L "This is a circle," said Rabbi Levi Shemtov. "It brings together Torah, the Jewish people and God. If you don't care, then something is really missing from your life." "There is not enough in the Jewish community for our families, there is next to nothing," said Carolyn Morris, the mother of 5 1/2-year-old Sammy. When she and her husband, Michael, learned their son was autis- tic, Carolyn spent a month on the phone searching for services available to her son and family. She heard by word of mouth about the Friendship Circle. "They really know how to give help and how to make the people receiving the help not feel like they are a bur- den," she said. "Honestly, the Friendship Circle could teach the pro- fessionals how to do this. They don't make you feel like you're some sort of loser." The Morrises' volunteer is Netanya Weiss, a 16-year-old Akiva Hebrew Day School senior. "I go to help the parents," she said. "I know it's a tough time for them, and the kids need me." Netanya takes Sammy and his brother and sister to the park, plays with them, and meets whatever needs she can. The voluteers average one to two hours a week. Some families have more than one volunteer on different days. "Look, I think it's a sad situation that the Jewish community doesn't offer anything for Jewish kids like this. I called Jewish Family Service, and the best they could say to me was, Its a shame.' That I didn't want to hear." Sheryl Kaminer has been down this road as well. Her daughter, Elana, suf- fers from a rare syndrome known as Trisomy 15 Inverted Duplication. She has an extra piece on her 15th chro- mosome. Elana, 9, has the mental ability of a much younger child. She is a cheerful, active child who craves affection and attention. The Kaminers crave some rest. "I got a letter in the mail," said Sheryl. "It sounded weird, too good to be true. But I love it. It comes down to being a relief. I do what I want to do. I look forward to it, and she looks forward to it." Someone else looks forward to it as well, their volunteer. Diana Jacobs, a 13-year-old Beth Jacob student who addressed the Friendship Circle's early summer ban- quet, told those in attendance that what Elana does for her is as impor- tant as what she can do for Elana. "Elana has been a great teacher for me," she said. "It goes beyond fun. I've learned kindness, I've learned con- trol." ' , . Above: Netanya Weiss plays with (clockwise): Benjamin, Sammy and Emma Morris. Left: Diana Jacobs takes Elana Kaminer for a walk around Elana's Oak Park neighborhood. Oppostite: Sammy Morris gives Netanya a kiss and a hug. On this day, Diana and Elana are "reading" books to stuffed animals. "You can't believe that teen-agers are doing this," said Mrs. Kaminer. "So much is written and said that is negative about teens. But these kids are all wonderful, so nice. You need to understand that for people who need respite, the minutes, the time is desperately sought. Finding respite is like a desperate search." And when that search is complete, parents can look forward to $600 a year in respite monies from the state. That, they say, is hardly worth the time screening and finding workers. Matt Pearl doesn't think of himself as a worker. Indeed, the 16-year-old Novi High School student loves the time he spends with 6 1/2-year-old Alyssa. The child of Andi and Randy Gold was born after only 25 1/2 weeks of pregnancy. She weighed 26 ounces, was blind in one eye and had low vision in the other. Said Andi about Matt, "I can sit and I can relax, finally. It gives me a spell without my daughter at my side." Andi has volunteered for Jewish causes. But she never heard of any- thing quite like the Friendship Circle. And the Golds ran into fear from friends and family. "People were afraid," she said. "We're living with their nightmare, blindness. We've just had to learn that we have to work a little harder to have a normal life and that getting from A to B isn't necessarily a straight line." But that line is made straighter by Matt Pearl. "I'm here to have a good time with Alyssa," he said. "She wants to swing, I swing. She wants to play with her toys, I play with her toys — whatever she wants to do." Alyssa holds on to a railing as she walks up the back stairs of her home. She gives a visitor a hug and a kiss. Then she has to get going. It's time to play something else. Matt keeps up with her. And Andi can let go. Mission The Friendship Circle Volunteer Club provides assistance to fami- lies with special needs children, and simultaneously "helps the helper" — empowering its teen- age volunteers to build their own moral character and to grow through their mitzva-volunteer- ing. For more information, call (248)-855-1212.