SALE prepares for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. Although Zev ad- mits that blowing the shofar is "hard work," he says it's his fa- vorite part of the holiday. It's supposed to remind us of great events in Jewish history and make us think about the impor- tance of being good Jews. Jews believe that everybody was creat- ed in God's image and each of us deserves dignity and respect. Ms. Brown also is the author of Hello Amigos! and Chinese New Year. Mr. Kobre, whose work has appeared in Time and Rolling Stone, teaches at San Francisco State University. H man, friends said, did not believe in an afterlife. 16 1 armor was a mere 3 years old when he realized he was "divine." He liked to act out the story of Exodus, starring himself as the burning bush. A few years later, he an- nounced, "I'm a genius." By the time he was an adult, Junior became convinced he was the messiah. He christened him- self Yahweh Ben Yahweh and es- tablished an inner-city Black Hebrew cult that murdered, stole and amassed $100 million in real- estate holdings. Pulitzer Prize winning jour- nalist Sydney P. Freedberg chronicles the unusual journ.ey of Yahweh Ben Yahweh in the new Brother Love: Murder, Mon- ey and a Messiah (Pantheon). He was born Hulon Mitchell Jr., and was first called Junior. Later, he would take a variety of names for himself, including Hu- lon X, Hulon Shah, Father Michel, Brother Love, Moses Is- rael, Emmanuel, Och (brother) e was the ultimate swinger. In Swing, Swing, Swing (Norton), Ross Firestone tells the story of jazz legend Benny Good- man, a man raised in a Chicago ghetto who became a high-soci- ety figure whom the author de- scribes as "a truly original, undeniably American artist." Benjamin David Goodman was the ninth of 12 children born to Dora and David Goodman, a tailor. They lived in a base- ment and always were struggling for money. Sometimes the Good- mans had rolls and cof- fee for breakfast; other times it was nothing. Benny started play- ing the clarinet when he was 10. He took lessons at Hull House, a kind of social center established to help way- ward boys in the neigh- borhood. His practicing was incessant — a trait he would continue throughout his life. In Swing, Swing, Swing, Mr. Firestone traces Mr. Goodman's path from Hull House to Hollywood, where he had the reputation of being a talented, if Sydney P. Freedberg: A criminal named Yahweh, rather quirky, musician Junior, Brother Love. who had no patience for players who didn't keep his beat. Moshe Israel and finally Yahweh When the phrasing was off or Ben Yahweh (God, the son of the intonation a little shaky, Ben- God). ny had a habit of peering over his Mitchell's first temple was in glasses with a look of such icy dis- a Florida warehouse. He called it belief that it could make strong the Temple of Love. It was deco- men tremble. Someone, possibly rated sparsely, though pictures trombonist Murray McEach- of and references to the group's ern...was reminded of the "Paral- leader were everywhere. ysis Ray" in the Little Orphan "Life is better with Yahweh," Annie comic strip and started us- one sign read. And just in case ing the term for the formidable anyone thought life elsewhere Goodman stare. The term caught might be better, a select group of on, and "the Ray" took its place henchmen, the Circle of Ten, was alongside such other mystifying there to assure followers it was idiosyncrasies as Benny's endless not. quest for the perfect reed and his Mitchell amassed both support inability to remember his side- (Louis Farrakhan labeled him "a men's names. builder" and asked God's bless- Mr. Goodman died of a heart ing for "Yahweh Ben Yahweh, for attack in 1986, without a thought we know that the government is of bringing his winging sound to that Big Band in the sky. Good- ODYSSEY page 90 The Best of Fall Merchandise 40 - 50% Off AIDAKIA 722 North Woodward Avenue Birmingham, Michigan 48009 810-258-5018 Out With The OLD, In With The NEW... ALL COCKTAIL DRESSES 30% OFF PERFECT FOR NEW YEAR'S (THRU 12/31/94) Previous Sales and Layaways Excluded Applegate Square • Southfield • 354-4560