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September 02, 1994 - Image 19

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-09-02

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

Breakfast Honors
Become Hot Potato

JENNIFER FINER STAFF WRITER

ple, Quality County" breakfast.
Then Mrs. Oaks learned that
the fete was a $150-a-plate fund-
raiser for Mr. Patterson. She de-
cided not to attend her own
breakfast.
In a letter to Mr. Patterson, the
retiring commissioner wrote: "It
has just come to my attention
that the proceeds raised from the
September 8, 1994, Q2 Award
Breakfast will be used by your
campaign fund. In light of this,
I must respectfully request that
my name be removed from the
honoree list," Ms. Oaks wrote.
"...Had I been apprised of the pur-
pose of this event initially, I
would have declined at that time.
Please understand that this de-
cision in no way affects my re-
spect for you or this award."
Lillian Jaffe Oaks:
Mr. Patterson said there was
Honored, then surprised.
a miscommunication between his
office and Ms. Oaks.
etiring Oakland County
"I believe she was told," he
Commissioner
Jaffe said. "But I'm not going to argue
Oaks was honored but sur- with her on that point. I'm just
prised by a recent phone going to write it off as a miscom-
call she received on behalf of the munication. I see nothing wrong
county's executive, L. Brooks Pat- with a Republican honoring a De-
terson.
mocrat."
His office informed Ms. Oaks
Other honorees are Dr. Robert
(a Democrat) that Mr. Patterson Aranosian, director of Pontiac Os-
(a Republican) wanted to honor teopathic Hospital's emergency
her at a Sept. 8 breakfast.
trauma center, and Robert Grus-
She accepted the offer and in- nick, the former mayor of Auburn
vited some friends to the event, Hills and a Republican county
called the "Oakland Quality Peo- commission candidate. ❑

And In The Seventh Year
The Land Lies Fallow

Wishing Our
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The
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cEnreR
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Joseph B. Slatkin
And The Staff Of
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Wish Everyone A
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ATLAS AUTO LEASING, INC.

REBECCA WALDMAN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

p

eople's work lives are mea-
sured in days; after six
days of work comes one
day of rest.
The earth's work life is mea-
sured in years; after six years of
work comes one year of rest.
That's how it is for 3,496 farm-
ers in Israel who observe the
Torah commandment of shmitah,
or allowing the earth to lie fallow
every seven years.
The Torah law of shmitah is a
biblical example of Jewish envi-
ronmentalism. The Torah forbids
working directly with the earth
in the Holy Land, or profiting
from anything that grows during
the shmitah year. Shmitah-ob-
servers who stand to lose a year's
worth of livelihood get financial
assistance, spiritual guidance and
agricultural advice from a 42-

year-old organization, Keren
Hashvi'is, which has a Detroit
committee based in Southfield.
"It's a Shabbos for the earth,"
says Rabbi Baruch Borchard, ex-
ecutive director ofAgudath Israel
of America, the New York-based
umbrella organization for Keren
Hashvi'is. "The earth gets a rest."
This Rosh Hashanah marks
the end of the shmitah year 5754.
For the High Holy Days, the
Southfield organization, the De-
troit Committee ofRabbonim (rab-
bis), is intensifying efforts to help
Keren Hashvi'is help farmers with
fund-raising events, appeals to pri-
vate donors and mailings.
And, throughout this past
year, observant farmers could not
plow, sow, fertilize, or do anything
having to do with growing. Nei-

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In The New Year

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