War Veterans' Green Post and Auxiliary will visit the Veterans Administration hospital in Battle Creek. Jewish Vocational Service's Pro- ject Outreach will sponsor a Chanukah party for about 50 of its elderly clients on Dec. 23 at the Jewish Community Center's Jimmy Prentis Morris branch. Project Outreach volunteers will distribute clothing at the party, according to Rhoda Raderman, JVS assistent ex- ecutive director. Project Outreach stays in touch with isolated Detroit Jews throughout the year. Some local Jews will give their gentile neighbors a respite on Christmas Day. Six members of the Ibmple Beth El Brotherhood will fill in for non-Jewish staff at the Ronald McDonald House at the Detroit Medical Center on Dec. 25, allowing the regulars to spend Christmas with their families. Marcia Davis asserted that volunteers get more in return than what they invest in time and energy. Through volunteering, one can learn much about oneself, she said. "You're kind of reminded that you have a lot that you can give?' Those interested in volunteering for the Holiday Project may call its 24-hour line, 585-8659. Rabbi Spivak addresses an anti-missionary rally in Manhattan. Rabbi Says Kids Lack `Spiritual Nourishment' LINDA ROMAN Special to The Jewish News R abbi Yaakov Spivak, known for his efforts in protecting Jewish youth from mission- aries and cults, spoke Nov. 30 at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Rabbi Spivak told the 50-member audience that 43 percent of all cult members in the United States are Jewish, although Jews comprise on- ly 21/2 percent of the nation's population. As the leader of Cong. Ayshel Avraham in his home town of Monsey, New York, the Orthodox rabbi believes that Jewish youth are easy prey for cult recruiters. "We take a chance with our children," he said. "We teach them to question intellec- tual authority. We don't just give them a set of catechisms and say, `Memorize this: We provide them with different viewpoints. We say, `This rabbi interprets it this way and that rabbi interprets it that way? "The problem is that these kids grow up in homes where they don't get enough spiritual nourishment, and they're looking for something. The worst cult a kid can get into is the cult of nihilism — nothing. And that's what Jewish parents are raising their children in." Citing statistics compiled by the Continued on Page 14 ROUND UP Authority Push Worries Jews. Bonn (JTA) — A recent crackdown by the East Ger- man authorities on members of the Zion Church in East Berlin, a Protestant con- gregation known for its sym- pathy toward Jews, has arous- ed concern in East Berlin's small Jewish community. But members of the com- munity said that no action has been taken against Jews and there seems to be no im- mediate threat. Flak Feared On Appointment New York (JTA) — Orthodox Jewish leaders in New York responded with surprise to a report in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that Or- thodox Jewish circles in New York oppose 'e appointment of a woman ab Israel's consul general in New York. According to Haaretz, Israel's Foreign Ministry fears that such opposition can foil the appointment of Col- ette Avital to the post, which is presently held by Moshe Yegar. A Sucessor To Waldheim? Vienna (JTA) — Leaders of the Socialist Party and the conservative Peoples Party were reported this week to be seriously discussing a possi- ble sucessor to President Kurt Waldheim should he be forc- ed to resign before his term expires. Israel Asked To Help Pollard Washington — Anne Henderson-Pollard's father, Bernard Henderson, appealed to Israel to intercede with the U.S. government on his daughter's behalf, the Jerusalem Post reported. Henderson-Pollard, serving a five-year prison sentence for illegally posessing classified documents, is reportedly suf- fering from a rare gastro- intestinal illness which has not been adequately treated in prison. "My daughter . . . through medical malpractice or negligence, is slowly and painfully dying . . . " Hender- son said in a cable to New York lawyer Leon Charney. The lawyer, now in Israel,pro- mised to raise the issue with the Israeli leadership. Anti-Israel Unit's Closure Mooted Washington (JTA) — The deputy chairman of the Anti- Zionist Committee of the Soviet Public refused Tuesday to confirm reports that the Kremlin is planning to dis- band the anti-Israel pro- paganda organ. When asked if the reports were true, Samuil Zivs, in Washington for Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's summit meeting with President Reagan, chuckled and refus- ed to comment. But on Monday, Zivs told the New York Times, "No public organization can last forever?' Program Helps Russian Olim New York — Russian Jews are able to leave in significantly increased numbers, but will they pick up the option to go, and to what destination? In order to help many decide, a hi-tech program called SATEC, has been launched by former refuseniks and western in- vestors to make successful careers in Israel possible in 1988 for Russian-Jewish scientists and engineers. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 7