THE NEXT BEST THING TO RESERVATIONS! Love Song A passionate story amid fields of flowering henna and rare fruit. ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM ASSOCIATE EDITOR REMODEL YOUR KITCHEN! INNOVATIVE DESIGN CUSTOM CABINETS FOR HOME OR OFFICE MANUFACTURED ON OUR PREMISES From concept to reality, our custom designs, expert craftsmanship and quality installation suit your specific needs. Our custom cabinets and furniture will enhance your surroundings. ithin a few years, Char- lotte Salomon produced 765 paintings. And the works were more than simply oil on canvas. They included captions and dia- logue and bits of music compris- ing a collection, still intact in Amsterdam, that chronicles a sin- gle life in an extraordinary time. (810) 624-7300 Showroom Hours: Monday-Friday 1 1-5, Saturday 1 1-3 or by appointment 3160 Haggerty Rd. • West Bloomfield • 48323 The Entire Staff Of VARSITY LINCOLN MERCURY Extend Best Wishes To The Entire Community For A Happy, Healthy Passover! VARSIT LINCOLN • MERCURY 49251 GRAND RIVER AT WIXOM RD., NOVI Directly Across From The Wixom Lincoln Plant (810) 305-5300 • 1-800-850-NOVI 110 -Y Cr (4.1# ■ .4 A Perfect Family Gift... A Subscription to the Jewish News. aAir• 810-354-6620 S usannah Heschel is more than a little uncomfortable when she enters some syn- agogues and hears the rab- bi use the word "Jew." She is certain she is not among those of whom the rabbi is speaking. For the rabbi, "Jew" means "male Jew," she writes. "When the rabbi speaks of women, he uses the expression (a translation from a tender Yiddish phrase) `Jewish daughter.' `Jew' speaks for itself. 'Jewish daughter' does not...`Jew' signi- fies adult responsibility. 'Daugh- ter' evokes immaturity and a dependent and subordinate con- nection." In a new reprint Charlotte's self- of On Being a portrait, 1941. Jewish Feminist Author Mary Lowenthal Felstiner. In To Paint Her Life (HarperCollins), Mary Lowenthal Felstiner tells the story of Char- lotte Salomon, a German-Jewish artist who died in Auschwitz. She was 26 years old. Born in 1917, Charlotte was the daughter of a physician. She was 16 when the Nazis came to power. Rather than be subjected to the Third Reich's regulations singling out Jews, she dropped out of school. She later emigrat- ed to France and in 1943 married Alexander Nagler, also a refugee. Five months after the wedding, the Gestapo sent both to Auschwitz. Charlotte and Alexander died in the gas cham- bers. Until now, little has been writ- ten about Charlotte Salomon. Now, in To Paint Her Life, Ms. Felstiner explores the artist's tragic family history (filled with suicide), her own pain (Charlotte vacillated between taking her own life or devoting it to art), her exile in southern France and the terror she felt as she began to re- alize her almost certain fate un- der Hitler. Ms. Felstiner spent 10 years researching the book, traveling to Europe and Israel and inter- viewing Charlotte's former class- mates, relatives and even those who had been on the same trans- port to Auschwitz. (Schocken), Ms. Heschel edits a col- lection of essays on Judaism and fem- inism, covering such topics as Jew- ish lesbianism, battered wives, liturgy and Jewish women in history. Her position: "Women's religious and social needs have been ne- glected, misrepresented, or simply ignored by the central texts that define Judaism" and went largely overlooked by the Jewish commu- nity itself until recent years (until the feminist movement). Yet Ms. Heschel, associate pro- fessor of Jewish studies at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, suggests such changes are minimal and may be only temporary. 'While their issues have clear- ly gained legitimacy, the mood among feminists is not entirely optimistic. Many women rabbis encounter prejudice, even dis- crimination, when they search for a job. Women who find greater equality in the syna- gogue often see more and more meaningful traditions eliminat- ed. Others feel frustrated that further efforts are not being made to radically rewrite the tra- ditional liturgy in order to rid it of sexism...Many feminists feel the movement is in a quiet pe- riod of retrenchment, recapitu- lating the gains of the past decade, articulating a program for the future, and responding to the challenges of their oppo- nents." Among the contributors to the book are Cynthia Ozick, Deborah Lipstadt, Judith Plaskow, Arthur Green and Lesley Hazelton.