SECOND CLASS THE JEWISH NEWTS SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS OCTOBER 18, 1991 / 10 CHESHVAN 5752 B'nai David Board Plans Maple Road Construction ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor C How the laws of mikvah and family purity unlock Jewish femininity. Page 24 ALSO INSIDE: ongregation B'nai David's board voted nearly unanimously Oct. 10 to go ahead with con- struction of a new synagogue in West Bloomfield. The vote "re-affirmed the action we took when we voted to sell our present building," said B'nai David President Alex Blumenberg. "We voted again because of the merger negotiations we had been having with other congregations." B'nai David sold its Southfield Road building to the City of Southfield early last year for $1.45 million. The city plans to use the building for art and perform- ing arts classes and pro- grams. The congregation has an option to stay in the building until March 1994. B'nai David members, ac- ting on behalf of the syn- agogue, purchased a nine- acre West Bloomfield site in 1987. The site is on the south side of Maple Road, between Halsted and Haggerty. At the same time, B'nai David, which considers itself traditional, had been active- ly participating in merger talks with several area Con- servative congregations, in- cluding Beth Achim and B'nai Moshe. Beth Achim and B'nai Moshe will vote Nov. 12 on merging. B'nai Moshe has a new synagogue under construction in West Bloomfield, on Drake Road a quarter mile south of Maple. B'nai David's Mr. Blumenberg said his board voted 28-0, with two absten- tions, to begin construction planning. He said a building committee is being selected, chaired by Jerry Soble and Ernest Klein, and "nothing has been pre-determined" about the size or cost of the new facility. "We are at the beginning," Mr. Blumenberg said. B'nai David has 325 member families, he said. Rabbi Morton Yolkut of B'nai David said the move would be a difficult process, but "the unanimity of the board and within the con- gregation" will ease the transition. Merger Vote Due Nov. 12 Congregations B'nai Moshe and Beth Achim have set Nov. 12 for separate votes on whether to merge the two congregations. The proposed merger was ap- proved by the synagogue boards last spring. Beth Achim members will vote at 7 p.m. at their syn- agogue. B'nai Moshe mem- bers, who normally meet at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center, will meet 7:30 p.m. at the United Hebrew Schools Auditorium in Southfield because of Book Fair events at the JCC. Beth Achim has also scheduled four identical meetings for its members to discuss the synagogue's membership, finances, recruitment and answer questions about the proposed merger. Each meeting at the synagogue will cover the same information; four were scheduled to give as many members as possible an op- portunity to attend. The meetings are set for: 10 a.m. Oct. 20; 3 p.m. Oct. 24; 7 p.m. Oct. 28 (tentative); 7 p.m. Nov. 7. Muskegon Talks Ponder Jewish-Christian Ties ) N NOAM M.M. NEUSNER Staff Writer O Ukrainians try to maintain their culture in the melting pot. Page 41 n Monday, Muskegon became the world's center for Jewish- Christian dialogue. Theologians, pastors and rabbis converged on this small west Michigan city for a one-day conference that in- cluded speeches, group discussions and public debate on the meaning and future of Jewish-Christian relations. Featured speakers David Hartman and Krister Sten- dahl, in often confusing and difficult discussions, highlighted some of the philosophical issues of inter- religious dialogue. Muskegon, with only 250 Jews, held the conference as a continuation of its Jewish Centennial Celebration of 1989. Events on Jewish cul- ture, religion, history and language were held then to honor the city's 100-year- old Jewish community. "Maybe God's spirit said, `Why not Muskegon?' ," said Donald Mathews, chairman of the West Shore Committee for Jewish-Christian Dia- logue, the conference sponsor. "We have to start where we are. We are here." Rabbi Hartman, director of the Shalom Hartman In- stitute in Jerusalem, said that while Judaism em- braces its covenant with God, it does not need to deny the existence of other covenants. "The problem with re- ligion is revelation," said Rabbi Hartman, an Or- thodox Jew. • "When God speaks to humans, Ilq becomes tribal." Trying to strike a differ- ence between the "univer- salism" of secular ethics and the "particularism" of religion, Rabbi Hartman sought to explain Jewish- Christian relations as a "capacity for dissonance, a capacity for permitting others to enjoy themselves while do- ing something else." The "adversarial model" that Judaism — like other religions — often takes for itself is mistaken, Rabbi Hartman said, and has no place in the faith. Continued on Page 14