Photos by G lenn Triest Larry Garon and Gary Schiffman enter the yeshiva. most comfortable level of commitment might be. Working with some of the wealthiest Jewish businessmen in suburban Detroit will possibly help the yeshiva's ongoing fund-raising efforts. But the commitment the rabbis and their students have far transcends any financial obligations, accor- ding to Rabbi Krohner. Rabbi Krohner tells of phone calls sometimes three a day in which he and his students discuss everything and anything on their minds. In a year and a half, the learning pro- grams for the businessmen have increased from just two people to the over 50 the yeshiva now works with. The numbers in- creased largely through referrals and word of mouth. "We've tailored our program to fill a need," Rabbi Krohner said. "We speak at a challenging level to convey our ideas. We're not teaching these men, who are all successful in their own lives, a history bas- ed on geophysics. The Torah is a teaching of moral values. What we found was that the more we taught to these sharp, suc- cessful men, the more they wanted to know, and then more kept coming back." Rabbi Krohner said it is interesting for everyone concerned at the yeshiva to watch the businessmen's adjustment. For many of them, it was like a step back in time. The businessmen, who were used to arguing and making deals via FAX machines, car phones, power lunches and secretaries, saw young men learning one on one, arguing points of Talmud in a study hall filled with sacred texts. The students did this all day, not just once a week. Rabbi Krohner said that many of these business- men never stopped to look beyond the covers of the ho- ly books they saw through their lives. Also, many of the images they had about the Torah were largely through stories learned as children. Rabbi Avraham Jacobo- vitz, whose Machon L'Torah also does outreach to the non-religious corn- munity, said that "organizations work to of- fer just enough of a taste of Judaism to motivate the adult to want to learn more. "I strongly believe that after the initial exposure to the information, if done proper- ly, the people will want to take the next step themselves," he said. Mr. Garon said he was always proud of be- ing Jewish. He said he would defend the faith to the death. But with all that pride, he never paid enough attention to the Torah and never considered it the moral guide he does now "When I started coming to the yeshiva, it was almost like that Ford commercial with the light bulb going off over my head:' he said. "I became fascinated by it all, possessed by it. I feel for the past 34 years, I've been denied. I wish I could go through Hebrew school again and not waste the time I've wasted. Yeshiva Gedolah is fill- ing this deep void in a lot of us. I don't con- sider myself a religious person, but I will admit that this has taken a hold of me." Mr. Garon said he has drastically changed his way of looking at religion. At one point in his life, he said he couldn't make sense of any belief in God. He felt God was created by man to answer his most perplexing questions. Bible stories, he said, were no more than fairy tales. "There's something in me that's driving me to my heritage," he said. The yeshiva classes have also made life different for Mr. Garon in relation to his other Jpwish friends, many of whom, he Neil Satovsky and Gary Schiffman go over a point of discussion with Rabbi Greenfield. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 23