liCnt Southfield resident Raquel Pomerantz Gershon knows that cutting a CD requires pie?, of hard work and a lucky raffle ticket. PHIL JACOBS EDITOR IF or Raquel Pomerantz Gershon, it came down to a raffle, a little bit of luck. She'll take it. Her dream was to cut a CD, pro- duce a record of songs she had writ- ten and had been singing for years. How many times had she heard oth- ers stamp out their music by the thousands? She knew she could be just as good, maybe better. The cost to produce a CD, though, was pro- hibitive. Then, last spring at the Hillel Day School annual dinner, Gershon dropped a $200 check in the school's raffle drawing. The result was $18,000 in prize money, and she was on her way to cutting Jerusalem On My Mind. "I had 10 songs written," said Gershon, her smile still intact with the memory of that night. "I had enough songs to do an album. All I need- ed was money. I was ready to beg or borrow. I was praying for it to fall from the sky. It did." The tape and CD, Jerusalem On My Mind, is now available at Jewish bookstores throughout metro Detroit. It is a sweet blend of the traditional to the upbeat. One of Gershon's songs, "Kol Yis- rael Arevim," was chosen as a finalist in the first annual American Zionist Movement's Songwrit- ing Competition. Raquel Gershon, the wife of Shaarey Zedek's Rab- bi William Gershon, has a father who is a rabbi and a sister who is a cantor. Indeed, Ms. Gershon herself is trained as a chazzan in the Conservative movement and has conducted High Holiday services. But there's more to this Southfield resident's taste in music — a great deal more. She jokes that if one were to analyze her music "personality," one would most likely find everything from classical to rock 'n' roll with some folk thrown in there as well. Her son Benji, 7, once told his Hillel classmates that he felt his mom was "as famous as the Beat- les." Would the Beatles have had such a remarkable family loud of Jewish song? Her dad, Rabbi Moshe Pomerantz, constantly brought Jewish song into their Seattle household. It was not unusual for Raquel, her parents and three siblings to work on harmonies and sing rounds. In recent years, she and her family have put their family rounds together in a recording studio. And the joke is, if one wants to marry into the family, he or she must audition. In the Pomerantz family, Friday night Kiddush was always sung in six-part har- mony. Rabbi Pomerantz, a violinist, played in local symphonies as a child and toyed with the idea of becoming a professional musician. Alisa Pomerantz-Boro, Raquel Gershon's younger sister, is a cantor at Congregation Tiferes Is- rael in San Diego. Her brother, Ari, works for MTV's on-line department, and plays the gui- tar and writes his own music. Brother Joey plays the trumpet, and he's a chef. Her mom, Kay Pomerantz, is a Jewish educator and an author. She's written three cookbooks, Come For Cholent, Come For Cholent ain' and Come For Everything But Cholent. r•-/