1UP FRONT Hungry Jews Turning To Yad Ezra For Help SUSAN GRANT Staff Writer month after opening its doors to feed the Jewish hungry, Yad Ezra, Detroit's only kosher food pantry, has helped 789 people. Gary Dembs, one of the pantry's organizers, said the figure is "higher than ex- pected. We did not anticipate such a response." According to the pantry's latest figures, Yad Ezra has aided 265 families by distributing almost 11,200 pounds of food to the Jewish hungry in February. In- dividuals can come to the pantry once a month to pick up food packages. Jeanette Eizelman, Yad Ezra's executive director, said she is surprised that all the pantry's clients have been Jewish. Although the pantry is intended for hungry Jews who keep kosher, Eizelman expected to see a few non-Jews ask for help. Most of those using the pantry have been Soviet Jews, she said. In its first week 96 percent of Yad Ezra's clientele were Soviet emigres. Soviet Jews make up 80 percent of the pantry's client list. More Orthodox Jews have begun using the pantry, Eizelman said. Although all the food items are certified kosher by the Vaad Harabonim, the Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Greater Detroit, if an item does not meet individual standards it can be exchanged. Yad Ezra is attracting Jews to its Southfield pantry on Ten Mile Road, west of Greenfield Road, from as far away as Dearborn, Bellevue and Madison Heights, she said. Each person receives a package of non-perishable kosher food which includes cans of tuna, salmon, fruit and vegetables, pasta, cereal, oatmeal, soup mixes, cooking oils and vanilla wafers. "We try to make it nutritious," Eizelman said. "We also try to put together a package that will last seven to 10 days." Most of those who come into the pantry can make it through the first three weeks of the month, but food stamps usually run out before the month ends, she said. Yad Ezra volunteer Ethel Abrams stocks the pantry's shelves. For some, it takes courage to accept the food. "Pride is a big problem, especially among non- Russians. It is difficult to walk through that door," she said. "But when you have little kids who are hungry, it's amazing what you can do." For those who can not get to the pantry to pick up food packages, volunteers are beginning to deliver packages to homes, she said. The pantry is open on Mon- day, Wednesday, Friday and Sunday from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. and Tuesday and Thursday from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Dembs said Yad Ezra or- ganizers will not begin a fund-raising campaign until later this month, but $8,000 has already been collected to purchase food. He estimates the pantry needs $5,000 a month to make purchases from wholesale food warehouses and the Oak- land County Food Bank to stock the shelves. The pantry also receives food donations from area synagogues, Hebrew schools and individuals. Yad Ezra is kicking off its fund-raising efforts by holding a "Hunger and Friendship Dance" for sixth, seventh and eighth graders at 7 p.m. March 25 at Tem- ple Emanu-El in Oak Park. tion to help new immigrants through their first weeks in America. Chapters include instructions on how to place telephone calls and open bank accounts, and an in- troduction to U.S. political structure, health care and education. and conferences, and exchange of students and trainees. The institutions also plan to host joint- commissioned projects in the Soviet Union and Israel. Tel Aviv Signs Pact With Soviets New York (JTA) — Students at Yeshiva Univer- sity recently collected $18,000 in one day to help Jews emigrate from the Soviet Union. The emergency appeal stemmed from rumors that a pogrom will occur in the Soviet Union on May 5. The money, which is being sent to the United Jewish Appeal's Operation Exodus, will be used to bring out five families of four people each. It was contributed by students, faculty and staff, mostly in $18 donations — a sum corresponding to the letters in the Hebrew word chai, life. ROUND UP New Rabbinic School To Open New York — The Institute of Traditional Judaism, the first non-denominational rabbinical school for the study of traditional Judaism, is set to open in September 1990 in Mount Vernon, N.Y. Rabbi David Weiss Haliv- ni, professor of Talmud and Classical Rabbinics at Columbia University and president of the American Academy of Jewish Resear- ch, will serve as head of the school. The institute will offer a five-year program that in- cludes study of Talmud, Bi- ble, codes and jurisprudence, as well as courses in history, Hebrew literature and Jew- ish thought. It will grant traditional ordination and offer non-matriculated studies. In announcing the forma- tion of the new school, Rabbi Halivni said, "The motto we have chosen for the institute is emunah tzerufah v'yosher da'at, which may be trans- lated as 'pure, genuine faith and intellectual honesty.' "By this we mean to con- vey our love of God and of man. That love is demon- strated by our commitment to living our lives according to Jewish law and custom in respect and awe of the Divine, while at the same time pursuing our study of Judaism with intellectual vigor and an open mind." HIAS Book Aids Soviet Jews New York — HIAS, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, just published two bilingual acculturation books for distribution to 40,000 Soviet Jewish emigres who arrived last year in the United States. The Jewish World, by David Harris, describes Judaism and Jewish culture. "My aim was to create a book that people will return to over and over and that will whet their appetite to learn more," said Harris, EBPEVI VI IMP THE JEWISH WORLD • DAVID A. HARRIS HIAS' new book for Soviet immigrants. Washington representative for the American Jewish Committee. The Jewish World is a companion piece to Entering a New Culture, Harris' first bilingual acculturation book which HIAS published last fall. Entering a New Culture contains practical informa- Tel Aviv — Tel Aviv Uni- versity has signed agreements of academic co- operation in the fields of mathematics, physics and chemistry with the Institute of Control Sciences of the USSR and Wroclaw Univer- sity of Poland. The two faculties agreed to exchange scientific, technical and ad- ministrative information on their teaching and research activities, arrange visits by academic staff members and exchange publications. Among the activities pro- posed are short-term resear- ch and lecture exchange programs, joint symposia One-Day Drive Raises $18,000 Compiled by Elizabeth Applebaum THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5