WEST MAPLE
PLASTIC SURGERY
DANIEL SHERBERT, M.D.
Reformed Beliefs
Rabbi Wine remembers
"The Man And His Message."
ROBERT A. SKLAR
Editor
A
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LOS S MO N S OO B
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9/18
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1998
20 Detroit Jewish News
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s a pre-bar mitzvah young-
ster, Rabbi Sherwin Wine
was moved by Rabbi Leo M.
Franklin's conviction in
Classical Reform Judaism.
"Rabbi Franklin was a spokesman,
par excellence, of that
point of view, which has
been rejected by the
modern Reform move-
ment," said Wine, who
will speak on "Rabbi
Leo M. Franklin: The
Man and His Message"
as part of a continuing
achival exhibit about the
spiritual leader who
served Temple Beth El
for 43 years.
"Many not-so-kind
things have been said
about Classical
Reform," Wine said. "I
will offer a fresh
approach to Franklin's
message."
In a free public
forum at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 23, at
Temple Beth El, Wine
will reflect on Franklin,
a progressive champion
of social progress for all,
regardless of race or reli-
gious beliefs. A dessert
reception will follow.
Wine, founder of the
Birmingham Temple in
1963 and later the
Society for Humanistic
Judaism, was assistant
rabbi at Temple Beth El
under Rabbi Richard
Hertz from 1956 to
1960 (he served as a
chaplain in Korea dur-
ing 1957 and 1958).
He's a winner of the
Rabbi Leo M. Franklin
Award for human rela-
tions achievement.
Granddaughter Mary
Shapero characterized
Franklin as "a humani-
tarian who didn't differ-
entiate between people of any kind —
except the Father Coughlin kind."
She said Wine "knew my grandfa-
ther in a way none of the other current
rabbis in the city did."
Franklin — who Hertz once said
"made the people feel he was their
rabbi" — came to Temple Beth El from
Omaha at age 29 in 1898. He served as
Left:
Rabbi Sherwin Wine —
influenced by
Rabbi Franklin.
Above:
Rabbi Leo M Franklin,
in his study circa 1941.