HEALTH Faces Hundreds of ideas for everyone on your holiday list Continued from preceding page Large Selection of Gifts at 50% Off* -• Getz and Blumenfeld check the patient list. Gifts of Distinction from 8herwoDd AuctTo8 Tel Twelve Mall • 12 Mile & Telegraph • Southfield • 354-9060 Daily 10-9 Sunday 12-5 Always 20% off Complimentary gift wrapping *does not include complimentary gift wrapping DOUBLE YOUR CLOSET SPACE with THE CLOSET SYSTEMS CO. Call Us For FAIR PRICES • CUSTOM DESIGN • QUALITY INSTALLATION • 50 FREE HANGERS with each order • 1 set per household 356-2830 106 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1988 • • • • Weddings Bar Mitzvahs Parties Meetings organization's spiritual ad- viser. He helped provide the motivation to get the organization started. "Visiting the sick — our tradition says it helps the per- son get better, and overcome their sickness. I've seen it happen, people can literally get better by having contact with others," said Rabbi Drucker. On a recent Sunday Getz and Blumenfeld paid their weekly 21/2 hour visit to Sinai Hospital. After signing in at the Guild office, the two sat down in the hospital lobby with a master list of the pa- tients currently in the hospital, plus a list of Jewish patients. They played a kind of guessing game, because the list of Jewish names was not up-to-date. Because of time constraints and hospital's size, Blumenfeld and Getz limit themselves to the number of patients they can visit. They don't attempt to go to all floors. Hospital policy prevents them from visiting intensive care patients, and those over 70 years of age without permission. "I call myself Malke the Jewish hounddog," laughed Blumenfeld. "I try to decide who is Jewish and who isn't. Most of the time I'm right. If I feel they are Jewish we go in. If not, we just leaves' In fact, Blumenfeld's bat- ting average wasn't bad, but her hounddog nose failed her when they entered the room of a man by the name of Blum. He turned out to be Catholic. She and Getz left the room, apologizing for disturbing him. Most of the visits are brief. Getz and Blumenfeld enter as many as 35 rooms, greet the patients and tell them they are from Bikur Cholim, visiting Jewish patients. In one room, a patient began a lengthy discussion about trading on the stock market. In other rooms the patients were not ready for company and the visitors did not linger. Often they would ask if the patient needed anything and was being treated well. In one room a woman complained of the cold, so Blumenfeld and Getz put an extra blanket over her. Although none of the patients had heard of Bikur Cholim, all were appreciative of the visit. Commented Getz as they 41 left the new mother's room, "That's what makes it wor- thwhile. Did you see how she was smiling and no longer depressed as we left? We made her feel better about things in general:" Added Blumenfeld, "When - they feel good, we get 100 per- cent back." A different approach is re- quired for visitors to nursing homes. More time is spent with'each patient and a rela- tionship is developed during subsequent visits. Tila Levinson placed her two young children in a dou- ble stroller at Mt. Vernon Nursing Home. Levinson had been coming for several months, and she and her children were becoming a familiar sight as they made their way down the hall. Her daughter offered her lollipop to several of the residents as they passed. One lady proud- ly said to another, "See, she knows who I am by now." They entered Betty Zuckenberg's room which Betty shares with two other women. They talked about