PHOTOS BY BILL HANSEN Scattering Blessings Adam Milgrom's bar mitzvah. party was pretty corny. JULIE EDGAR SENIOR WRITER A dam Milgrom knew it would be fun, but he had no idea if his friends would think so. At least they were curious: Very few turned down his bar mitzvah party invita- tion. Last Saturday, 55 friends, plus a smattering of parents, boarded a rented bus and headed for Gleaners Community Food Bank in Detroit, where they sorted and packaged corn and other foodstuffs that will be distributed to some of the more than 300 agencies the food bank serves in the Detroit area. After they organized themselves in assembly line order, the teens seemed to really like the work, said Adam's mother, Susie Sills Milgrom. "They were very pumped up. I didn't see one kid who did not get into it," she said. After a few hours at Gleaners, the group re- boarded the bus and headed for Camp Tamarack in Ortonville for a daylong adventure that includ- ed a ropes course and other skills-sharpening ex- ercises. Dinner, Havdalah and dancing followed. The guests got home around midnight. Adam, whose bar mitzvah was held March 8 at Congregation Shaarey Zedek B'nai Israel Cen- ter, said his mom gave him the idea for the vol- unteer party. The entire family — Adam's mom, three sisters and father Steven — had worked at Gleaners through Volunteer Impact, a private ser- vice corps that provides volunteers to several hun- dred agencies in the metro area. "I had a lot of fun then," said Adam, a seventh- grader at the Birmingham Covington School. "Then my mom mentioned to us that it might be a good idea. I thought it would bring out more of the mean- ing of being a bar mitzvah than reading your stuff and having a party." Steve Milgrom said when he and his wife took their family to Gleaners the first time, the children were surprised by the amount of surplus food that would be wasted without food banks like Glean- ers. Then they saw people picking out even bad surplus food from a Dumpster. "It was really an eye-opener for them," Mr. Mil- grom said. Volunteer Impact founder Elizabeth Kanter Groskind said her organization is beginning to tap into the rich vein of potential volunteers among the young and reaching out to synagogues that may be interested in a different kind of mitzvah pro- gram. "Our whole push for the last year or so has been for families to volunteer together and get the kids involved," she said. "It's clear if we don't get kids involved in the community mindset early on, we never will." El Bar mitzvah boy Adam Milgrom packs corn. N OW OPE N We're making a point of letting you know n A D A O HARDWARE is ready to serve you in West Uloomfield Orchard Lake at Lone Pine in the Crosswinds Mall • • • • • PLUMBING & HEATING ELECTRICAL • TOOLS LAWN & GARDEN PAINT • AUTOMOTIVE HOUSEWARES OPEN 9-9 • SATURDAY 8-9 SUNDAY 9-5 • 810-626-5860 Showroom Hours: Monday-Friday 11-5 • Saturday 11-3 • by appointment 3160 Haggerty Rd. • West Bloomfield • 48323 • 810-624-7300 0 • 01, • 0,