"She has taken us from a mom-and pop organization to the forefront." Gad Stewart THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS in the rented room and both the former Soviet Union. Ini- Above: Ms. Shallal worked at the grocery store. tially, because he was a for- makes time for Ms. Shallal's oldest sister came individual meetings eigner and Ms. Shallal was next. All three worked in the with group-home assimilating into American cul- residents. store. Within six years of his ar- ture, she wanted nothing to do rival, her father had the entire with him. Mr. Ayzin pursued family here; eventually, the her and she finally agreed to go family was able to open its own out with him once. They dated Below: Ms. Shallal store. for three years and married in listens to home During her early adult years, 1983. manager Beverly Ms. Shallal began dating a Their children Eric, 12, and Steward. Jewish man named Boris Mark, 8, are being exposed to Ayzin. both backgrounds. With the help of Jewish "In our family, it was ex- Family Service, Mr. Ayzin had immi- pected that we marry within our culture, grated to the United States in 1976 from Ms. Shallal said. "My mom disowned me until my children were born. The fact that [my husband] was Jewish was a big part of the family not wanting me to marry him. We lived in a Muslim-dominated country, so my parents were influenced by the anti-Israeli sentiment." Ms. Shallal comes from a family and culture where arranged marriages are not uncommon. Her parents first met on their wedding day. Her father was in his late 20s and her mother was barely 13. A year later, their first child was born. When Ms. Shallal's father died at the age of 61, he and his wife had been married 33 years. All of the 10 Shallal children grew up to become professionals. They include physicians, attorneys and an interior dec- orator. Some have done more unusual work. Ms. Shallal's brother was once the Reebok aerobics champion, and her sis- ter Jane is a past president of the Chaldean Federation. "Our parents valued education," Ms. Shallal said. "All of us have at least an undergraduate degree." With the exception of two out-of-state brothers, the family still lives within a five-mile radius of each other and see one another often. By the time Ms. Shallal was 14, she knew she wanted to go into counseling. "I think I'm a natural therapist," she said. "I have a knack for being able to help people." Ms. Shallal attended Mercy College, majoring in psychology. She went on to earn a master's degree in social work from Wayne State University. Two days after her graduation from Wayne, she went to work for Catholic So- cial Services of Wayne County. She spent the next 16 years there in various posi- tions, first as a family youth therapist and a social worker in two Detroit Catholic schools. A promotion after two years moved her to a supervisory posi- tion. The next 14 years were spent su- pervising the agency's teen mothers program, and later the adoption program. After nearly two decades with the same agency, Ms. Shallal believed it was time to move on. One of her former pro- fessors told her of a job opening at Jew- ish Family Service. The job fit her background and qualifications, and she was hired to supervise the agency's fi- nancial assistance, clinical staff and child- welfare programs. Ms. Shallal left JFS after a supervisor gave her name to Kadima, which was looking for an executive director. Because Ms. Shallal wasn't Jewish, the board deliberated on whether it felt a Jewish director was necessary for the primarily Jewish agency. In the end, board members decided religion didn't matter as much as qualifications. "Because I'm not Jewish, I didn't think I would be hired, even though I am ori- ented to Jewish culture," Ms. Shallal said. "I like working in the Jewish communi- ty. When critical issues come up, you can usually get someone to help. To me, that's a miracle. That doesn't happen in a lot of communities. It's exciting to see people who care for one another." Shallal's schedule is consistently interrupted by emergencies, like meet- ing with a young woman who is mental- ly ill, pregnant and homeless. Eventually, the agency found the woman an apart-