our society, you are allowed to pick and choose. With Amway, you pick and choose," Ms. Kartaginer remarked. Dr. Handelsman also is unfazed by the occasional "Praise the Lord" refrain either at a meeting or on a motivation- al tape. "My feeling is, so what? Jews have be- liefs. You take what's useful to you," he said. "Our uplines have told us they don't want us to change our beliefs." Yet, he finds his involvement in Amway to be "really spiritual. When you leave yourself behind and give others the help they need, you get back ten- fold," Dr. Handelsman said. Karen Kahn said Amway, by its na- ture, is welcoming to anyone willing to give it a try. "The people we're working with have been incredibly receptive to the fact that there are Jewish people. You can't build this business not wanting to welcome all kinds of people. You have to be ac- cepting of all different types," she said. Her husband goes frther: He believes that the increasing presence of Jews in Amway has opened hearts and minds. Jews, he said, have "educated the mass" about Judaism. But the company's reputation wor- ried him at first. So, he called Richard Lobenthal, former director of the Michi- gan Anti-Defamation League. Mr. Lobenthal found no file on the compa- ny. Then Dr. Kahn, a member of Con- gregation Shaarey Zedek, called Rabbi Reisel, whose photograph he had seen in the AMAGRAM. The Orthodox rab- bi said he and his family plan to make aliyah — thanks to their Amway earn- ings. That Mr. Van Andel and Mr. DeVos support a political agenda that is heav- ily influenced by born-again Christian theology does not bother Dr. Kahn or Dr. Handelsman. "It doesn't bother me where Amway money goes. I see it as a vehicle for me and my family. This will allow me to be more charitable," Dr. Handelsman said. Dr. Kahn, likewise, said his greater financial security vis-a-vis Amway will enable him to give more money to Jew- ish charities like the United Jewish Ap- peal. That tzedakah, however, will never be as much as Amway gives to organi- zations like Campus Crusade for Christ, a "missionizing" group founded by Mr. DeVos and Amway honcho Bill Bright. Campus Crusade for Christ works close- ly with Jews for Jesus, said Mark Pow- ers, director of the Baltimore-based Jews for Judaism. Mr. Powers has received many phone calls from Jewish college students who have been "hit on" by representatives of Campus Crusade. "I really don't care how many Jews get involved in this and say they'll be able to contribute to Jewish causes," he said. "There's more money going to Campus Crusade and other missions wholly owned by [Mr. Van Andel and Mr. DeVos] than all the Jewish money involved in this whatsoever. "My question is, what is the value of a Jewish life? Are your dreams more im- portant? Any money they can contribute cannot possibly offset the amount of money and damage done by the money that goes to these missionary organiza- tions," Mr. Powers said. In her 1989 book Spiritual Warfare, The Politics Of The Christian Right, Sara Diamond writes that Mr. DeVos and Mr. Bright were among the finan- cial backers of Third Century Publish- ers, which was "established for the purpose of promoting books and study guides designed to link a comprehen- ciety where there is a mix, they'll tone it down somewhat, but they never lose the feeling," he said. "People become very spiritually connected to the com- pany." Small and big Amway functions, which some describe as more revivalist than corporate in tone, generally be- gin with a prayer. Nowadays, however, the speaker might mention Abraham, Isaac and Jacob in the invocation, along with Jesus, said Amway distributor Ter- ry Weingarden. Jonathan Jacobs noted that a speak- er will invoke "Judeo-Christian" values rather than just Christian ones during a prayer opening an Amway meeting. It makes him feel neither better nor worse about the company. "In some seminars you hear the word `Jesus'; at others you don't. Sometimes you do during personal testimonials. "In Amway, there's no MOM anymore." David Kahn sive conservative political agenda with born-again Christianity." David Kahn (not related to Joel), a network marketing consultant who op- erates A.D. Kahn Incorporated in South- field, said Amway's Christian orientation "has worked well for them." Many network marketing companies, in fact, use religion to pump up their dis- tributors. "It's all 'Praise the Lord, thank Jesus for that.' In a more heterogeneous so- If that individual has had some spiri- tual feeling along the way and wants to mention it, it's [his] right to do it," Mr. Jacobs said. It is no secret that Mr. DeVos and Mr. Van Andel "are strong in their belief of Dutch Christian values," he continued. "They feel there's a higher power that rules their life. It's semantics whether they call him 'Jesus' or we call Him God." LI An Old Ship A network marketing consultant says Amway isn't the way to go to make money. JULIE EDGAR SENIOR WRITER D avid Kahn compares Amway to a huge luxury liner — it moves real slow. At 37 years old, the Ada, Mi.- based company has been around so long, the public consciousness is at the satura- tion point, said the network marketing consultant. "In Amway, there's no room anymore. You run out of people. Ask 10 neighbors if they've been exposed to Amway and they'll say they have, and weren't interested. Only the doors in the Far East are still open. It has nothing to do with the quality of the company," Mr. Kahn said, adding that the big wheels in Amway who have made mil- lions — staple inspirational figures like Dexter Yager — built their networks when the company was young. "I can't tell you how many Amway distributors fall off," he continued. "They just don't make enough money, they lose friends. And this is indigenous to Amway. Amway is such a mainstay of the industry that when people invite you to a meeting they won't tell you it's an Amway meeting." Furthermore, distributors, unless they can sign up dozens of people, cannot hope to make much money. Based on calculations of Amway's revenues last year ($6.8 bil- lion), the number of its dis- tributors (2.5 million), their volume and their profit mar- gin, Mr. Kahn figured the av- erage monthly earnings amount to $39. Plus, he added, Amway products are actually more expensive than what's on the shelves in local stores. "Amway does have a zealous attitude about its own company. That's why you'll have distributors sign up and buy in the Amway catalogue just to participate. In reality, if they got off their tail and went to the store, they'd be able to buy in the store what they bought for more." ❑