20 % off everyday 20 % off everyday 20% FAMILY page 3 and an ever changing selection' of outstanding hand crafted items for yourself, your home, and gift giving LOCATED IN THE ORCHARD MALL 6385 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD AT MAPLE WEST BLOOMFIELD MI 48322 810.855.4488 MONDAY - TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY FRIDAY - SATURDAY 10 AM - 5:30 PM THURSDAY 10 AM - 8 PM and gallery ITEMS UNDER $25 EXCLUDED. •tireto- Oaf:exaft •,ireca-dtenw •tirett SEE FOR YOURSELF WHAT JEWISH METRO DETROIT IS TALKING ABOUT Frig Congregotion Beth Achi-n 2,103W. l.. 0.e ;b., Beth Abraham NM Moses Scuinl......ricocr.80/6 B'nai Moshe I 810-932-3766 810-357-2910 810-788-0950 Jmish Jewish Community Center 810-661-5151 Under Supervision of the Council of Orthodox Rabbis on their family members for such support, the community will most likely foot the bill. "Many of these people don't have family members they can count on to help them," Mr. Isaacs said. "Multiply 300 times the $600 a month they are get- ting and that is what the com- munity will have to come up with." "The way I look at it is that we are bringing in a family unit and we help support them as a humanitarian measure," he said. "As I see it, we should take down the Emma Lazarus poem at the foot of the Statue of Liberty," he said, quoting lines from The New Colossus, which states, " 'Keep ancient lands, your storied pomp!' cries she with silent lips. 'Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free. The wretched refuse of your teeming shore, send these, the tempest-tost to me. I lift my lamp beside the golden door!' " "We really don't mean them anymore if we are going to do this to these people," Mr. Isaacs said. To battle the measures, Fed- eration has joined others repre- senting ethnic or religious groups to ask legislators to re- consider. So far, some ground has been made up but only time will tell what the consequences of the legislation will be, Mr. Isaacs said. "Things seem to change al- most daily," he said. Mr. Goldberg, a man with a near constant smile and a gen- tle handshake, stops for a mo- ment when he considers a question about what being an American means to him. After he left the former Soviet Union in January 1990 and arrived in America as a refugee, he, his wife and two daughters became stateless peo- ple. "I was not a citizen of any country," he said. "I could not vote. I did not have the rights of a citizen." As he waited for the required four years and nine months to pass before he applied for cit- izenship, Mr. Goldberg learned English and obtained a part- time job at Jewish Family Service as a driver and worked at nights as a part-time math instructor at Oakland and Hen- ry Ford community colleges. He and his wife Sophia saved their money and bought a house in Southfield in 1994. "First, we lived in an apart- ment at Franklin Towers that Resettlement Service helped us with," he said. "It was comfort- able and bigger than anything we had in Russia, but the house, it is bigger." After a few years in America, his daughter Inna married an American, Igor Biem; Mr. Biem had immigrated from the former Soviet Union to America as a child and later obtained citizen- ship. The couple and their daughter Jane, 3, live in Wa- terford, where Igor works as a computer programmer and Inna attends school to become a nurse. Yekaterina became Kate, an 18-year-old who will be- come a citizen within the next year. She graduated from high school and now attends Oakland Community College. Like many people her age, she is unsure what she will do with her life. Mr. Goldberg recently ob- tained a full-time job at Jewish Family Service as program di- rector for transportation and translation services; he contin- ues to teach math part time in the evenings at OCC. Mrs. Gold- berg recently obtained a part- time job. The pair became citizens last May in a ceremony at the fed- eral court house in Detroit. They voted for the first time in the No- vember elections, a right most Americans do not chose to exer- cise. "People who grew up in a free society sometimes do not know what it means to be free, to want to be free," Mr. Goldberg said. ❑ (../3 U-1 L1-1 CD azC LL1 U-1 30 50/0 Off all services with Carol Lee on any Monday or Tuesday BSA-337 3 Alex Goldberg: Knowing what it means to be free.