go JOIN US AT THE FLEISCHMAN RESIDENCE for the best cycle of your life! U rainia City urtures Jewishness VITAL LOURIA HAHN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS 0 wily Sh 1219a -t & Holiday Srvices in our Synagogue aytime nd Evening kcpvities ation, Laundre.,, Housekeeping gistered Nurse &Yerson\al Care Assistance Nosh Nook, Gift 5 Op, Beau t y/Barber Shop Three Kosher Meals Daily Medication Assistance Health Clinic Around the Clock Security Respite & Gues ooms Available / or N ore Information, pie9se Contact: ti CAROL ROSENBERG ADMINISTRATOR FLEISCHMAN RESIDENCE/13LUME3ERG PLAZA 6710 W. MAPLE ROAD, WEST BLOOMFIELD, (810) 661-2999 (LOCATED ON THE JEWISH COMMUNITY CAMPUS) Since 1986 STEVEN TARNOW PREFERRED BUILDING CO. Additions Kitchens • Bathrooms Remodeling Building Quality Into Every Project With Unmatched Personal Service. NA RI T HE DETRO NATIONAL ASSOCIA nos OF TIIE REMODELING INDUSTRY 18 810-626-5603 . .1 ■ 11 ■ 111111•11•• CPR can keep your love alive Fighting Heart Disease and Stroke the inescapable paradox of Jew- ish life emerged: the impulse, nurtured by people like Rabbi Baksht and groups like the American Jewish Joint Distrib- ution Committee, to continue the immense task of rebuilding Jew- ish life and instilling Jewish iden- tity; and the one, nurtured by the Jewish Agency, to encourage aliyah to Israel. Mission member Kenneth Cowin, managing director at Bear Stearns, wondered "if it's really in our interest to send everyone to Israel in a place where anti-Semi- tism is tolerable. Perhaps there is a future for some of them here." Indeed, Odessa has a Jewish may- or. And Jews no longer hide their religion as they did during communism. There now are two synagogues: Rabbi Baksht's Odessa Main Syna- gogue, and the Brodsky Syna- gogue. Before communism there were 14; during communism just one, to serve port workers. But the Nachlat Eliezer Synagogue collapsed several years ago from water damage to its foundation. Jewish groups have organized a highly praised Jewish library that is part of the Odessa system. In small but tangible ways, Jewish life is being nurtured through a network of agencies that tend to the elderly, support an orphanage, run programs for children and operate a vibrant aliyah youth club. Gemilut Chessed is one such active welfare program. Run by the JDC, it supplies for the el- derly hot meals, activities, home care. In a sunlit one-story building, a group of elderly ladies sang in Yiddish, and children from a 'Hood reds emig rate I to Is rael. Detroit Jewish News is now offering FREE personal ad placement. People•Voice Licensed & Insured American Heart Association. It's A Free Country. Now placing a Personal Ad is too. (Free) dessa, Ukraine — Rabbi Shlomo Baksht is trYing to jump start Jewish life in this faded city — on lost young soul at a time. A 37-year-old from Jerusalem, the red-bearded Rabbi Baksht founded the Jewish Children's Home last fall when he discov- ered that an estimated 300, Jew- ish children in south Ukraine were either orphaned or aban- doned. Economic hardship, com- bined with drug and alcohol abuse, drove scores of parents to abandon youngsters, he says. The rabbi, who loves to hug his lit- tle charges, says he has rescued dozens of kids from the streets. Others are from state institu- tions where, he says, they receive one meal a day and are baptized by missionar- ies. He now has 44 children, and says several hundred more need help. One is Avram, 11, who lived in a state orphanage after his par- ents abandoned him. He now gets food, love — and soon a bar mitzvah. He already recites the Shema. Yet when his prayerbook falls on the floor accidentally, he sometimes crosses himself in- stinctively. Rabbi Baksht, who has been in Odessa for four years and is affiliated with the Israel-based Ohr Sameach Yeshiva, says that "after I negotiate with the gov- ernment for an orphanage li- cense, I hope to get these children to Israel in a few years." The rabbi's Jewish Children's Home was one stop on a recent 10-day mission to Ukraine and Israel by the UJA-Federation of New York. At nearly every stop in Odessa, home to some 50,000 Jews, and throughout Ukraine, onnector sii1.4.1c(cso To place a free ad, call 1.800.881.8290 You must be 18 or older. A JDC staffer reads a book about Shabbat to orphans in Odessa.