SPORTS Wishing Our Customers & Friends The Healthiest and Happiest New Year! NILVLASLiincEITF5 in the West Bloomfield Plaza 626 - 5511 • 626 - 1173 6672 Orchard Lake Rd. REG. HOURS: M-F 9-5:30 TUES. & THURS. 9-8:30 ROCHELLE LIEBERMAN and the staff of Gateway. Travel GATEWAY TRAVEL wish all our friends and clients a happy and healthy New Year! Julie Morgonroth • Nancy Fink • Lynne Starman • Wendy Danzig • Max (Nancy) MacLeod • Mark Rubinstein • Connie Wolberg • Beth Feldman • Sonny Cohn • Mille Chad • Marlene Kraft • Jeanette Shouneyia • Laura Taylor • Ina Pitt • Gail Young • Joe LaMarra • Jean Sucher • Judy Chazen • Sue Erlich • Steve Spitz • Deena Canvasser • 29100 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, Mich. 48034 353-8600 Hearty Wishes To Our Customers and Friends For A Very Healthy and . Happy NEW YEAR JEWELRY DESIGN & MFG. LTD. Morris Bednarsh Anthony Ferrari APPLEGATE SQUARE Northwestern & Inkster 356-7007 1 Dilemma Continued from preceding page ride, Abbie might never get the chance to ride it again." There are so many golf and tennis tournaments schedul- ed that the absence of Amy Alcott or Corey Pavin would not draw attention on the golf circuit. But two years ago, two Jewish tennis players, Aaron Krickstein and Brad Gilbert, competed for the champion- ship in Queensland, Australia on Yom Kippur. Gilbert won and both athletes were criticized by col- umnists Gabe Cohen of the National Jewish Post and Opinion and Rabbi W. Gun- ther Plaut of the Canadian Jewish News. Both writers contended that the two were "heroes of the Jewish community" — I think most Jewish sports fans would disagree, since neither has been able to achieve the star/hero plateau — and should not have played. They also commented: "It could be what these two see around them of obser- vance or rather lack of it .. . makes it easy for them to justify their violation . . ." But it's a far differenfset of circumstances that caused the two to play, as Dr. Herbert Krickstein, Aaron's father (and the son of a rabbi), explained. First, tennis players' tour- nament schedules are made months, even years, in ad- vance. They are made by an agent, who may not be Jewish and who surely doesn't have a Hebrew calendar in front of him when he books the athlete. Second, there never can be c‘2 a guarantee that a tennis player will advance to a championship match which may fall on Yom Kippur; ors-; the player could expect that the match would end before sundown. But, in 1990, what could Gilbert and Krickstein do, once they kept winning and advancing to the champion- - ship? Could they both forfeit? Would that have been fair for the tournament organizers? Added Dr. Krickstein: "It's easy to criticize but not so easy to deal with. Religion is not a big part of the lifestyle of a professional athlete. They aren't at home; they're nomads. They aren't con- scious of the holidays until they draw near. What could they have done? They already were in Australia."E I RELIGION Yom Kippur Preparations Involve Atonement LISA SAMIN Special to The Jewish. News T he evening before Yom Kippur, Marie, a new immigrant from Mos- cow, took a walk around one of Jerusalem's religious neighborhoods to watch preparations for the sacred Day of Atonement. Unfamiliar with many Jewish customs, Marie was lost for words. Men and women were swinging live chickens around their heads, chanting something incom- prehensible. Incredulous, she turned the next corner, only to see men and women swing- ing bags of money around their heads. "What kind of country have I come to?" she wondered aloud. The ceremony was the sacrificial kapparah (atone- ment) ceremony (which predates the Shulchan Aruch — the basis for normative halachic Judaism) which is performed on the eve of Yom Kippur, mostly by the Sephar- dic and Chasidic com- munities. Ashkenazi Jews often use money in place of a chicken. After reciting a passage° from Psalms and from the Book of Job, a fowl (a rooster for a man, a hen for a woman) <1 is taken and swung around the head three times. Simultaneously, with their right hand on the fowl's head, they recite three times: "This j be my substitute, my vicarious offering, my atone- ment. This animal shall meet death, but I shall find a long and pleasant life of peace." I The fowl is then slaughtered and given to the poor or to charity, as is the ( money used in the Ashkenazic ceremony. A more modern-day practice is to give the animal's monetary value to charity and to eat the chicken for the Seudah Hamafseket — the last meal before the fast. Rabbi Hanania Berzon, an Orthodox rabbi who came to Jerusalem in 1969 from New York, says, "The concept of sacrifice is a very powerful one. In essence you are saying that although I have sinned, God has given me the oppor- 7_, tunity to live, and I must atone for my sins." The fowl's slaughter, an in- tegral part of the intense pro-