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May 15, 1998 - Image 14

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1998-05-15

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

ALL CHILDREN
ARE SPECIAL.
JARC IS HERE
WHEN YOU, FACE
A CHALLENGE.

The JARC

0** • •

Merle and Shirley Harris Children
and Family Division

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(incorporating the Keshet Program)

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************MOMM II M*MA

Services for children with
any disability and their
families including:

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*****************
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UPCOMING EVENTS:

.

Tuesday, May 19

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"Sibling Relationships"

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An opportunity for parents to discuss
common issues. At the home of
Michelle Brodman.
1:00 - 2:30 p.m.

Tuesday, June 16

"Home Help Services"

Learn about Home Help Services (for your
family member over 18) from a Family
Independence Agency representative.
7:00 p.m.
JARC office

Monday, June 29

"Keeping Your Cool:
Providing a peaceful, fun summer
for your child with ADHD"

Presented by David Maiseloff, MSW
7:00 p.m.
JARC office

Sunday, June 28

2nd Annual
Keshet Family Picnic

Kahn JCC - West Bloomfield
12:30 - 2:00 p.m.
Sponsored by JARC, JCC and
the Daniel Sobel Friendship Circle

Parents, Need A Break?

Trained JARC staff available to provide
quality respite care in your home.
Sliding fee scale.

Dreams Can Become Reality

Our new Person-Centered Planning
Program will help you develop a goal-
oriented action plan based on the unique
needs of your child and your family.

The Merle and Shirley Harris
Children and Family
Division provides:

• In-home respite care
• Life planning based on individual needs
• Parent-to-Parent networking
• Resources and referrals
•Social and educational opportunites
• Newsletter

To RSVP or for more information call

(248) 352-5272

5/15
1998

14


28366 Franklin Road
tIMA.) Southfield, MI 48034

about to die was just too much."
Slay had learned about the
Holocaust, in part, through speakers
at Dream Dialogue meetings, but she
said it merely taught her about the
sequence of events. After watching a
video on anti-Semitism at the muse-
urn, "I learned about how it all start-
ed," she said.
Said Serling, "We spent at least
two meetings going over what they
would see. It's hard for kids in
America to understand everything,
and the museum is important because
it gives powerful images."
Quinn Wright, also of Ferndale
High School, is taking a class about
the Holocaust at his school.
"The museum has reinforced what
I've learned in class," he said. "This is
the place I'd send the people who say
that it never happened."
Wright pointed out that the muse-
um's stark brick-and-steel design pro-
vided him with vivid images of con-
centration camp life.
"The museum was more emotional
than the first time," said Shira Traison,
a sophomore at West Bloomfield High
School who has been to the museum
before. "My grandmother is a survivor,
and it had never touched me like it
did this time."
Following the museum tour, the
group went to the ADL office in
Washington for lunch. There they
heard Michael Lieberman of the

Washington ADL,
Gautam Rana of
the National Asian
Pacific American
Legal Consortium,
and Mayvee Smith,
project director of
A World of
Difference, talk
about inter-ethnic,
intergroup coali-
tion work on
Capitol Hill.
"Unusual coali-
tions get results
because groups
other than your
own fight for your
cause," Lieberman
said. "You must
work with others who feel the same
way you do."
The students then headed for the
Hart Senate Office Building to meet
Sen. Carl Levin, a Democrat who also
is Jewish.
Southfield-Lathrup student
Stephanie Citron and Levin debated
about the Ku Klux Klan's right to
hold a rally in Michigan, as was done
in Ann Arbor on May 9.
"They have a fundamental right to
hold a sign-up," Levin said. "It's
important not to respond with vio-
lence. That puts them on the evening
news, which is just what they want."
Levin praised the students for their

Above: Terrell
Lockhart and
Kassandra Stout
watch information
about the
Nuremberg Trials.

Left: Sen. Carl
Levin talks as
Mark Tapper, Joel
Hirsch and Sarita
Singleton listen.

participation in Dream Dialogue,
tellinc, them, "You can make a differ-

ence."

At the National Museum of
American History, students toured
the "Field to Factory" exhibit, which
chronicles the movement of African-
Americans from the South to the
North between 1880 and 1930.
"I caught a few more details than I
had before," said Kimberly Webb, an
African-American who was one of the
trip's facilitators. "It chronicles a good
piece of history. I just wonder why
there isn't a bigger museum devoted
to this." 0

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