Detroit's matchmakers say there's a tremendous need for their services and their telephone bills show it. ences. She keeps track of prospects in Detroit, New York, Toronto, Cleveland and Chicago. Mrs. Moseson and the others, who will be working together as a committee, feel the computer will speed the process. The matchmakers say that, despite the electronic machine and the compiling and analyzing of biographical data, and despite the similar-sounding philosophy of, as Ada Moseson puts it, "we don't arrange marriages, we ar- range introductions," they are not a Jewish dating ser- vice. The major difference bet- ween the two comes perhaps from the Talmudic Hebrew verb root shedach, which • - • "If they all worked, it would be wonderful. There are plenty of singles out there." Risha Kaufman means "to persuade," to "influence." While shad- chanim don't force people together, they will try to help candidates work out dif- ferences before the paired parties give up. "Sometimes you have to push things along a little," says Kayla Polter of Oak Park. "We're living in a world where people think everything should be perfect. As a result, sometimes silly things will stand in the way of two peo- ple getting together. "For example, a boy makes a statement about his expec- tations on a particular sub- ject and the girl gets frightened off. " 'Instead of taking it at face value,' I tell her, 'why don't you ask him to explain, or let me ask him. Ask what his opinion is on something, don't assume.' " "We're not putting them under the chuppah, but we feel very responsible," adds Mrs. Moseson. And the shidduch makers are patient. - Although some pairings result in a shidduch within a week, others take longer. Mrs. Polter had one match that took a year to come to fruition. "So maybe sometimes people aren't ready," she says. It can't be rushed, she says. "You are only messengers from God. And it takes mazel. Sometimes, you deal with total opposites: he is very quiet, she is not. But there is something there. It is pre-ordained." If it's bashert, it will work out, the matchmakers say — with help often from the boy and girl as to whether they can work things out between themselves. What does a shadchen in- troduction have over, say, the singles bar scene? "A shadchen will speak with the parties separately and try to match backgrounds and values, so that by the time the prospec- tive couple come together the chances for a spark ig- niting between them are much greater," Mrs. Moseson says. Major factors are simi- larity of religious background — matchmakers generally won't pair more observant Jews with those considerably less observant — and family background. The reason is, as Mrs. Moseson says, the Jewish wife "is the guardian of her husband's observance" of kashrut and other laws. Of course, "where they are now" can negate background differences in some cases, she says. A per- son who, for example, has given up materialistic ways for a more spiritual lifestyle might be a good potential spousal candidate for some- one for whom fulltime Torah study is central to his life. Too, "it is very essential that these people be at- tracted to each other," says Mrs. Moseson. Her own daughters were married via shadchanim. "But they went out with a wide spectrum of men to find the guys they respected. "It's not a Torah command- ment that people use the services of a shadchen, but it's preferred because it helps to weed out people whose value systems are not compatible." She said it's ironic that, "in this day when we think we are more modern," that more people, including totally non-observant Jews, are coming to matchmakers. "It's the total reverse of what you'd expect. People are seeing that relationships formed 'the more modern way' are not producing what they want." The increase in "business" for shadchens comes, in part, from the growing number of Ba'alei Teshuvah, Jews returning to traditional Jew- ish life, according to Mrs. Moseson. "Most were raised just the opposite. The past few ge- nerations have realized the Mrs. Moseson goes over a match-up with her husband, Rabbi Joseph Moseson, and checks a computer printout. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 29