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April 29, 1994 - Image 77

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-04-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Animmimismiimmumpow-

ANNOUNCING..."EQUITY TRADE PROGRAM" WE PAYOFF YOUR TRADE!*

MEL FARR

copy also tells of Deborah:
Because of her great wisdom,
Deborah had been made a judge
by the Israelites. Each day she sat
under a palm tree and listened to
and advised people who brought
her their disputes to settle. When
the Israelites were threatened by
their enemy Sisera, Deborah sum-
moned Barak and told him that
God commanded him to lead the
battle against Sisera. But Barak
refused to go unless Deborah
joined him. So together Deborah
and Barak fought and destroyed
Sisera's army on the slopes of
Mount Tabor. When the battle
was won, Deborah raised her
voice in a song of praise.
iographies of leading Re-
form rabbis of past and
present are featured in Re-
form Judaism in Amer-
ica (Greenwood Publishing) by
Kerry Olitzky, Lance Sussman
and Malcolm Stern.
The work serves as a source-
book for some of the most inter-
esting men and women in Jewish
history. They include:
* Max Lilienthal, a German-
born rabbi and colleague of Isaac
Mayer Wise, active on behalf of
the North during the Civil War
* Sally Priesand, the first
woman ordained a rabbi
* Sherwin Wine, founder of
Humanistic Judaism
* Samuel Cook, an Altoona,
Pa., rabbi credited with the de-
velopment of the first Reform
Jewish youth group organization
* Ben Steinberg, a musician
and composer of "Echoes of Chil-
dren," commemorating the chil-
dren who died in the Holocaust.
The first of its kind, Reform Ju-
daism in America includes brief
biographies of 170 rabbis.
ome area resi-
dents remember their
parents encour-
aging them to
leave clothes on a
chair beside the bed.
This way, the children
could jump right out
of bed and be ready
the moment Moshiach
arrived.
n What Will
The World Be
Like? (HaChai
Publishing,
Brooklyn),
Adel
Lebovics considers the
world when Moshiach
finally is here.
"One night after
supper, Before she
went to bed, Sarah
looked up at her fa-
ther, And this is what
she said: Father, what
will the world be like,
When Moshiach ar-
rives?" this colorful book begins.
The conversation goes on to de-
scribe how huge fruits will grow
on trees, the lamb will no longer
fear the lion, and the sick will be-
come healthy.
What Will The World Be Like?

B

S

features illustrations by Norman
Nodel.
f you're politically correct in
the cooking world, you know
better than to ask for a rich,
fattening sauce with your
brisket or a heavy cream atop
your chocolate dessert.
Rose Reisman's new Rose
Reisman Brings Home Light
Cooking (MCM Books) includes
all kinds of health-smart recipes,
and it comes with a bonus: a por-
tion of the proceeds from the sale
of the book will be donated to the
Y-ME National Breast Cancer
Organization.
Among the dishes in Light
Cooking are baked French-wedge
potatoes and tortilla pizzas, Chi-
nese beef with vegetables and
fresh tomato-dill soup.
Ms. Reisman also is the author
of The Dessert Scene: Toronto's
Top Dessert Spots Reveal Their
Secret Recipes and Manhattan's
Dessert Scene: New York City's
Top Dessert Spots Reveal their Se-
cret Recipes.
he complex feelings of Jews
growing up in postwar Ger-
many and Austria, and
their sentiments about
those nations today, is the focus
of Jewish Voices, German
Words: Growing Up Jewish
in Postwar Germany and
Austria (Catbird Press), edited
by Elena Lappin.
A collection of stories, memo-
ries, essays and poems, Jewish
Voices, German Words compris-
es the writings of 14 German-
Jewish authors and journalists.
They discuss anger with parents
for staying or returning, assimi-
lation and Jewish identity, anti-
Semitism and neo-Nazism.
Contributors include Katja
Behrens, who survived the war
in a Catholic parish in Austria;

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103

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