Ir .11101.. EDITOR'S WATCH "Up North" Synagogue Calls To Spirituality Of Jewish Travelers serve their spiritual needs." t's up north, along the Lake Petoskey, Alpena, Hancock, Mar- Michigan shoreline. And it's a quette, Iron Mountain, Ishpeming year-round vacation getaway. and Sault Ste. Marie also boast Jew- Traverse City is a destina- ish congregations. Detroit may be tion- spot that counts thousands of the core of Michigan's Jewish com- Jews among the vacationers who munity, but Judaism descend on Michigan's sun- thrives throughout the set coast. north country, thanks to But I'd venture to say few the spiritual vigor of the visiting Jews know there's a Jews who live outstate. historic synagogue beckon- Congregation Beth El, ing them in the heart of at 311 S. Park St., behind Michigan's cherry capital. the Park Place Hotel, is a Congregation Beth El is a state historic site and one simple white-frame struc- of two synagogues in Tra- ture offering "a small-town verse City. It's the oldest brand of Judaism to weary RO BERT synagogue building in con- travelers." A.S KLAR tinuous use in Michigan, So says Mickey Fivenson Editor E' according to the state his- — Traverse City native, life toric marker. Traverse City member of the synagogue lumber magnate Perry Hannah, who and Anti-Defamation League/Michi- contributed to many religious and gan Region activist. civic institutions, donated the land it "When your readers travel up stands on in 1885. north," he said, "they have no idea The synagogue is affiliated with which communities may be able to Ahavat Shalom Also Beckons Rabbi Stacie Fine started Congregation Ahavat Shalom in Traverse City last summer. Today, the unaffiliated con- gregation has 50 member families and a mailing list of 500. "We're open and welcoming to County. For the Reform congregants, movement Congregation through the Beth El is the Union of center of their American spiritual uni- Hebrew Con- verse. Offerings gregations, but include bar/bat all Jews, no mitzvah and matter how confirmation as observant they well as religious are, are wel- school and come. some adult Fifty families education. make up the A tribute to the current active tiny congrega- membership. tion's resolve, a Members come Hebrew Union from a 50-mile College-Jewish radius that Congregation Beth El is housed in the oldest Institute of extends to synagogue building in continuous use in Religion stu- Cadillac, Man- Michigan. dent rabbi flies istee, Grayling in from Cincinnati to host Shabbat and Elk Rapids. services every other Friday and High There's no Jewish community cen- ter, B'nai B'rith chapter or Jewish TRAVELERS on page 32 neighborhood in Grand Traverse everyone in the Rabbi' at every Shabbat service." ;iaensit lliTill '':2:411 F aiiiiide tvt e l i ‘ cicied TempleI srael Bloomfield. Ahavat Shalom hosts monthly Shabbat services at Unitarian Univer salist Fellowship, 67.26 Center Road. "Cantonal soloist Elat e Broad, who teaches at Interloclenter for the Arts, prepares the Shabbat music. Fine's husband, Tom, clinical supervi xhal om, Fine is community develop- In addition to serving Ahavat s u i t t Anis, is h avat Shalom. t of emphasis on Je wish histo- in ways that Fine an "Ask visfiou.rng meaSnoctiaety re stiaco jr for sth rabbi at the Birmingham Temple, both in Farmington Hills. Please t-211 1 (616) 929-4330 for more information about Shabbat ser- vices, High Holiday services, speakers and other offerings at Ahavat Shalom. M Moledet and compared all of Israel to Germany 1938: "Kristallnacht happened because a political state decided to be rid of peo- ple unwanted within its borders. It seems increasingly clear that Israel would prefer to rid itself of Palestinians if it could do so. And: "Kristallnacht — the event itself, the conditions that brought it on and, even more important, the results it produced —should provoke reflection 50 years later. For early November 1988 has its portents, too. "Some of them can be seen in Israel's election returns, which signify a turn to the right, religiously and politically." And: "As much as any other people today, the Palestinian Arabs are being forced into a tragic part too much like the one played by the European Jews 50 years ago." 2. The opposition to Roth "was light on academics, almost all of whom vociferously proclaimed their approval of Roth." In fact, many academics questioned Roth's suitability for the Holocaust museum position. Here are just a few of those scholars: Emil Fackenheim, professor emeritus of Holocaust Studies at Hebrew Univer- sity in Jerusalem, who is one of the most famous Holocaust scholars in the world, wrote: "Roth's record of judg- ments, in particular about the Holo- caust itself, has been so consistently poor as to make him, in my view, quite unsuitable for this sensitive post." Professor Alvin Rosenfeld, director of the Jewish Studies Program at Indiana University, said of Roth's record: "It calls the man's judgment very seriously into question ... very seriously undermines his credibility." Professor Zsuzsanna Ozsvath, direc- tor of the Holocaust Studies Program at the University of Texas at Dallas, wrote: "Mr. Roth's emotionally driven beliefs and hateful statements disqualify him as director of research at the Holocaust Memorial Museum ... Not only are those statements (comparing Israel to Nazi Germany) misleading, even ill- willed, they also reveal his lack of understanding of the subject." Professor Yaffa Eliach of the Brook- lyn College Department of Judaic Stud- ies, who created the famed "Tower of Life" exhibit at the U.S. Holocaust Museum, said that Roth's unfamiliarity with Yiddish and Hebrew, two primary languages of Holocaust research, made him unsuitable for the position. Dr. Walter Reich, former executive director at the U.S. Holocaust Muse- urn, said that Roth's Israel-Nazis analo- gy reflected "either a deep misunder- standing of Israel or a deep misunder- standing of Kristallnacht. It suggests a lack of judgment that is disturbing." 3. "There is simply no evidence that ... Klein ... bothered to look at the written work of the man they set out to remove ..." In fact, my staff and I examined Roth's books as well as hundreds of Roth's articles and book reviews. Bolkosky never called me to ask me if I had read Roth's works. 4. "... the written work of the man they set out to remove — more than 20 books written or co-authored by John Roth." Bolkosky's obvious implication is that Roth has written more than 20 books about the Holocaust. In fact, according to Roth's own cur- riculum vitae, he has written only two books about the Holocaust (A Consum- 8/7 1998 Detroit Jewish News 31