Where Caring
Comes Naturally.
The Marvin and
Betty Danto Family Health
THE
ONI THP JI HIS!!
THE
C0.11.11U AI 1 CAMPUS.
Care Center is a unique
QUALITY OF CARE.
QIALITY OF CARING.
quality, personal care is at
the top of the list of resi-
dents' needs and prefer-
care services in an envi-
ronment respectful of the
Jewish faith and heritage.
Our services include
ences in health care. Which
24-hour nursing care in
exceptional feature is its
a catered living setting-for
staff. People who truly put
long term residents, sub-
acute programs for
their patients and residents.
is why the Danto Family
Health Care Center's most
their hearts into caring for
patients transitioning
And for those first
attracted by the building's
between an acute care
hospital and home, and a
physical appeal, rest assured
that it's carried throughout
specialized self-contained
unit to care for
the complex. With a lovely
Alzheimer's patients.
chapel, luxurious rooms,
Quality-driven sub-
mahogany furniture, brass
acute programs provide a
trim and elegant attention
level of complex medical
to detail that combine to
care or rehabilitation not
available in most nursing
create a warm relaxing
atmosphere.
centers, at a cost signifi-
cantly lower than an
We believe the center
is an attractive addition to
extended hospital stay.
the Detroit metropolitan
area. Stop in or call to
arrange a personal tour.
We would love to show you
how at the Danto Family
Health Care Center
caring comes naturally.
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
c
agenda of components of the De-
mocratic Party?
Those of us who chose to cross
the picket lines at the papers
have been greeted with the most
offensive anti-Semitic slurs we
have ever experienced. One
young Jewish woman was called
"slut" and "whore," reducing her
to tears on several occasions. One
non-Jew informed me that I was
"no better than a kapo," the Jew-
ish collaborators at concentration
camps. And these are the people
who claim the high moral ground.
This strike is about incompe-
tent union leadership. Those of
us who chose to place the secu-
rity and well-being of our fami-
lies ahead of adherence to the
interests of a group of self-serv-
ing union officials are closer to
my understanding of what my re-
ligion teaches than your com-
plaining striker.
She says that the strikers feel
abandoned by the Jewish com-
munity. That may be because the
community is smart enough to
see through their claims. If only
The Jewish News had been as
perceptive.
Research shows that
health care facility. The
Center offers multiple
r.
PERCEPTION page 28
810-788-3300
—
I I
("Company Man" July 4), the new
publisher of the Detroit News. A
positive and historic event for the
community, the appointment of
a Jewish journalist to the posi-
tion was transformed into a
smarmy attack on his religious
convictions by your decision to
use a quote (... "he is a sad ex-
ample of a Jew") from one of the
striking newspaper workers).
This is absolute garbage. Since
when is an individual's Judaism
measured and defined by his de-
votion to labor unions? Where is
it written that the tenets of our
religion must reflect the political
• ,
w•- •-Npr. ,
11 ofille1111441
George Cantor
West Bloomfield
Canal
The Unavoidable
The subjects of Israel and the Holocaust
have become complex issues
on the American Jewish scene.
NEIL RUBIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS
0
MARVIN AND BETTY DANTO FAMILY
HEALTH CARE CENTER
68001K MAPLE ROAD
EST BLOOMFIELD, MI 48322
1;
Detroit News Publisher Mark
Silverman.
f all places, I had to run
into the Holocaust in the
Subway Sub shop.
Over the years, I've be-
come friendly with the guy behind
the counter who occasionally pre-.
pares my veggie sub.
`The Spielberg people came to
interview Mom," he told me be-
tween plopping down the green
peppers and the spicy mustard.
"They even made me leave the
house so they could talk to her
alone."
There it was, smack in the
middle of what had been a Holo-
caust-free day. His mother, a sur-
vivor, was interviewed by the
remarkable Steven Spielberg-
funded project to record the sto-
ries of all living survivors.
Five years ago, I would have
argued that the twin towers of
passion of American Jewish iden-
tity — remembering the Holo-
Neil Rubin is editor of our sister .
paper, the Atlanta Jewish
Times.
caust and defending Israel —
were inevitably shrinking.
The reasons for diminishing
concern about Israel are clear.
Favoring all of Israel's actions
has become increasingly complex.
Simultaneously, the Jewish
state's economy soared while
thoughts of its physical annihi-
lation, even with today's climate,
are remote.
With the Holocaust, the in-
evitable march of time was bound
to diminish its impact. Besides,
I felt that younger Jews want Ju-
daism's personal, spiritual touch,
certainly not gruesome stories
and graphic newsreels.
Then came Steven Spielberg's
Schindler's List, the U.S. Holo-
caust Memorial Museum in
Washington, D.C., and the 50th
anniversary of the end of World
War II. Suddenly, there was an
explosion of Holocaust movies,
books and even news stories.
And we've found ways to make
this fit nicely into the American
Jewish mantra for personal rel-