100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

February 27, 1998 - Image 78

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1998-02-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

EdItoR's NoTe

Congregation Beth Achim

invites your family to join us for

PURIM

Sunday, March 8, 1998:
Purim Dinner and Play -
"This is Your Life, Mordechai and Esther"

bout once every six
months I get this
urge to rearrange

Wednesday, March 11, 1998:
Megillah Reading

Sunday, March 15, 1998:
Youth Department Purim Carnival

Costumes are optional for all events.

For more information, please call (248) 352-8670
Congregation Beth Achim, 21100 W. 12 Mile Rd., Southfield, Ml

NoWt, Cairdata,

GALLERY

FINE LEATHER FURNITURE HONESTLY PRICED

29555 Northwestern Highways At La Mirage Mall • Southfield

248-223-9877

HOURS: Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 11:00-8:00
Sunday 12:00-5:00 • Closed Tuesday & Wednesday

*some selections slightly lower or higher

10% OFF

THE GREATEST BIRTHDAY
PARTIES ANYWHERE!

Offer Good Mondcry lin Thursday • Miinum 10 IGds

BLACK & WHITE AND COLOR PHOTO BOOTHS

PARTY
RENTALS
AVAILABLE.
THE LATEST
IN ARCADE
GAMES.

2/27
1998

18 L

WE HAVE AN
ATM MACHINE

J•

1 Coupon
Per
Person

,
aatcy 2L--k

t-J



Must be used of Marvin's
Expires 3/5/98

310050R0HARD LAKE RD., SOUTH OF 14, BEHIND F&M • 626 - 5020
MON.- THURS.10 TO 9; FRIA SAE10 TO 11,50.11TO 9

furniture.
Most often, the living room is
where I focus my energies. The
bedroom furniture is too heavy; the
I TV in the den has all those cables I
wouldn't dare touch, and the
kitchen is too small to allow for
much creativity.
Several months ago my - husband,
'Phillip, mentioned that he'd caught
a few moments of a home-decorat-
ing show where the host suggested
that furniture on an angle (that is, in
the corner) makes the room look
1 bigger.
That night he came upstairs when
he thought he heard thunder. But it
was only me, putting all our furni-
ture on an angle.
Most recently, my mother came
for a visit and we decided to shift
the couches around. We put one in
front of the large window, an area I
admit I heretofore always tound dis-
1 concerting. All that window, with a
few inches of wall beneath
what, really, could one do with it?
Although I suspect I'll start moving
things around in the not-too-distant
future, for now I quite like the way it
looks in there. And my favorite spot,
oddly enough, is the large window.
One morning, soon after the
redesign was complete, I found my
baby, 1-year-old Talya, standing on
the couch and looking outside. I
quickly saw what had caught her
attention: It was the birds, mostly
starlings but sometimes a passing
bluejay or cardinal, eating under-
neath the tree.
My husband calls me "the birds'
best friend," because I am always
I tossing them leftover bits of bread,
pasta and cereal. Recently, their
fare extended to bird feeders my
I children made at school: bits of
birdseed and peanut butter on pine
cones, hung from the finger-like
branches of the tree.
In the summer, we can sit on the
front porch and watch the birds for

I

-I I

,-- /

a
good half
hour. The cold of
winter has, for the
most part, limited such viewings, c / \
though sometimes I am in the
kitchen and see them from the small
window there.
I
Since discovering Talya on the
couch I have made it a habit to
I stop there and watch the birds with
her. I'm a pretty quick-moving per-
I son, not much for standing still; but'
these moments are precious to me.
Talya points and laughs and makes
I those dear little baby sounds as she
I watches the birds, and I watch her.
. Yesterday I was there with Talya
when I remembered a story I heard
long ago from my friend, Rabbi
1 Mark Levin. He was talking about
I how fortunate most of us are, how I
much we have and how grateful
we should be.
He recalled a young man who
I had been paralyzed from the neck
I down, and now spent most of his
I life in bed, looking out the window.
1 There was a tree there that he
loved, and he would watch the
passing birds. "And for him, this is
enough," Rabbi Levin said. "This
I alone is enough to make him glad
to be alive."
How I would like to meet this
young man. I would bring my fami-
ly and we would look out the win-Z
dow and see what he sees, and he
I would tell us about himself and we
I would listen, for as long as he
I wanted. I think I would remember
forever that view from his window,
the tree and birds and the remark-
able human being in that quiet par-
: adise.



.14101/u

Elizabeth Applebaum
AppleTree Editor

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan