that the Council circulated the letter, saying the signature of Rabbi Berel Brody was fake. He was not sure where the letter originated. Rabbi Elimelech Silberberg of Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield also said the Vaad had done everything possible to keep the eatery open. "We bent over backward to keep a full-service restaurant," Rabbi Silberberg said, adding that the Vaad didn't charge Mr. Goodman for supervision services and circulated its own letter stat- ing the place was in fact kosher. The late Al Rosenberg of Rosenberg Catering at Adat Shalom Synagogue blamed the Vaad for the closing of his restau- rant in the 1960s. While the restaurant had the Vaad's ap- proval, none of the members would patronize it or recommend it to their congregants. fc1 begged the rabbis to come in, to just sit at a table, and they said no," Mr. Rosenberg told a re- porter the year before he died. `They said that first the common man would have to come and then the ba'al teshuvah (newly religious Jews) and then [they would] come." The Vaad never made it, he said. The restaurant closed with- in a month. Outside the arguable issue of support, owners say they would have to attract a larger clientele such as gentiles and the nonkosher Jewish population to break even. Ken Hechtman, owner of Ken's Diner and Bugsy's Place in Skok- ie, Ill., said operating a kosher restaurant in the Detroit area is a difficult proposition. "To have a successful kosher restaurant, you have to look for more than just a Jewish popu- lation," said Mr. Hechtman, adding that 40 percent of his business is out-of-towners. "The transient business in Detroit is not like anywhere else. People don't come to Detroit on vaca- tion." After losing more than $250,000 on the recently closed Classic Coney Island, Steve Ra- binowitz couldn't agree more. Al- tion to $1,200 a year for supervi- though he was able to attract a sion from the MKC, she also had great deal of Jews from the area to pay the mashgiach $7 an hour as well as a lesser number of gen- for each hour she was operating. tiles, he depended on the out-of- That increased operating costs town traffic. by almost $20,000 a year. "A lot of my patronage was from people coming through the city on business," he said. "And there weren't a lot of them." One burden for kosher restaurants and other food- service industries is the larg- er cost of operating a kosher business. Food prices can be twice to three times the equivalent of a nonkosher brand; treife meat is signifi- cantly cheaper than the same cuts of kosher meat. Add to this the cost of su- pervision charged by the Vaad Morris Goodman said the lack of Vaad support or the Metropolitan Kashruth crushed his business. Council headed by Rabbi Jack "If you add up the days you are Goldman, as well as the salaries closed, [the total is] more than for the mashgiach, an on-the-spot two months of the year. On top of that, you have to pay higher food kashrut supervisor. For Shirlee Bloom, owner of prices, you have to pay for a Bloom's Catering, supervision mashgiach, you have to pay for was a high price to pay. In addi- supervision. Who wants to do - '97 SEBRING CO VERTIBLE JX PHOTO BY G LENN TR IEST THE PAST page 19 that?" said Ms. Bloom, who now operates an uncertified kosher catering business. Because of those additional costs, owners find themselves grumbling about having to charge the customers more, thereby reducing their chances of attracting nonkosher clientele. But the kosher-keeping con- sumers were not happy with the service they received, either. Owners of some local kosher es- tablishments reported hearing complaints about menu items with high-fat content, small por- tions, high prices, dirty places of business and poor selections. Owners also said young people and observant families with many children may have prob- lems eating out where food is costly. "Young people today who are trying to be kosher have to move away from it sometimes, " Ms. Bloom said. "If it has that stamp of approval, it costs twice or three times more. Naturally we have to charge more, and people don't want to pay." ❑ P.Y.O.P. Paint Your Own Pottery Moth Employee Lease * Acquisition Fee Destination Charge SecurffV15 Deposit . 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