Rabbi Jaffe sees a human kinship that supersedes religion. ringing. This is life for Vic- ki Krausz and JCAN. With little operating mon- ey, JCAN has no workers outside of Vicki and Stephen Krausz. What it does have is a handful of dedicated vol- unteers, like Dr. Hillel (James) Rosenfeld, admin- istrator of the North Oak- land Child and Adolescent Clinic in Pontiac. Dr. Rosenfeld is an out- spoken advocate for placing Jewish children in Jewish homes. "Our identity is formed out of our culture," he says. "We know who we are because we come from a family, a community and then, a broader culture." Not to allow a child to grow up in his own religion is to "strip him of a major former of his identity." Adoptive children already are wounded because they have experienced great loss — separation from their birth parents. "Separation and loss is traumatic for children and it has lasting effects," Dr. Rosenfeld says. This pain — especially for disabled children — can be compounded by depriving the child of his cultural iden- tity. Only now are social work- ers beginning to understand the importance of factors like religion and race and heritage, he says. In the past, adoption was seen "as a way to help childless fam- ilies and girls with unwant- ed babies." Today, the focus is shifting to what will be best for the child. That hundreds of Jewish children have been placed in gentile homes is in many ways the fault of the Jewish community, he says. "The Jewish system of communal services has not responded effectively" to changes in adoption proce- dures, such as the state's in- terest in quickly moving children into adoptive homes (as opposed to letting them languish in institu- tions), he says. Detroit's Jewish Family Service sees few special- Vicki Krausz and family and daughter Elisheva, who started it all. 26 FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1992 needs Jewish children up for adoption, according to JFS Adoption and Foster Care Coordinator Esther Krystal., 1 When she does learn of a –) disabled child who needs a home, Mrs. Krystal's first step is to contact "everybody on my wait list" — parents hoping to adopt. Couples have been asked in advance whether they would be will- ing to consider a hard-to- place child and, if so, what stipulations this would in- clude. Would they take a biracial child, one with a se- rious medical problem, a Down syndrome baby? H If that fails, Mrs. Krystal- calls other adoption agencies and asks if they know of