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Round Table Forum
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1988
J
The third annual Muslim,
Christian, Jewish Leadership
Forum, sponsored by the
Greater Detroit Interfaith
Round Table, will take place
on Wednesday at Mercy Col-
lege Conference Center in
Detroit.
The theme is "The Peace
Imperative in our Religious
Traditions." Participants will
be asked to discuss how each
community reaches out
toward peace, promotes unity
within American diversity
and fosters cooperation on
common problems. Clergy
and laity of all faiths meet
with one another in a social,
cultural and religious con-
text. At the conclusion of the
event, which begins with
registration and a continental
breakfast at 8:30 a.m., there
will be a joint celebration on
the theme, "Facing Issues of
Justice and Reconciliation."
Speakers at the forum in-
clude Krister Stendhal,
retired bishop of the
Lutheran Church of Sweden;
Dr. Khalid Duran, Muslim
theologian who has served as
a professor in Islamabad,
Pakistan, Hamburg and
Washington, D.C.; and Rabbi
Walter Wurzberger of Con-
gregation Shaaray Tefila in
Lawrence, N.Y. Rabbi Wurz-
berger is past president of the
Synagogue Cuncil of America
and the Rabbinical Council of
America, and for 25 years was
editor of Tradition, a monthly
magazine expressing the
American Orthodox point of
view.
The morning session will
discuss "The Peace Im-
perative in our Holy Books
and Traditions"; the after-
noon will be "The Peace Im-
perative in Relation to Na-
tional and Political
Allegiances?'
Seven workshops will
enable participants to learn
more about Islam, Christiani-
ty and Judaism. They will
counsel on coping with
violence in our society, inter-
religious cooperation on com-
munity issues, non-violence
in our world today and help-
ing our kids to get along with
one another.
Group leaders are: Dr.
Ahmad Sakr, Islamic Founda-
tion of Knowledge, Chicago;
Dr. William Hackett, Henry
Ford Community College;
Rabbi Lane Steinger, Temple
Emanu-El; Dr. Eugene Per-
rin, Children's Hospital of
Michigan; James Perkinson,
Detroit, George Alcser,
Marygrove College; and Im-
am Mitchell Shamsud-Din,
the Muslim Center, Detroit.
Rabbi Wurzberger
A reception and dinner will
follow. There is a charge. For
information, call Rev. Oscar
Ice at the Round Table,
869-6306.
Shermans Host
YAD Meeting
Jane and Larry Sherman
will host members of the
Young Adult Division major
gifts section at a dinner
meeting for the Allied Jewish
Campaign on Nov. 21.
The 6:30 p.m. meeting is for
contributors of $1,000 and
over and will be addressed by
Mrs. Sherman.
Chairman of the 1988 and
1989 campaigns, Mrs. Sher-
man is a former chairman of
the Campaign's Project
Renewal Committee and na-
tional United Jewish Appeal
Project Renewal chairman.
UJA Honors
'87 Campaign
Detroit's Jewish Welfare
Federation will receive the
Pinchas Sapir Award for Con-
tinuing Excellence from the
United Jewish Appeal,
recognizing Detroit's outstan-
ding achievement in the 1987
Allied Jewish Campaign, led
by Paul D. Borman and
Emery I. Klein.
This award is given annual-
ly to a large, an intermediate,
and a small community to
honor unique achievements.
Detroit first won the award
for its 1984 Campaign.
Under the leadership of
Borman and Klein, Detroit
had the highest per capita
Campaign increase of any
large community. Detroit's
UJA allocation was one of the
highest of any large com-
munity, and Detroit did well
for Project Renewal.