CLOSE-UP UNDER THE CROSS SUSAN GRANT Staff Writer n Gabe Bodzin's Spanish class, students each day recited the Hail Mary. Not Gabe. He was allowed to say the Shema — as long as it was in Spanish. "When my teacher told me to say the Shema in Spanish, it made me feel really good," said Gabe, 17, one of five Jewish students enrolled in the University of Detroit Jesuit High School, an all-boys Catholic institution. Gabe, who is among a handful of Jews attending Catholic schools throughout the Detroit area, has spent the past two years at U of D. Like other local Jewish students enrolled in parochial schools, he is more interested in getting a good edu- cation than learning about the Roman Catholic Church and its teachings. Gabe, who lives in Huntington Woods, wasn't happy during his freshman year at Berkley High School. That touched off a search for a suitable private school. His parents looked at secular institutions, but disliked the expensive tuition and a perceived emphasis on materialistic values. They rejected Akiva and Yeshiva Gedolah, the only two local Jewish day schools with high-school programs, as too traditional. Then some of Gabe's friends told him about their experiences at U of D. "They really liked it," Gabe said. After two years, Gabe and his family have few complaints about the school. He's doing much better at U of D, said Linda Bodzin, Gabe's mother. "He can be free to concentrate on academics without distractions. It works for him." At first, Mrs. Bodzin and her husband, Gabe Bodzin attends Lionel, were concerned about sending the University of Detroit their son to a Catholic institution. They High School. wanted Gabe to retain his Jewish values. 24 FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 1991 But, they soon discovered Catholic theo- logy classes, which all students must take regardless of religious beliefs, were not threatening to Gabe's interest in Judaism, they said. "He's become a better Jew since going to U of D," said Mrs. Bodzin, who is active at Temple Emanu-El. "Once he got into U of D, it reinforced who he was. He become even more active than we are." Active in Temple Emanu-El's youth group the past two years, Gabe is the MSTY (Michigan State Temple Youth) vice president of religious and cultural af- fairs. This summer, he is going to Israel, courtesy of the Mason, Steinhardt and Jacobs scholarship given annually to a Temple Emanu-El student who has shown leadership qualities. "It's a great balance," Gabe said. "It's really a different feeling being surround- . ed by Jewish kids. It's been a major in- fluence in my life." While some may question the strength of a child's commitment to Judaism after he has gone to Catholic school, Jewish students in high schools with names like Shrine, Marian, U of D and Mercy say they don't have a problem. Jeff Brochstein, 18, a member of Temple