June 1, 1990 renowned for his brilliance as a speaker and all-round communicator, for his erudi- tion and for his dry, acerbic wit. But he always looks as if he would rather be in his study — a converted shed at the bottom of his North Lon- don garden. He is not, he concedes, a "natural rabbi," and he agrees that he will be an extremely reluctant chief rabbi. Any one of the bright young men of his generation who had chosen to embark on a religious vocation would, he insists, have done a better job. But when he looks around today, 20 years after the "big bang," he finds that while most of his Cambridge contemporaries have remained religious, they have become all sorts of wonderful things, but not rabbis or Jewish educators. "I never thought about anything so hard," he says of "Pre and post-Holocaust Jewish existence has traced out the oldest and most haunting theme of the Bible: the improbability and yet the certainty of the survival of the covenantel people." )=C his decision to accept the job of chief rabbi. "It was a very painful decision, a decision that runs totally against the grain of my inclinations." Ultimately, though, he was persuaded that he could do it: "It was a job that need- ed to be done and one that would have to be done, whatever the sacrifice. I'm not saying that out of modes- ty, but out of great personal feeling." Jewish history, he points out, is replete with reluctant leaders: "Perhaps, if a person were not reluc- tant, he shouldn't be a leader." Certainly, Sacks' reputa- tion has spread far beyond Britain . He has been offered a fistful of plum jobs in the United States (he mentions Lincoln Square in New York and Beth Jacob in Los Angeles), but he was never seriously tempted to aban- don his chosen vocation of educating British Jews. Having first rejected the most glittering prizes that the secular academic world could offer and then some of the most prestigious pulpits the Jewish world could offer, he opted to become principal of Jews' College, London, which trains rabbis and teachers for the British community and which, dur- ing his five year incumben- cy, has doubled its student body. Now, sitting in a spartan room at the college, Sacks surveys the daunting pro- spect of being Chief Rabbi of Great Britain and the Com- monwealth, a role that he can expect to fill the next quarter-century of his life. He would be less than human if he did not flinch slightly at such a prospect. In formal terms, the Chief Rabbi is leader of only those who are affiliated with the centrist United Synagogues movement, which provides the foundation of British Jewry. In practice, however, he is regarded by the wider community as the spokes- man for all British Jews, a role that is likely to be significantly enlarged as the integration of Europe gathers pace. At the same time, he knows full well that the British community is spill- ing out at both ends. Despite the religious revival of re- cent years, it has fallen in numbers from a peak of 450,000 to to just over 300,000. And the hem- morhage is continuing: While the left is drifting into assimilation and, in increas- ing numbers, away from any identification with the Jew- ish community, the ultra- right is tending towards a total rejection of the secular world. Sacks laments the lack of statistical and sociological data about Britain's Jews, in contrast to the wealth of in- formation that the American Jewish community has about itself. What he does know, however, is alarming enough: Two out of every three young Jews who should be showing up for synagogue weddings are not doing so (because they are either marrying out or not marrying at all); the Jewish divorce rate doubled bet- ween 1965 and 1980; one Jewish child in six can ex- pect to experience family break-up by the age of 16. For all his formidable qualities, Sacks is seen as being deficient in one very obvious area: the lack of years of yeshiva study and the authority of exhaustive Jewish learning. To compensate for this, he will travel to Israel in September to spend a year at the Harry Fischel Institute. ANNOUNCEMENT Opening June 15, 1990 Franklin Club Adult Lodge Temporary accommodations now available for Seniors. Attractively furnished. Complete apartments. Reasonably priced from $875 per month including utilities. Short-term lease and daily rates. Additional services and amenities upon request. FRANKLIN CLUB APARTMENTS 28301 Franklin Road, Southfield, Michigan 48034 (313) 353-2810 Monday-Friday 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. CLASSIFIEDS GET RESULTS! Call The Jewish News 354.6060 LOTS OF LEATHER STYLES & COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM! PLUS...WALL UNITS, DINING RMS., DINETTES, BEDROOMS, LAMPS, PAINTINGS AND MUCH MORE! HOURS: MON, THURS, FRI 10-9 & TUES, WED, SAT 10-6 ORCHARD MALL Maple at Orchard Lk. Rd. 855-4065 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 35