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Ernst J. Conrad. Services: Friday 8
p.m., Saturday 9:15 a.m. Chevrat
Torah.

REFORM:

TEMPLE BETH EL

7400 Telegraph Rd., Birmingham,
851-1100. Rabbis: Daniel Polish,
Julian I. Cook, Richard C. Hertz.
Cantor: Gail P. Hirschenfang. Friday
5:30 p.m. Likrat Shabbat, Saturday
11 a.m. Torah Study, 9:30 a.m.
Saturday: Rabbi Cook will speak on
"Taking the Law Into Our Own
Hands."

BETH ISAAC

2730 Edsel Dr., Trenton, 675-0355.
Services: Friday 7:30 p.m.

TEMPLE EMANU EL

-

14450 W. Ten Mile Rd., Oak Park,
967-4020. Rabbis: Lane B. Steinger,
L. David Feder. Rabbi Emeritus: Dr.
Milton Rosenbaum. Cantor Emeri-
tus: Norman Rose. Services: Friday
8 p.m.
Summer services begin in the West
Garden (weather permitting).
Shabbat Pinhas will be conducted by
the religious committee.

TEMPLE ISRAEL

5725 Walnut Lake Rd., West
Bloomfield, 661-5700. Rabbis: M.
Robert Syme, Harold S. Loss, Paul
M. Yedwab. Cantor: Harold Orbach.
Services: Friday 8 p.m., Saturday
10:30 a.m. (Rebbe's Tish 9:30 a.m.),
Weekdays 7:30 a.m., Sunday 9 a.m.
Friday: Rabbi Yedwab will deliver the
sermon. Saturday: Rabbi Syme will
deliver the sermon.

TEMPLE KOL AMI

5085 Walnut Lake Rd., West
Bloomfield, 661-0040. Rabbis:
Norman T. Roman, Rabbi Emeritus:

5642 Maple, West Bloomfield,
737-8700. Rabbi: Dannel I. Schwartz.
Services: Saturday 11 a.m. 9:30 a.m.
Rabbi's Tish.

CONGREGATION
SHIR TIKVAH

3633 W. Big Beaver, Troy, 643-6520.
Rabbi: Arnie Sleutelberg. Services:
Saturday 11 a.m.
Picnic service in the sun at the home
of the Zendels. Service conducted
by Rabbi Arnie Sleutelberg.

HUMANISTIC:

THE BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE

28611 West 12 Mile Rd., Farmington
Hills, 477-1410. Rabbi: Sherwin T.
Wine. There will be no services for
the month of July. Services will
resume at 8:30 p.m. on Aug. 9, 1991.

M

oses is commanded
in this sedra to view
the Promised Land,
which he may not enter, and
is given an intimation of his
approaching death. This com-
mand is repeated in
Deuteronomy 32:48, and its
fulfillment is recorded in the
last chapter of the Torah.
At first blush, God's decree
preventing Moses from enter-
ing the Land of Promise ap-
pears rather harsh and
severe. If ever there was a
man who deserved to reach
the goal of his life that man
was Moses. He devoted his
whole life to the purpose of
taking his people out of the
land of Egypt and leading
them to the land of their
fathers. More than once he
felt overwhelmed by the
weight of this awesome
responsibility. The Jewish
people, by their complaints
and despair, made his 40-year
tenure much harder than it
should have been.

Morton Yolkut is the rabbi at
Congregation B'nai David.

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SEPHARDIC:

SEPHARDIC COMMUNITY
OF GREATER DETROIT

17030 New Jersey, Southfield.
557-8551. Services: Sunday 9 a.m.
at Yeshivah Beth Yehudah, 15751 W.
Lincoln, Southfield.

Throughout Moses' endless
trials, one thought alone sus-
tained him and gave him
strength to endure — he was
ambitious to see his people
safely in the Holy Land. But
at the end of his life, when his
great goal was at hand, it was
denied him. His foot would
never tread on the soil of the
Promised Land; Joshua, his
student, would lead the
Israelites there.
The disappointment must
have been immense, but he
did not complain. One may
even assume he died happy,
although his greatest wish
had not been fulfilled,
because he must have felt
that the work he had com-
menced would be brought to
fruition.
This final episode in the -life
of Moses has much to teach
us. Moses did not complete
the task he set for himself,
but his life was certainly not
a failure. His greatness rests
upon what he attempted, not
upon what he achieved. It is
only the men who aim low
who accomplish all that they
desire from life. In the words
of poet Robert Browning: "Ah,
but a man's reach should ex-

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1035 St. Antoine at Monroe, Detroit,
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THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

43

