COMMUNITY Soviet Jews Show Happiness At JCCouncil Freedom Seder RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer T Sam Lerner Party Honors Lerner On JFS Retirement "Celebrate Sam," a recep- tion in honor of the retire- ment of Samuel Lerner, ex- ecutive director of Jewish Family Service and Resettle- ment Service, will take place on May 4 at 7:30 p.m. at Con- gregation Shaarey Zedek. A native of New Jersey, Lerner assumed his position with JFS in 1963. Previously, he had been the director of casework service of Wayne County Juvenile Court, direc- tor of the Battle Creek Child Guidance Clinic, casework supervisor at the Jewish Family Service in St. Paul, Minn., and a psychiatric social worker at the Jewish Child Guidance Clinic in Newark, N.J. During his 26 years at JFS, Lerner has been involved in the agency's Housing Reloca- tion Project for inner-city Jews, the Poverty Project, resettlement of Soviet Jewry, in-home respite care and group apartments for the elderly. Lerner received the first Berman Award for Outstan- ding Professional Service in 1988. Under his ad- ministrative leadership, Detroit's Jewish Family Ser- vice received a 99.7 rating (out of a possible 100) from the (national) Council on Accreditation. Plans for "Celebrate Sam" include a wine, hors d'oeuvres and dessert reception and entertainment provided by a four-member Michigan Opera Theatre troupe who will per- form a special Broadway salute to Lerner. There is a charge. For reservations, call Betty Barach or Marilyn Solomon, 559-1500, by April 28. Israel's 41st Celebrated The Jewish community of metropolitan Detroit will celebrate Israel's 41st birth- day May 7 with an event- filled day at the Maple/Drake Jewish Community Center. There will be a children's crafts activities area spon- sored by the Jewish Center and Yavneh Academy; a pet- ting farm sponsored by Hadassah and Young Judaea; the Great Israeli Kumsitz, sponsored by the Anti- Defamation League, Jewish Experiences For Families, L'Chayim section of The Jewish News The entetain- ment will be the Dudaim. Bring a blanket, lounge chair and a picnic basket. Food will be available for purchase. There will be two films. Decorations will be pro- vided by B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations and BBYO. At 3:30 p.m. a Quiz Bowl, sponsored by the Jewish religious school of Metropolitan Detroit, will take place. The day will begin with the annual walk for Israel. he snow and cold of last Sunday afternoon were in Detroit rather than Kiev, and Vera Ludyan- skaya couldn't have been happier. Standing in the chill wind that blew through the park- ing lot of Congregation Adat Shalom, the Soviet Jewish immigrant marveled at how she and her family had been received in their newly adopted city. "The Jewish people here are so nice to us — they give us so much, and for what?" said the former Kiev teacher. "We gave them nothing. We gave in Russia and we got nothing for it." Ludyanskaya's comments followed the second annual Freedom Seder for Soviet Jewry, sponsored by the Jewish Community Council. More than 125 people, in- cluding numerous recent im- migrant families and their children, attended. Ludyanskaya arrived in mid-December with her hus- band, Grigory Shvarthburg, her son-in-law and daughter, Arkady and Galena Shargorodsky and their sons, Josef, 9, and Alexander, 3. Lu- dyanskaya felt the brit milot of both youngsters since their arrival underscored the fami- ly's commitment to Judaism. Living freely as Jews also was on the minds of Igor and Faina Zolaterevsky, formerly of Kharkov in the Ukraine, who noted their son Eugene, 9, is attending United Hebrew Schools ' and their daughter Alisa, 3, is enrolled at the Jewish Community Center kindergarten. "I knew this word 'Pesach' but not the meaning of this," said Faina Zolaterevsky after Sunday's seder. Her father, Si- meon Vaysberg, 78, who with his wife Bella accompanied Soviet Haggadah Available Free A new Haggadah in modern Russian and Hebrew is now available free in limited quantities. The Haggadah is illustrated with instructions on how to prepare and con- duct a Seder. It includes com- mentary and definitions of Hebrew terms. For information, call Rabbi Yosef Lange, 968-0836. the Zolaterevskys to Detroit, said the impossibility of get- ting matzah during and after World War II made it too hard to teach about the holiday. Igor Zolaterevsky said before his family left for America, a semi-official, anti- Semitic letter had been issued by the school at which he was studying. His wife said the family was told by their gentile neighbors to get out. "This is our first good feel- ing about being Jews again," she said. "Before, we were Jews only when they (non- Jews) would scream and yell at us." On this evening, the Zolaterevskys and Vaysbergs enjoyed listening to Eugene ask the Four Questions in his native Russian. Paul. D. Borman, JCCouncil president, told the audience, "We should not be sidetrack- ed by the Soviet Union's glasnost and the re- appearance of Jewish culture because there still are Jews who cannot leave due to ar- bitrary regulations. "Let our generation be remembered for its strong ad- vocacy on behalf of Soviet Jews and for taking action in resettling them," he said. 111 Bonds Attorneys Unit Cites Gage, Lippitt Judge Hilda Gage Judge Norman Lippitt The Israel Bond Attorneys Division will hold its annual tribute dinner on behalf of Israel's economic develop- ment at 6 p.m. May 16 at Con- gregation Shaarey Zedek, it was announced by division co- chairmen Saul Bluestone and Sheldon L. Miller. Honored at the event will be Judge Hilda R. Gage and Judge Norman L. Lippitt, recipients-elect of State of Israel Eleanor Roosevelt Humanities Medals, "in recognition of their outstan- ding support of the Israel Bond program." Dinner chair- man is Henry Baskin. Judge Gage has been on the Sixth Judicial Circuit Court of Michigan since her election in 1978. She served as presi- dent of both the Michigan Judges Association and the National Conference of State Trial Judges (ABA). She serves on the board of directors of Congregation Shaarey Zedek, Children's Hospital of Michigan and the Michigan Multiple Sclerosis Association. Judge Lippitt, counsel, Car- son, Fischer, Potts and Hyman, served on the Oakland County Circuit Court Bench, by appointment of Gov. James Blanchard, from 1985 to 1989, when he resigned to return to private practice. Prior to his judicial appoint- ment, Judge Lippitt was in private practice from 1967 to 1985, served as legal counsel for the Detroit Police Officers Association from 1965 to 1985 and, earlier, served as an assistant Wayne County prosecuting attorney from 1961 to 1965. Judge Lippitt is a trustee of the Detroit College of Law, and a director and vice presi- dent of the Detroit College of Law Alumni Association. A dinner tribute committee is in formation. For dinner reservations, call Israel Bonds, 352-6555. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 45