COMMUNITY Independence Day Celebration Planned Holocaust Memorial Set At Maple-Drake The Dudaim, the Simon and Garfunkel of Israel, will perform at a cabaret evening celebrating Israel In- dependence Day 9:30 p.m. May 9 at the Maple-Drake Jewish Community Center. The cabaret will be part of a week-long communitywide observance of Israel's 44th an- niversary of statehood and the 25th anniversary of the reunification of Jerusalem. The singing duo consists of Benny Amdursky and Israel Gurion. The two have toured the U.S. and Israel and recorded many albums. Mr. Amdursky is an Israeli chef and Mr. Gurion a stage director. The evening also will be the occasion for two exhibits at The Shaarit Haplaytah Organization of Metropolitan Detroit, Survivors of the Nazi Genocide, will hold its annual Holocaust Memorial Academy 1 p.m. April 26. The event will begin in the Maple- Drake Jewish Community Center and conclude in the Holocaust Memorial Center. The annual commemoration is held in conjunction with the observance of Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remem- brance Day. A candlelighting ceremony by the survivors of the con- centration camps and ghettos will include David Bauer, James Fish, Sol Gringlas, Leon and Rose Gutman, Helen Jutkiewicz, Nathan Nothman, Helen Reisman, George Vine and Eva Wim- mer. Sandy Baumhaft, Betty Ellias, Debra Feldman, Morry Levin, Faye Lincoln, David Oliwek and Ann Tibert, all children of Holocaust sur- vivors, will participate and will be joined by Daren Shavell, grandchild of a Holocaust survivor. The candle in memory of fallen Israeli soldiers and civilians will be kindled by Nathan Harris. Miriam Slaim will light the candle in memory of all deceased members of Shaarit Haplaytah. Colors will be presented by the Jewish War Veterans of the United States of America, Department of Michigan, led by Commander Jack Schwartz. Greetings will be extended by Abraham A. Weberman, president of Shaarit Haplaytah; Leon Halpern, president of the Holocaust Memorial Center; Henry S. Dorfman, chairman of the HMC Executive Committee; Mark Schlussel, president of the Jewish Federation; Linda Lee, president, Jewish Corn- munity Center; Robert A. Ar- mand, director of the Greater Detroit Interfaith Round Table of the National Con- ference of Christians and Jews; State Senator David Honigman; Michael Eizelman, chairman of the Holocaust Committee of the Jewish Community Council; and Charles Silow, president of C.H.A.I.M. (Children of Holocaust Survivors Associa- tion in Michigan). The celebration will be capped off May 10 with the annual Walk for Israel. the Janice CharaCh Epstein Museum/Gallery at Maple-Drake. Tickets for the cabaret will be available at Maple-Drake and Jimmy Prentis Morris Jewish Community Centers. The week of activities will begin with a Hebrew University-sponsored pro- gram titled "Israel Now: Con- temporary Issues and Answers," 7:30 p.m. May 3 at Congregation Shaarey Zedek. On May 4 and 6, puppeteer Maureen Schiffman will pre- sent an Israel show 6:30 p.m. in the Discovery Room at Maple-Drake. A Yom Hazikaron memorial service in honor of Israel's fallen soldiers, featuring a talk by Gen. (Res.) Uzi Narkiss, will take place 7 p.m. at Maple-Drake. Local and new Jewish American teens will join in a production of the play Sparks . . . A Jewish Journey 7:30 p.m. May 7 at Temple Emanu-El. On May 9, teens in grades 9-12 will join the celebration at "Up All Night for the Allied Jewish Campaign." Beginning with registration at 10:30 p.m. at Maple-Drake, teens will have an overnight event with movies, basket- ball, swimming, volleyball, movies and food. Participants should bring sleeping bags and pillows. There is a fee which will go to the Cam- paign. To register, call Ellen Krivchenia, 642-4260. The celebration will be cap- ped off May 10 with the an- nual Walk for Israel 11:30 a.m., leaving from the Jewish Community Campus. Follow- ing the walk, there will be an indoor Israeli street fair with exhibits, games, entertain- ment, food and more. Students in grades 6 and 7 will compete for prizes in the seventh annual Israel Quiz Bowl 1:30 p.m. at Maple-Drake. The Janice Charach Eps- tein Museum/Gallery exhibit "A Day in the Warsaw Ghet- to: A Birthday Trip in Hell" shows life in the Warsaw Ghetto through the photos of Heinz Jost, a Nazi soldier who had taken the photos on his birthday in 1941. The museum/gallery's other ex- hibit, "Art History: The Ar- tist's Interpretation of the History of the Jews," includes the works of artists Lynne Avadenka of Detroit and Dubi Ari of Israel. Ari's The Mis- sion, a painting depicting the history of the Jewish people, will be part of the first floor museum/gallery exhibit. For information about the activities, call Shelley Milin, 642-4260. Jerusalem Day Plans Are Set The 25th anniversary of the reunification of Jerusalem will be celebrated 2 p.m. May 31 at the United Hebrew Schools building. The Detroit Zionist Federation will pre- sent "Rejoice with Jerusalem," a family program open to the community. Members of Young Judaea from Flint, Ann Arbor and Detroit and the local B'nai B'rith Youth Organization will participate. A highlight will be 15 shoferot heralds. Helen Naimark, vice presi- dent of Labor Zionist Alliance, chairs the commit- tee, assisted by Sara Schiff of LZA and committee members representing various Zionist member organizations: Har- mon Bayer, Shula Fleisher, Deborah Kovsky, Lev and Klara Paransky, Michael Schoenberg, Vivian Stollman, Esther Tal, Emil and Shoshana Wolok and Dr. Leon Warshay. Joseph Medwed is president of the Detroit Zionist Federation. Religious school students, with the cooperation of the Jewish Educators' Council headed by Dorothy Dressler, will study the Gates of The Dudaim Jerusalem and prepare essays and stories about these struc- tures located around the City of Jerusalem. The Rabbinic Council of Metropolitan Detroit is en- couraging all rabbis in the community to highlight the significance of the reunifica- tion of Jerusalem in a sermon on May 30. Yom Yerushalyim will culminate the May events observed by the Detroit Jewish community including Yom Hazikaron and Yom Hatzmaut, in cooperation with the Israel Desk of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit and the Jewish Community Council. Family To Family Seeks Recruits "Say Yes! to Family-To- Family" is- the theme of the Family-To-Family's new drive to recruit local families to welcome newcomers from the former Soviet Union to live in America, introduce them to new activities and share in the joy of Jewish traditions. In advance of the Passover holi- day, this is particularly mean-, ingful for people who are discovering their Jewish heritage. With a waiting list of 50 new Jewish American families and more expected each month, there is a critical need for families and in- dividuals to become involved. Small groups also may be con- nected with two or more newcomer families. Co-sponsored by the Na- tional Council of Jewish Women and the Jewish Federation Women's Division, Family-To-Family has made more than 350 connections in the Detroit area. To date, 1,800 new Jewish Americans have come to the Detroit area from the former Soviet Union. More than 800 additional newcomers are ex- pected this year. Family-To-Family par- ticipants have no financial obligation nor a specific time commitment. For information abut being matched with a new American family or the orien- tation session, call Family-To- Family, 258-6000. Violinist Joseph. Ravitsky will perform Russian and memorial musical selectidns and Sherri Kaufman will deliver a recitation. Proclamations will be acknowledged by Dr. Irvin Gastman, Junior Division of Shaarit Haplaytah. Rabbi Charles H. Rosenz- veig, founder and executive vice president of the Holocuast Memorial Center, will deliver the memorial ad- dress and Cantor Najman will sing "Ani Marvin." Participants will then move to the Holocaust Memorial Center where Rabbi Rosenz- weig will lead the Kaddish and chant El Mole Rachamim to be followed by the in- dividual lighting by those assembled of hundreds of yahrtzeit candles. Arthur Weiss is chairman of the event. The committee includes Rabbi Herbert S. Eskin and Dr. Arthur Feuer, honorary presidents of Shaarit Haplaytah; past presidents Arnold Einhorn, Leon Halpern and Simon Schwarzberg; and Norman Adelsberg, Irving Altus, Gustav Berenholz, Allen Charlupski, Alex Ehrmann, Gedale Elbaum, Fred Ferber, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Fisk, Mrs. Michael Fordonski, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Halpern, Mr. Sol Kleinman, Mrs. Benedict Lewkowicz, Jack Lipton, Mrs. John J. Mames, Herman Marczak, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Moskowitz, Abraham Paster- nak, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Praw, Mrs. Joseph Slaim, Ben Sweet, George Vine, Martin S. Water, Mr. and Mit. Abraham A. Weberman. Home For Aged Needs Volunteers The Jewish Home for Aged needs volunteers to provide services for residents at its three locations: Borman Hall, Prentis Manor and Fleisch- man Residence/Blumberg Plaza. Among the ongoing projects in which they assist are: library, birthday gifts, Chanukah gifts, flowers at Rosh Hashanah and Passover, gourmet club, out-trips, resi- dent enrichment programs, bingo and pokeno. Volunteers assist profes- sional staff members in a wide variety of program areas, including auxiliary gift shop, nosh nook, out-trip ex- cursions for residents, creative center, friendly visiting, Yiddish reading, resident library/bookmobile, music groups, men's club, beading and jewelry classes. To volunteer, call Carol Rosenberg, 532-7112. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS