TORAH PORTION YAD EZRA feeding the lewigh Hahgry presents Travels Of Abraham And Modern Society A tribute to RABBI A. IRVING SCHNIPPER L. DAVID FEDER Special to The Jewish News T To Benefit YAD EZRA, Detroit Area's Food Pantry Serving The Jewish Needy Sunday, November 17, 1991 at Congregation Beth Abraham Hillel Moses Tickets: $50.00 Tables of Ten: $500.00 Hors D'oeuvres: 6:30 p.m. Dinner: 7:30 p.m. Dinner Chairperson AL BRICKER Honorary Co-Chairmen IRVING NUSBAUM DENNIS DEMBS Featured Speaker: JAMES MACY Executive Director-Food Bank of Oakland County and Yad Ezra Board Member For ticket information, please call (313) 557-FOOD (3663) MAKERS OF CUSTOM LAMINATED PRODUCTS Futuristic Furnishings, Inc., is proud to announce the addition of: RON STOOPS to their sales and design team. Being a licensed builder for many years, Ron's experience in kitchen and bath remodeling is .a welcome service for all our clients. If quality, timeliness, service, and a first class installation is important to you, please call Ron for a free consultation. 4329 Normandy Court • Royal Oak, Michigan 48073 • (313) 549-6300 • FAX (313) 549-6330 48 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1991 he Eternal said to Abram, 'Go forth from your land, the place of your birth, from your father's house to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you shall be a blessing. I will bless those that bless you And curse the one who curses you; and all of the families of the earth shall bless themselves by you! " So begins our sedra for this week, Lech Lecha, and so begins the saga of the Jewish people. According to at least one of our classical commentators, Don Isaac Abarbanel, this is actually the third and most specific story of the origins of Israel. The first, the creation of Adam, and of humanity in general, is comparable to the biological origins of the life of a people; with the renewal of humanity in the days of Noah we witness the emotional development of a people; and finally with Abraham we en- counter the formation of the distinctly human intellectual aspect of a people. Just as Abarbanel notes the gradual evolution of the Jewish people, tradition also notes the stage-by-stage development of the character of Abraham, which is usual- ly discussed in the context of the 10 trials of Abraham. Many consider this to be the first test of Abraham, while the binding of Isaac is the 10th and ultimate test. These trials and gradual transformations, which mark the origins of the Jewish peo- ple, remain constant in the everchanging, yet still some- how changeless parade of Jewish history. The nature and content of each metamorphosis varies from age to age, but the fact of their existence remains uniform. The journey of Abraham from the place of his birth, from his father's house, is one that we know very well in our own mobile age. In his own day, this was a remarkable journey. No one permanently left the security of home and of clan for an uncertain future unless he or she absolutely had to. Today, that journey is far more common. We are ac- L. David Feder is a rabbi at Temple Emanu-El. customed to travel great distances just to acquire or complete our education. Employment frequently demands that we journey to a strange and new community in order to work in our chosen professions. Children no longer live in the same neighborhood as their parents, aunts, uncles, nephews and cousins, or even in the same city, and fre- quently, not even within the same time zone. Grand- children, instead of consider- ing grandparents' homes to be their own, actually have the opportunity to visit their grandparents, at best, only a few times a year. A sense of rootlessness and of being alone is far more common in Lech Lecha: Genesis 12:1-17:27; Isaiah 40:27-41:16. the present, than it was a generation ago. Abraham's journey then, is one that many of us ex- perience and that all of us can learn from. Abraham learned that he had to establish his own community wherever he traveled, that he had to seek out like-minded souls over the course of his wanderings, as Scripture teaches, "Abram took his wife Sarai and his brother's son Lot, and all the wealth that they had amass- ed, and the souls that they had acquired in Haran; and they set out for the land of Ca- naan." Tradition teaches us that the "souls that they had ac- quired" refers to those people whom Abraham and Sarah found shared their belief in a single God. These people at- tached themselves to Abraham and Sarah, and Abraham and Sarah to them. We learn from this that a sense of community is not something that we find ready- made, but something that we must strive to create. The responsibility to create that atmosphere exists on both sides. Not only must strangers and newcomers seek out like-minded in- dividuals — in the form of friendships, congregations and other organizations, but we must also create warm and friendly atmospheres as individuals, as well as in those groups in which we take part, in order to embrace the newcomer. The transient nature of our society makes this more than just a nice