DETROIT Local Jews Join In May 20 AIDS Candlelight Vigil ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Assistant Editor A s a volunteer with the Wellness Networks, a local clearinghouse for information about AIDS, Peter Cooper hears ques- tions ranging from the ridiculous to the tragic. One woman wanted to know if she could catch AIDS from men's pajama bottoms. Another asked if she should have her daughter tested for the disease; the girl had just been sexually molested. Cooper is one of a number of Detroit-area Jews who work disseminating infor- mation about AIDS and help those with the virus. Among his projects, Cooper is serv- ing as a volunteer on the 7th International AIDS Cooper has seen a great change in the Jewish community's attitude. Candlelight Memorial, which will be observed in Detroit 8:30 p.m. May 20 at the Westminster Presby- terian Church. More than 180 cities in 32 countries will participate in the international vigil, which is coordinated by the San Francisco-based Mobilization Against AIDS. The Detroit program will in- clude guest speakers, a candlelight procession and a silent vigil. Panels from the NAMES quilt, which com- prises hundreds of panels made for those who died of AIDS, also will be on display. Speaking at the vigil will be Rabbi Lane Steinger of Temple Emanu-El, who as a board member of Wellness House, a local organization that provides housing, food, medical supplies and visitors for those with AIDS, meets with individuals diagnosed with the virus. Regional Co- Chairman of the AIDS Committee of the Northeast Lakes Council-Metropolitan Federation of Reform Syn- agogues of the Union of American Hebrew Con- gregations, Rabbi Steinger says he's participating in the vigil because "AIDS touches many people, including Jews, and we can't turn our backs." Peter Cooper has been try- ing to educate the public about AIDS for the past five years, since he began vol- unteering with Wellness Networks. For two years he has worked on the group's hotline, where callers in- clude everyone from those asking how the virus is transmitted to physicians requesting information on the newest medicines used to combat AIDS "There is no cure," says Cooper, also a volunteer with an AIDS support group, Friends. "The best thing we have to fight AIDS is edu- cation." Cooper also has con- tributed to one of the most well-known AIDS projects, the NAMES quilt. The first piece of the quilt was dedicated in 1987 by San Francisco's Cleve Jones, who created the panel in memory of his friend, Mar- vin Feldman. Since then, hundreds of panels have been added and the quilt has been on display in cities throughout the country. Cooper, who wears a button that says "Fight AIDS, Not People With AIDS," created two panels for friends who died of the disease. He volunteered to help display the quilt in Detroit and in Washington, D.C. Cooper also volunteers as a "buddy" for someone who carries the AIDS virus. This work can include everything from taking the person with whom he is paired to a movie to finding him a housekeeper. Cooper's first "buddy," who was Jewish, died last November. In his five years working for AIDS education, Cooper has seen a great change in the Jewish community's at- titude toward the disease. Three years ago, Cooper asked a local Jewish agency to make available brochures describing AIDS. He was told, "That's not an issue that concerns us." Several weeks ago he called the same agency, ask- ing that brochures about the May 20 vigil be placed around the office. This time, the director told Cooper, "Give me 50 copies." As care coordinator of the AIDS Care Connection, Carolyn Forbes arranges for insurance, home health ser- vices, nurses, support groups and other care for those with the AIDS virus. Forbes originally worked as a legal researcher and in labor relations. Then she learned of an open position as hotline/volunteer coor- dinator for Wellness Net- works. "When I saw that, I knew it was my job. It had my name on it," she says. Forbes will never forget working on the hotline. Men and women often told her of their tremendous heartache. "To enter their lives and be of some assistance was a tremendous privilege." Seven years ago Forbes didn't know anyone with the virus, she says. "It seemed so remote from my life." Now, she works on a daily basis with men, women and children diagnosed with the AIDS virus, along with their families. While she sees a great deal of anguish, Forbes also is witness to "the truly heroic way some people re- spond. There's a very spiri- tual dimension to seeing how people affirm their lives even in the process of death and dying." Such support programs, along with education about the virus and funding for AIDS research, is critical for a number of reasons, Cooper says. First, Cooper points to the stigma attached to those di- agnosed with the AIDS virus. Second, Cooper said, "If we can catch this in the bud, we can save a lot of lives. If we had started doing research 10 years ago . . . " Cooper also says AIDS ed- ucation and research is necessary because the disease is communicable. While today persons from all walks of life have been diag- nosed HIV-positive, 10 years ago when the public first learned of AIDS "most peo- ple thought it was limited to gays and iv-drug users, and who cared if they died?" Forbes agrees. "People could write off homosexual men and the i.v.-drug users," she says. "They said, `Oh, they're on the outside of mainstream society,' or, `They deserve it.' "What it really means when we put labels on people is that we don't have to be responsible to them. What we don't see is that 'they' are 4 us. , Greater Detroit Chapter of Hadassah will provide stickers for patients at Children's Hospital of Michigan who have taken their medicine or completed a procedure. Nurses at the hospital have been providing the stickers at their own expense. Presenting the first batch of stickers to Children's patients are Hadassah's Lauren Bruss, Francine Hack and Arline Gould. Glenn Triest Agency Plans Its First Graduation Reunion SUSAN GRANT Staff Writer M ore than 60 years have passed since Naomi Floch graduated from United Heb- rew Schools. But the years have not dimmed her fond memories of the school and the education she received there. "I remember the wonder- ful teachers," said Floch, a member of UHS' first high school graduating class in 1928. "The teachers may not have had the degrees needed (to teach in today's schools), but they understood the psy- chology of an American child," Floch said. "The discipline was better. The teachers would simply not tolerate misbehavior." Floch and an estimated 1,100 UHS graduates can reminiscence about their school days during a 7:30 P.M. June 11 reunion at UHS. Humorist and author Allan Gould, who attended UHS, will speak about Jew- ish education. The reunion is the first since UHS, now called the Agency For Jewish Edu- cation, began graduation ceremonies, said Sylvia Iwrey, one of the event's or- ganizers. "It just seemed like a good idea," Iwrey said of the reu- nion. "It's a way to con- solidate our identity." Reunion co-chairman Joseph Colton, who graduated in the class of 1931, said he discovered front-page newspaper stories about UHS graduation classes. "That shows how central to the community Hebrew school was at the time," he said. "I think Hebrew schools are undergoing a revitaliza- tion today," said Colton, who . continues to take classes at the Agency For Jewish Edu- cation. "For a number of years, it didn't have the same dynamics that it does today. Now people recognize the high school as part of the community." Reunion co-chairman Ben Rosenthal, who graduated in 1965, said the UHS has become "one of the unknown assets of the community." But Rosenthal admits he didn't appreciate his Hebrew education until after graduation. Ofra Fisher, agency exec- utive director, said Rosen- thal isn't the only graduate to feel that way. She has heard from 200 graduates who are eager to come to the reunion and talk about their experiences. Yet, graduates tell her THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 15