CLOSE-UP Specializing in photo buttons and other party favors for your next affair Cost Of Being Jewish Continued from preceding page 851-6806 LOUIE & SCOTT RUBIN RICK SCHATZ Best Wishes For A Happy and Healthy NEW YEAR To All Our Customers & Friends ON THE BOARDWALK Orchard Lake Road, S. of Maple • 855-5529 We Will Be Closed For The Holidays Mon. — Rosh Hashanah Wed. — Yom Kippur We wish our family and friends a very healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. "Katz Kids" JOHN R. LUMBER CO. SUKKAH PANELS $ 2 1 95 CONGREGATIONAL DUES Annual Dues Building Fund Members ADAT SHALOM $725 $1,500 1,150 BETH ABRAHAM HILLEL MOSES $665 $1,000 650 BETH ACHIM $655 $1,250 600 TEMPLE BETH EL $950 $2,000 1,650 BETH JACOB $750 $750 130 BETH SHALOM $695 $1,000 600 BETH TEFILO EMANUEL-TIKVAH $175 none 45 BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE $590 $1,400 415 B'NAI DAVID $644 none 400 B'NAI ISRAEL OF WEST BLOOMFIELD $450 $1,200 125 B'NAI MOSHE $702 $1,000 400 none 500 Congregation DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE $100 EMANU-EL $800 $1,250 700 TEMPLE ISRAEL $900 $2,500 2,000 KOL AMI $800 $1,500 350 LIVONIA JEWISH CONGREGATION $250 none 70 none 100 SHAAREY ZEDEK $950 $2,000 1,800 SHIR SHALOM $850 none 327 T'CHIYAH $360 none 50 TROY JEWISH CONGREGATION $360 none 115 YOUNG ISRAEL OF GREENFIELD $334 $300 150 YOUNG ISRAEL OF OAK WOODS $322 none 100 YOUNG ISRAEL OF SOUTHFIELD $525 $1,500 125 SHAAREY SHOMAYIM 75 Figures listed represent the maximum amount charged by congregations. Fees may vary according to age and financial status. Building funds are payable over a 5-10 year period. Congregations which ask donations only are: Bais Chabad of Farmington Hills; Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield; Mishkan Israel Nusach H'ari Lubavitcher Center. (may not look as illustrated) • PRE-BUILT • 4' x 8' • Ready to Paint • Can be reused each year Also Available Bolts / Screws Nails / Paint See Us For All Of Your Other Needs • Paint • Lumber • Hardware • Plumbing • Electric • Building Needs "Katz Kids" JOHN R. LUMBER CO. On Coolidge At 11 Mile Road Berkley, MI 546-7550 '18 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1988 Congregations not listed did not respond to the Jewish News survey. munity support Israel by visiting the state or by sen- ding children for summer trips. And those planning to let young Rebecca or Avrum stay for several weeks in the Holy Land should be prepared for costs that some parents may feel are unholy. The National Federation of Temple Youth charges $3,250 for its summer program to Israel; the Conservative movement's Camp Ramah costs $2,875; and Camp S'dei Chemed in New York, which offers a summer program to Israel for Orthodox youth, charges between $2,400 and $2,600. What makes the issue of summer trips to Israel more compelling for parents even than their children's in- evitable cry that, "But everybody else gets to do it," is that such experiences usually have a stong impact on youths' feelings about their Judaism. Mark Goldman is one of those who says his life was changed by his visit this past summer, with a NFTY group, to Israel. He won a scholar- ship from Temple Beth El for the trip. Goldman, 17, is en- thusiastic when discussing Israel. He speaks of a four- hour-long talk about religion with an Orthodox Jew; visiting a kibbutz; forums on the West Bank and Gaza; and stopping at the Kotel just before returning to the United States. He recalls visiting Yad Vashem, Israel's memorial to the victims of the Holocaust. "I remember going into the memorial for the children," he says, "and it took me five or six minutes just to figure out where I was. And then I just broke down and cried." Goldman is eager to return to Israel. He'd like to take one of the trips that focuses on the country's politics. A strong supporter of the Labor Party, Goldman is closely following Israel's upcoming elections and laments the fact that American Jews know so little about Israeli politics. Goldman says his trip to Israel has reinforced his com- mitment to and interest in Jewish activities. "I feel like I know a lot more about Judaism and Israel," he says. "And I know I have so much more to give, and I'm going to keep giving wherever I can." HUC-JIR's Bubis notes the conflict between the impor- tance for Jewish teenagers of traveling to Israel and the high price tag that comes with the trip. In his speech "To Serve the Jewish Family," delivered in 1980 in Detroit before the