T H E INSIDER JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE & RESETTLEMENT SERVICE NE W S L E T TER • EXPANDING OUR HORIZONS TO SERVE YOUR NEEDS • FIRST ANNUAL REVA STOCKER LECTURE Jewish Family Service, through an endowment established by Reva Stocker, recently presented the first annual lecture of the Reva Stocker Educational Lecture Series: "The Family as Healer: Ten Lessons for Life & Love." The guest speaker was Dr. Paul Pearsall, for- mer director of the Sinai Hospital Clinic of Problems of Daily Living, popular lectur- Dr. Paul Pearsall er on mental health and healing issues, and the author of Sexual Healing: Using the Power of an Intimate Loving Relationship to Heal the Body & Soul. This first annual lecture was planned and organized by the JFS Education Forum Board Committee, chaired by Marta Rosenthal. The lecture was offered to the community at no charge and was presented in an effort to A service of the _IFS WINDOWS Program raise community awareness of the issues with which the JFS WINDOWS Program deals. The JFS WINDOWS Program is a family violence intervention program. The agency provides counseling and a full range of supportive services to clients who are either at risk of domestic vio- lence, or currently experiencing situations of domestic violence. The Reva Stocker Educational Lecture Series will take place each spring and will focus on issues of concern to today's family. For further information about the WINDOWS Program or the Reva Stocker Educational Lecture Series, please con- tact Sandra Hyman, Director, Department of Child, Adult and Family Services at 559-1500. JEWISH FAMILY SERVICES COLLABORATES WITH KADIMA Jewish Family Service has joined together with Kadima to offer supportive services for older adults with mental ill- ness. Kadima is a non-profit organization which provides a range of supportive ser- vices for Jewish adults with mental ill- ness. The agencies have collaborated to form "Kadima Plus". The program recently received a first year grant from the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's Max M. Fisher Jewish Community Foundation. Kadima Plus provides the support services that enable Jewish older adults with mental illnes to remain in their residences and maintain stability in their daily lives. In its first year, the program received funding to serve 13 individuals, ages 60 or older, who have a diagnosis of schizo- phrenia or bipolar disorder. JFS staff members provide traditional social work services, including individual and group counseling. Kadima staff provide focus work and/or case management, with a focus worker visiting a client three to five times per week to monitor medications and assist with daily living skills. Without the additional support provid- ed through Kadima Plus, older adults with mental illness often face eviction, undesirable foster care situations, prema- ture insitutionalization and even home- lessness. "There is a tremendous need for service for this underserved popula- tion", according to Phyllis Schwartz, Director, JFS Senior Adult Services Department. For additional information about Kadima Plus, contact Phyllis Schwartz at JFS (559-1500) or Janette Shallal, Executive Director, Kadima at 559-8235. JEWISH FAMILY KS COMPLETES SERVICE VAN DUSEN RECEIVES AIDS CHALLENGE FUNDING Jewish Family Service is proud to Jewish Family Service is pleased to announce receipt of a grant from the Ryan White C.A.R.E. Act Title I. This funding, which comes from the federal Department of Health and Human Services, is provid- ed for direct care for individuals affected by HIV/AIDS. Jewish Family Service received a $9,000 grant for complete funding of its HIV/AIDS Family Support Group. The group, which has been operating for the past year, serves Jewish families who have been affected by HIV/AIDS. The Ryan White funding enables the agency to offer the support group at no charge to the participants. The group is led by certified clinical social workers and is structured so that family members are welcome to join at any stage of the HIV/AIDS syndrome. The group enables Jewish individuals to seek support in a manner which specifi- cally addresses their needs as members of the Jewish community. Community resources (rabbis, physicians, lawyers, funeral home directors, etc.) are invited to give presentations to the group, as the needs of the group members evolve. The group is a service of the agency's AIDS Services Program. This Program is an evolving component of the agency's Department of Child, Adult and Family Services. The Program offers individual, family and group counseling, emergency financial assistance, transportation, respite care, meals on wheels and family outreach to persons with HIV/AIDS and their fami- ly members. The HIV/AIDS Family Support Group receives client referrals and community resources through its partnership with the Michigan Jewish AIDS Coalition, as well as other local AIDS providers. For fur- ther information about joining the HIV/AIDS Family Support Group, please contact Fay Rosen, MSW, Clinical Social Worker at 559-1500. For information about the Michigan Jewish AIDS Coalition, please contact Edwina Davis, MJAC, Executive Director at 356-2123. announce early completion of its Van Dusen Endowment Challenge drive. The agency raised $2 million in pledges to support an endowment for its WINDOWS Program, a program which provides coun- seling and supportive services for families experiencing or at risk of domestic abuse. Working together with the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, JFS participated in the Van Dusen Endowment Challenge - a program developed by the Kresge Foundation, in partnership with the Community Foundation for S.E. Michigan. The agency was given a three year period to achieve its goal. The Van Dusen program helps charitable organiza- tions in the metro Detroit area gain long term financial stability through permanent endowments. The WINDOWS Endowment Committee, under the chairmanship of Warren Coville, Irving Nusbaum and Susan Citrin conducted a series of indi- vidual, group and foundation solicitations during the past year to achieve the $2 mil- lion goal. As the goal has been achieved, the Van Dusen program will provide addi- tional endowment dollars of $667,000, resulting in a combined endowment of $2,667,000. Currently, 65 families are being served through the WINDOWS Program. WIN- DOWS' unique approach combines inten- sive therapeutic and environmental inter- ventions to enable family members to pre- vent abusive behaviors. For additional information about the WINDOWS Program, please contact Sandra Hyman, Director, Department of Child, Adult and Family Services at 559-1500. 24123 GREENFIELD ROAD, SOUTHFIELD, MI 48075 • 6960 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD, SUITE 202, WEST BLOOMFIELD, MI 48322