Fantastic Savings! at Sherwood Studios' Decorative Pillow Sale! Friday-Sunday, October 15th-17th ALL ULTRtUEDE HP' and Nova Suede Pillows $7900 In-Stock or Special Order • Any Color Large Selection of Leather $3900 & Fabric Pillows Up to $349.00 Value • In-Stock Only 8tucilos FINE FURNITURE, ACCESSORIES & GIFTS 6644 Orchard Lake Road ♦ West Bloomfield ♦ 855.1600 M-Th-F 10.9 ♦ Tu-W-Sat 10.6 ♦ Sun 12.5 We Never Leave A Stone Unturned... Four-strand cultured pearl bracelet (4.5mm pearls) with multi-colored gemstone separators in 14K gold. Citrine, amethyst, blue topaz, peridot and rhodofite stones. LLJ U) LLJ CC F- LLI LU 8 30400 Telegraph Rd. Suite 134, Ringholu Farms • 642-5575 Letters LETTERS page 4 face of the facts. The four reli- gious parties in Israel, who re- flect the entire spectrum of religious Jewry from Modern (Centrist) Orthodox to Charedi, are headed by the leading Torah figures of our generation. Yet not one member of Knesset from these parties, including Rabbi Ovadia Yosefs Shas Party, vot- ed for the peace accord. Everyone agrees that one may surrender land to save lives. However, as Rabbi Sil- berberg stated in his letter, the consensus of opinion of our Torah leaders is that giving land to the Palestinians and arming their soldiers will lead to an es- calation of terror. This is be- cause most Jews feel that we can never give them what they say is of paramount importance to them, namely Jerusalem and all of the West Bank. Dr. Gitelman contends that Rabbi Silberberg was mouthing the Chabad "party line." It seems to me that Rabbi Silber- berg's letter to The Jewish News was based on logic and Ha- lachah, and it certainly made no mention of Chabad-Lubavitch or the Lubavitcher Rebbe. Fur- thermore, Rabbi Silberberg has published several books on Halachah and is sufficiently competent to render halachic decisions without repeating any "party line." Dr. Gitelman's statements concerning Chabad were inac- curate. For example, he states that the Rebbe "urged the dis- astrous invasion of Lebanon in 1982." This is an utter fabrica- tion. Furthermore, as a Lubav- itcher Chassid, I would briefly like to set the record straight re- garding his contention that Chabad has become "hawkish" and has made an about-face from its previously held opin- ions on the issue of ceding ter- ritories and love of the land. Chabad leaders in every gener- ation, beginning in the 1790s, bought tracts of land in Israel and encouraged settlement there, notwithstanding their philosophical differences with secular Zionism. At the inception of the State of Israel in 1948, Chabad es- tablished the town of Kfar Chabad outside Tel Aviv. Dur- ing the early 1950s, the Lubav- itcher Rebbe directed most of his Chassidim who left Russia to settle in Israel, not in the Unit- ed States. This accounts for the fact that there are more Chabad Chassidim in Israel than in America. Further more, contrary to Dr. Gitelman's assertion, the over- whelming majority of Chabad Chassidim have served with dis- tinction and honor in the Israeli army. This is one of the reasons why Chabad maintains such a cordial relationship with the average Israeli citizen. It is truly unfortunate that Dr. Gitelman felt it necessary to inject issues of Moshiach and other totally irrelevant canards into a serious debate which con- cerns the survival of the Jewish state and the Jewish people. Martin Goodman West Bloomfield Letters Policy Letters must be typewrit- ten, double-spaced, and in- clude the name, home address, daytime phone number and signature of the writer. Brief letters (less than a page), arriving by noon Tuesday, will be given pref- erence. Men's Club Hosts Workshop The men's club of Adat Shalom Synagogue has created a new series of Sunday morning get- togethers at the synagogue for young teens and their parents. The tallit and tefillin workshops will encompass a prayer ses- sion, a full breakfast, and an en- gaging speaker on a topic of special interest. The first workshop is set for Oct. 24. The morning, in con- junction with Adat Shalom's Encounter Weekend, will fea- ture a discussion by Rabbi Ehud Bandel. It will run from 10 a.m.-noon. Subsequent pro- grams will be held Jan. 9, Feb. 6 and March 13. The sessions will be open to everyone, although they are particularly aimed at pre- and post-b'nai and b'not mitzvah and their families. The primary purpose of the programs is to bring young people and their parents together in a mean- ingful experience within the synagogue, to engage them jointly in prayer, learning, dis- cussion and socializing. The group will learn the specific prayers of the morning service. For information, call the syn- agogue, 851-5100. Kol Ami Hosts Square Dance Temple Kol AIM will host a western line dance and square dance evening 7 p.m. Oct. 16 at the temple. Dinner will be served. For in- formation, call Harold Rosen- berg, 661-2388.