COMMUNITY Editor's note: The lives of thousands of Jews here and overseas are touched by the agencies of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, through contribu- tions to the Allied Jewish Campaign. Twenty-eight years ago, Gil Golden's world opened up at the Jewish Com- munity Center. That's where he developed social contacts and began to have a social life. The 43-year- old Mr. Golden has since made many friends in the Jewish Center's Thursday Night Social Group for in- dividuals with developmental disabilities. A resident of a JARC Haverim Home, Mr. Golden has attended many Jewish Center programs. With the Center, he has taken trips to Chicago, New York, Toronto and elsewhere. As a participant in the Thursday Night group, he enjoys pocket billiards, bingo, movies and plays. The JCC has four social and recrea- tional groups for persons with various levels of developmental disabilities. "He's gotten so much ex- posure (to the rest of the world) because of the Center," said his mother, Ruth Golden, a long-time advocate for people with disabilities. "Without these programs, our children would have bleak lives." Contributions to the Allied Jewish Campaign help the Center provide services for some 300 per- sons with these and other types of disabilities. Among them: a visual- and hearing-impaired program and land and water flex- ibility and strengthening classes for persons with pysical disabilities. A Jewish "Special Olympics" is held each August, hosted by the Center and the Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. The community at large pays nearly 900,000 visits to the Center each year for entertainment, music, dance, art, sports and other recreational activities. The Center has a day camp, programs for pre-schoolers through senior adults, and Gil Golden sponsors the annual Jewish Book Fair. Another Federation agency, the Jewish Voca- tional Service, which offers job placement, career development and educa- tional counseling for the entire community, helped boost Mr. Golden's self- esteem. An assembler and packager in the JVS sheltered workshops, he was given employment at a lumber company in December 1990. A JVS job coach gave him on-the-job support for three months until he was able to be on his own. "The people are friendly and nice" at his workplace, Mr. Golden said. "The at- mosphere is good over there." As a result of his employ- ment, Mr. Golden has started to talk more and express his feelings. "JVS has done tremendous things for Gil, integrating him into the community, developing his social life," said his father, Lou Golden. Families of persons with disabilities also can find resources, respite care, sup- port groups and referrals to agencies through the Jewish Information Ser- vice. Persons who call the JIS help-line (967-HELP) or the Text Telephone 967-0460) can be linked to agencies that serve those with special needs. As a resource for the Jewish community, JIS has addresses, facts about Jewish life and a directory of social welfare agencies. An Israeli street fair, with activities for the entire fami- ly, will follow the annual Walk for Israel May 10 at the Maple-Drake Jewish Corn- munity Center. Beginning about 1 p.m., the street fair will have enter- tainment, crafts, exhibits, games, art and food. Booths will feature Israeli products, including jewelry, food, toys and candy. Israeli art will be for sale. A major exhibit will focus on life on a kibbutz. Informa- tion on travel to Israel will be available, and video travel- ogues will run continuously throughout the afternoon. The B'nai B'rith Youth Organization AZA basketball league finals also will take place that afternoon at the Center. The seventh annual Israel Quiz Bowl at 1:30 p.m. will see sixth- and seventh- graders from area Jewish schools compete for prizes. The Walk for Israel will start from the Jewish Com- munity Campus at 11:30 a.m. Registration is at 10:45. The street fair and walk are part of a communitywide celebration of Israel's 44th anniversary of statehood and the 25th anniversary of the reunification of Jerusalem. A week-long series of events Minsk Memorial Is Program Topic Charles Silow and Sarah Hartman recently traveled to Minsk, Byelorussia, to repre- sent Detroit at Minsk memorial services for Holocaust victims. At 7:30 p.m. March 29, Mr. Silow and Ms. Hartman will give a slide presentation and program about the com- memorative activities held in Minsk as well as the rebirth of the Minsk Jewish com- munity since Gorbachev's reforms. The meeting will be at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center. They also will show slides and discuss their visit to War- saw and Lodz, Poland, and Mr. Silow's visit to his parents' pre-war home in Lodz. The public is invited. There is a nominal charge. The pro- gram is sponsored by C.H.A.I.M. — Children of Holocaust-Survivors Associa- tion In Michigan. For information, call Mr. Silow, 489-8886. Israel Independence Day Atk • ■ WE WALK AS ONE will begin 7:30 p.m. May 3 at Congregation Shaarey Zedek with a briefing, "Israel Now," by Dr. Edward Kaufman, director of the. Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace at Hebrew University. Dr. Eitan Yefenof, professor of medicine at Hebrew Univer- sity, will speak on "Ad- vancements in AIDS and Cancer Research in Israel." At 7 p.m. May 5, a Yom Hazikaron (Israel Remem- brance Day) observance will be held at the Center. Gen. (Res.) Uzi Narkiss, corn- mander of Israel's eastern front during the Six-Day War, will speak on "The Reunifica- tion of Jerusalem." Puppeteer Maureen Schiff- man will present an Israeli show 6:30 p.m. May 4 and 6 in the Discovery Room at the Center. New American and American teens will join for a production of the play Sparks . . . A Jewish Journey 7:30 p.m. May 7. On May 9, an Israeli-style discotheque, gallery art show and cabaret will be held at the Center. Pre-registration for the walk is requested. To register, for information or bus transportation, call Shelley Milin at the Jewish Federa- tion of Metropolitan Detroit, 642-4260. New JFA Apartments Are Taking Applications Federation Apartments' 97 new units in West Bloomfield will open in early fall. JFA has mailed applica- tions to seniors already on an interest list. The new units are for seniors who do not qualify for U.S. government subsidies offered in the four other JFA buildings. The building, under con- struction, is connected to the Hechtman Federation Apart- ments and will be named Lillian and Samuel Hecht- man Federation Apartments II, based on a gift from the Hechtmans in 1982. Model Apartments should be ready mid-May to view on an appointment-only basis. Upon completion, JFA will have 618 units. The new building is aimed at persons who do not qualify for federal- ly subsidized housing, but who cannot afford market- rate housing. The rental rate for these one-bedroom apart- ments has been set at $675 a month, excluding utilities. There will be an additional monthly fee for kosher din- ners served five days a week. Eligible persons must have incomes between $25-$30,000 a year for individuals and $28,550-$40,000 for couples. Except for the requirements of the Michigan State Hous- ing Development Authority that 20 percent of residents have incomes under $25,000 for one person and under $28,550 for two persons, no exception to the eligibility range will be made. Qualified applicants will be called for an interview in the order their completed applica- tions are received. Interested persons can call JFA, 967-4240, to request an application. THE DFTROIT .1FWISH NFWg 42 OMM N IT Campaign Close-Up: Developmental Disabled Street Fair Will Follow May 10 Walk For Israel