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September 09, 1994 - Image 19

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

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

L.L'94

Ernest Hemingway ■ Leo Tolstoy ■ John Keats
Vicent Van Gogh ■ Vivien Leigh ■ Michelangelo
Edgar Allen Poe ■ Abraham Lincoln ■ Sylvia Plath
Charles Dickens ■ Robert Schumann ■ Beethoven
Winston Churchill ■ Isaac Newton ■ Virginia Woolf

People with mental illness enrich our world
Kadima '94 * "A Taste of Jazz"

An evening to benefit

Kadima

featuring world renowned trumpet player

Marcus Belgrave & Friends

plus Jimmy Johnson & Groove

Delectable Edibles

from local area restauranteurs

Thursday, September 29

7:00 p.m.

Royal Oak Music Theater

318 W. Fourth Strret • Royal Oak, Michigan

Kadima is a non-profit, nonsectarian
agency offering residential counseling
and supported employment services to
adults with psychiatric disabilities.

Beginning an exodus to Israel.

for 16-year-old Shana Salinger of
Southfield was arriving on the
beach in Haifa and "trying to es-
cape from the British."
"Parts of what we did really
seemed real," Ms. Salinger said.
"When we got to Israel, there
were two boats in the water and
a plane overhead and everyone
gathered on the deck and start-
ed singing and dancing."
The boats and the plane, as
part of the re-enactment, dropped
flyers on the Exodus and broad-
cast messages telling the ship it

"This experience
made me look at
Israel much
differently."

— Rob Yost

was not welcome. Once in Israel,
the "immigrant" teens were tak-
en to a British detention camp,
which they managed to escape.
`Phis experience made me look
at Israel much differently," Mr.
Yost said. "In Italy we saw a lot
of anti-Semitism. When we were
there, they were in the middle of
an election, we saw warnings for
the Jews, and we saw swastikas.
In Israel, I felt comfortable and
safe. That was the biggest con-

trast."
Dana Aronson, 15, of Ann
Arbor, said arriving by way of the
Exodus '94 was exciting because
the re-creation made the journey
easier to imagine. Li

Correction

The following question and
answer appeared incorrectly
in last week's "Tell Me Why."
Q: How long does one need
to wait before consuming
meat after eating dairy foods?
A: According to the Tal-
mud, one may eat meat im-
mediately after dairy —
provided he rinses his mouth
and eats bread.
The Mishna Brura, a ma-
jor source of Jewish legal in-
terpretation, comments that
on the holiday of Shavuot,
when it is customary to eat
dairy foods, there was a prac-
tice to have a dairy appetizer
followed by a meat meal.
The length of time between
the eating of meat and dairy
varies among Jewish com-
munities. The six-hour wait is
common to eastern European
Jews, while most western Eu-
ropean Jews wait three hours,
and Dutch Jews wait one
hour.

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