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July 24, 1998 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1998-07-24

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201

ish your

Maccabi athelete, C)

Gender

coach and team good

luck with an ad in the

Detroit Jewish News

Equality

Maccabi. Games

A Reform movement proposal
sparks debate on
what it is to be a Jew.

Special Section.

ISSUE DATE: August 14, 1998
AD DEADLINE July 29, 1998

LONNY GOLDSMITH
Staff Writer

SIZES/PRICES
4.8" x 2" = $45
4.8" x 3" = $65
4.8" x 4" = $85
4.8" x 5" = $100

T

OW
GOLDEN!

he Reform movement has
always considered the child
of an intermarried couple as
Jewish, regardless of the
religion of either parent.
However, Temple Emanu-El Rabbi
Joseph Klein questions a recommen-
dation by a Reform movement task
force to change the language that clar-
ifies who is a Jew within the move-
ment.
"The [Reform] movement has
always recognized the children of only
one Jewish parent," Klein said. "To
formally make that declaration only
aggravates the relationship between
the Reform, Conservative and
Orthodox movements."
The suggestion to modify "patrilin-
eal descent" to "equilineal descent"
was made before the Central
Conference of American Rabbis con-
vention in June, and if passed, would

MUM

J anet Miner

TRACK & FIEID
Detroit, MI

Photo
Here.

Good Luck!

traft

Mom & Dad

gl

change the movement's definition of
who is a Jew. Rabbi Samuel Stahl of
Temple Beth-El in San Antonio, Tex.,
who headed the Ad Hoc Task Force to
Study the Resolution of Jewish
Descent, said the issue will be exam-
ined at the CCAR executive board
meeting in November.
Stahl described it as a "principled
move, not a move made to expedite
the process of becoming a Jew. It grew
out of our commitment to gender
equality."
Klein said a non-Reform rabbi
remarked to him that, "It's too bad
you had to make a big deal."
Rabbi Norman Roman of Temple
Kol Ami is supportive of the move to
clarify, but he is against substantial
changes. "I don't see a major problem
with equilineal or patrilineal descent,"
he said. "Some think it's too radical a
change from Jewish tradition, but
matrilineal descent was a radical
change from the Torah."
Roman, unlike Klein, doesn't

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WE CANNOT PRINT YOUR AD WITHOUT THE FOLLOWING
INFORMATION, WHICH WILL BE KEPT CONFIDENTIAL

Name

Telephone

Address

City

DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

7/24

1998

20 Detroit Jewish News

State

For further information
call Barbara or MkkicF
at (248) 354-5959

27676 Franklin Rocs
Southfield, M1_48

Rabbi Norman Roman

Rabbi Joseph Klein: at odds with the
proposed Reform movement action.

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