THE JEWISH NEWS SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY THIS ISSUE 75cP West Bloomfield Accepts B'nai Moshe SUSAN GRANT Staff Writer A dmitting they were wrong to deny Con- gregation B'nai Moshe a building permit, West Bloomfield Township trustees last week welcomed plans to build the synagogue on Drake Road. After a short executive session on April 6, trustees approved a special use per- mit to build B'nai Moshe on the condition it raises a berm on the south side of the property by one foot. "I just felt I made a bad decision," West Bloomfield Supervisor Sandra Draur said. "I didn't ask the right questions earlier. I guar- antee it won't happen again." The approval comes about a year after B'nai Moshe first brought its $5.5 million construction project before the board and a week before Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Hilda Gage was scheduled to hear the case. After repeated rejections, B'nai Moshe had appealed to the court. After a meeting in late January when the township board voted to continue the fight in the courts, Draur said she sensed something "We got caught in the political games of the township, which was very unfortunate." Robert Roth was wrong. She asked the township planning depart- ment for answers. When she discovered the adjoining property to the south of the proposed site would need a variance to build single-family homes no matter what was built on B'nai Moshe's land, Draur said she questioned her original decision. She then called a special executive session, informing the other trustees she would change her vote on the syn- agogue project. She also ask- ed B'nai Moshe to increase the berm to provide more screening between the two properties. "The solution has nothing to do with the proposal of a one-foot berm," said Robert Roth, the synagogue's at- torney and former president. Instead, he believes the issue was political. Raising the berm one foot between the B'nai Moshe property and a five-acre parcel to the south owned by Tony and Marianne Iafrate does not change the screen- ing, Roth said. At Friday's meeting, the Iafrates said they did not object to the synagogue itself, but how it would interfere with the development of their property. "They (the trustees) never had any reason to deny us," Roth said. Roth is convinced the deci- sion is related to the recent Continued on Page 14 Surplus Food Pickup Will Start In July ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor T he Detroit Jewish community's third major effort in recent years to help feed the hungry is expected to begin operating July 1. Forgotten Harvest will pick up surplus food from restaurants, caterers and private homes for distribu- tion to area food banks. A donor covered the $18,500 cost of a refrigerated van, which has been ordered, and the organization is hiring a driver-administrator. The organization expects to collect and redistribute at least 24,000 pounds of food in its first year, said presi- dent Nancy Fishman, who based the estimate on fig- ures from the Philabun- dance service, a similar pro- gram in Philadelphia. Forgotten Harvest has ap- plied for several grants from private foundations to cover first-year operating ex- penses and is beginning a $55,000 fund-raising drive. CLOSE-UP • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e Some local Jews are using astrology, gurus and channeling to find their way through the New Age. • APRIL 13, 1990 / 18 NISAN 5750 The group has been given office space at Temple Israel, but is using 31275 Nor- thwestern Hwy., suite 243, Farmington Hills 48018 as its mailing address. Forgotten Harvest is an outgrowth of the Mazon - Jewish Response To Hun- ger effort in the Detroit area to raise funds for Jewish and non-Jewish hunger projects throughout the United States. Last year, a Mazon council was formed to coor- dinate efforts of local syn- agogues. Mazon asks for a contribution of 3 percent of the cost of any party. Fishman and others within Mazon began draw- ing up plans for Forgotten Harvest. A separate group worked on Yad Ezra, the kosher food pantry, which has opened on 10 Mile Road near Greenfield. The three independent organizations share some leadership. Forgotten Harvest's board includes rabbis Paul Yed- wab, A. Irving Schnipper and Dannel Schwartz, Lucy Continued on Page 14