INSIDE: FAMILY/ WITH SCHOOL BEGINNING, THE PRESSURE IS ON; NEXT GENERATION/ AN APPOINTMENT BOOK IS FILLED WITH JEWISH MEN. 75¢ DETROIT THE JEWISH NEWS 29 AV 5755 / AUGUST 25, 1995 Shabbat In Beijing Local Jewish women head to China for a worldwide women's conference. JULIE EDGAR STAFF WRITER PHOTOS BY GL ENN TR IEST I Building A Dream A building is erected in less than a year. Shir Shalom's dedication marks a new beginning for a growing temple. I JENNIFER FINER STAFF WRITER emple Shir Shalom's first Torah, a do- nation from an anonymous Holocaust survivor who smuggled it out of Germany in a wedding gown, will take another unusual journey. On Sunday, it will be removed from the temple's ark in a West Bloomfield office build- ing. It will be passed 5,280 feet through the hands of temple and community members participat- ing in the congregation's dedication of its new building. "No one will feel too far away from the Torah." — Rabbi Dannel Schwartz At the end of the human chain the holy scroll, along with the temple's four others, will be placed at another Shir Shalom address, the newly con- structed temple at the corner of Orchard Lake and Walnut Lake roads. The symbolic passing of the Torah up the one- mile stretch of Orchard Lake Road represents more than just a move from one building to an- other. "We want to bring everyone to the Torah, just as we want them to be a part of the tangible pro- cess of taking them to our new home," said Rabbi Michael Moskowitz, who will join Rabbi Dannel Schwartz on the bimah. Sunday's dedication comes 364 days after hun- dreds of temple members gathered to break ground on what used to be farmland, once in- habited by sheep. Several years ago, Rabbi Schwartz told his congregation: "We should be willing to design our building as a whole, understanding its costs and its plan as a whole and constructing it in stages. But be proud of what we do rather than just get it over with." Shir Shalom's design symbolizes what's im- portant to its congregants. The building is in- tended to look like an unraveling Torah scroll, although a future expansion stage will add the second roll to the scroll. Inside the building, which was designed by the architectural firm of Neumann and Smith, the entrance will soon house a series of stained-glass windows with murals depicting the Jewish hol- idays. The area will honor the late Wally Sampson, the immediate past president of Shir Shalom who died last year. • The temple's sanctuary is designed to make a few hundred people feel close to the bimah. For larger crowds, a wall can be opened, exposing the social hall and adding seating for an additional 1,300. Upstairs, opening another wall reveals sev- en classrooms built so that chairs may sit on ris- ers to overlook the sanctuary, to allow for total seating of up to 2,000. CONTINUED ON PAGE 14 hey've been warned not to wear "Free Harry Wu" T-shirts. And they'd best not hang around Tiananmen Square except to eat noodles and pose for snapshots. But their mere presence in Beijing and Huairou next week for the fourth United Nations World Conference on Women and the Non-Governmental Organizations' Forum '95 (NGO) will most certainly as- sure the locals that they are dead-serious about addressing human rights worldwide. Tens of thousands of worn- en, including some 90 from the Detroit area, will converge on China for the forum and some, like Fern Katz of Southfield, will stay for the UN portion. The two weeks will feature workshops and lectures that ad- Fern Katz dress women's issues ranging from birth control to economic empow- the capital. Scattered on her desk are envelopes, faxes and other erment. When she was asked just a few items of a world traveler packing months ago to attend the confer- an agenda. Language won't be too much of ences as one of two delegates of a barrier, she hopes, because she the National Council of Jewish Women, Ms. Katz started a gave up on learning Mandarin al- "China" file in her home office. most from the get-go. "I have a tape. Forget it," she Today, the folder brims with laughed. brochures, itineraries and a thick Ms. Katz, 67, left today for booklet on how to avoid irritating the local police inside or outside BEIGING page 8 Elizabeth Berkley's driving ambition and unforgiving determi- nation have led her from the halls of Miss Barbara's Dance Centre to the doorstep of Hollywood success with her new film, Showgirls. JILL DAVIDSON SKLAR Story on page 39 STAFF WRITER FROM TAP TO LAP