100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

January 10, 1997 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-01-10

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE JEWISH NEWS

UP FRONT

This Week's Top Stories

Three-Peat!

Dues And Don'ts

Few area congregations agree to provide their
membership fees.

The teen-age JCC Macdabi Games are coming back to Detroit
in the summer of 1998.

MARA REINSTEIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

T

he assignment: Call the
synagogues and temples
listed in The Jewish News,
ask them to fax over their
membership fee structures and
then publish them in an infor-
mational article as a service to
the Jewish community.
But out of the 47 congrega-
tions in metro Detroit, only sev-
en provided membership fee
structures (in addition to one
listed over the World Wide
Web). Eleven congregations nev-
er returned phone calls and six
didn't supply any information.
The range of annual fees fol-
lows, with a caveat: Each con-
gregation noted that its
membership dues are not
"carved in stone."

ALAN HITSKY ASSOCIATE EDITOR

I

Beth Abraham Hillel Moses,
West Bloomfield: Family

member fees range from $550-
$1,100. Single member fees
range from $275-$550. Fees
vary according to age.

Beth Achim, Southfield:

Family membership fee is $940.
Single member fee is $630. Re-
duced rates for members under
35. Special for new members:
two years for the price of one,
plus $100.

PHOTO BY GLENN TRIE

Birmingham Temple, Farm-
ington Hills. Fees for members

Above: Warming up for
Maccabi gymnastics.

Left: Opening ceremonies
in Baltimore, 1992.

PHOTO BY C RAIG TER KOWITZ

he Detroit Jewish
community has been
chosen to restage its
largest Jewish com-
munal event of the 1990s —
the Jewish Community
Centers North American
Maccabi Youth Games —in
August 1998.
The event will build on
Detroit's experience in Au-
gust 1990, when the Jewish
community hosted 2,200
teen-aged Jewish athletes
from around the world. The
awarding of the games to
Detroit marks the first time
in the 15-year history of the
JCC Maccabi Games that a
city has hosted the bienni-
al North American event
three times. Detroit also
hosted in 1984.
In 1990, Detroit placed
the visiting teen-agers in
1,000 Jewish homes, and
thousands of volunteers
helped the Detroit Maccabi
Club and the Jewish Com-
munity Center sponsor ath-
letic competitions in 16
sports, as well as nightly so-
cial and cultural events for
the visitors.
Detroit JCC Executive
Director David Sorkin said
many of the leaders of the
1990 event have volun-
teered for the 1998 games.
Maccabi Club and JCC
board member Jay Robin-
son and Maccabi Club Pres-
ident Dr. Alan Horowitz
will be general chairs in '98.
Both played major roles in 1990
and 1984.
Honorary chairs for the event
will be Bill Davidson, Robert Sos-
nick, David Hermelin and Sam
Frankel, with the Davidson-Sos-
nick-Hermelin-owned Palace of
Auburn Hills already slated for
the Maccabi Games opening cer-
emonies Aug. 17, 1998.
While the games are 20
months away, the JCC is hoping
to open a Maccabi Games office
by the end of January. "It takes
time," said the JCC's Mr. Sorkin,
"to find the venues, the hotel
space, the sponsorships."
Mr. Robinson estimates De-
troit could host 2,700-3,000 ath-
MACCABI page 20

over 31 range from $200-$1,085.
Fees for members under 31
range from $220-$325. The fee
for students under 25 is $65.

Congregation Shir Tikvah,
Troy: Couples fee (where the

home contains two adults with
at least one between age 30-65)
is $840. Singles fee for members
over 30 is $580. The fee for mem-
bers under 30 is $265 (single)
and $390 (couple). If married,
both must be under 30. The se-
niors fee for members over 65 is
$490 (couple) and $360 (single).

Regular membership fee scale
is $300 per year.

Adat Shalom Synagogue,

Farmington Hills. The fees for
members aged 32 and over is
$1,100. The fee for members un-
der 32 is $550.

The following congregations ex-
plained why they declined to
have their fees published:

Congregation Shaarey

Zedek, Southfield: 'This [list-
ing the fees] isn't the way to ap-
proach it because it doesn't give
an understanding of what we
offer. Our costs are much more
extensive because of extra ser-
vices."
— Leonard Baruch,
executive director.

Temple Israel, West Bloom-
field: "We have 250 different

fees. It's all based on fair share,
so whatever they can afford,
they pay."
— Sara Goldberg,
bookkeeper.

Temple Beth meth, Arm Ar-
bor: "It's a 2-percent fair share,

so the fees depend on the income
of the family."
— Ronnie Simon,
executive administrator.

Bais Chabad of Farmington
Hills: "We have a very loose fee

structure. Nobody has ever been
turned away for financial rea-
sons. "
— Rabbi Chaim Bergstein.

Machon L'Torah, Oak Park:

"We are a learning center insti-
tution that survives on contri-
butions and fund-raisers. No
members donate a specific fee."
— Dr. Edward Hurvitz,
Gabbai.

Young Israel of Oak Park:

Regular fees for all ages range
from $133-$453. The first year
new member fee is $148 (single)
and $278 (family).

Or Chadash, Oak Park: "We
have no membership fees, be-
cause when there are fees, it's
inevitable that people who give
more money get more respect."
— Ed Codish,
husband of Or Chadash
President Susann Codish.

Isaac Agree Downtown Syn-
agogue, Detroit: Regular

Shaar Hashomayim, Oak
Park: 'We ask everybody to as-

membership fees range from
$60-$100.

Huntington Woods Minyan:

sess themselves. Usually we ex-
pect 1-10 percent of their gross
income, but it varies."
— Betzalel Folk, rabbi.



Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan