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February 05, 1999 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1999-02-05

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

OPENING
SOON!

THE glERITAGE

EMNITY from page 6

cs‘A60,0xecylece04)14—

Because Your Lifestyle Never Retires

NOW ACCEPTING DEPOSITS



The Heritage, a premier rental retirement community for seniors will be opening

soon. We invite you to visit the information center and model apartment to learn
more about the many exceptional amenities and personal services available including:

• Fine Dining Services
• Spacious Studio, One-6-
Two-Bedroom Apartments
• 24-Hour Concierge Service
• Housekeeping Service
• Scheduled Transportation

• Fitness and Exercise Programs
• Indoor Swimming Pool
• Individually Controlled
Air Conditioning and Heat
• On-Site Health Clinic
• Full Service Bank

CALL AND SCHEDULE
A TOUR TODAY!

248-208-9393

THE HERITAGE, 25800 WEST ELEVEN MILE ROAD, SOUTHFIELD, MI 48304

Open weekdays 8:30Am-5:30Pm, Saturday & Sunday Noon-4PM.
Please Phone to Schedule Evening Appointments

❑ Please send me information on The Heritage.
❑ Please contact me to arrange a tour of the information center and model apartment.

NAME:

PHONE:

ADDRESS:

CITY, STATE, ZIP CODE:

Mail to: The Heritage, 25800 West Eleven Mile Road, Southfield, MI 48304

2/5

1999
• 10

EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY

The Heritage provides equal housing opportunities to all individuals 62 years of age or older.

Detroit Jewish News

JN 1 2/98

The bill passed 50-49, with for-
mer defense minister Yitzhak
Mordechai — the candidate for
prime minister with the new centrist
party — casting the deciding vote.
North American Reform and
Conservative leaders came back with
vows to withhold financial support
from Israeli candidates who support-
ed the bill. ARZA rabbis tried to
meet with Mordechai and his. No. 2,
Amnon Lipkin-Shahak, in Israel this
week. But both Israelis took off
unexpectedly for the United States
for another round of fund-raising,
where they heard about the religious
pluralism issue from angry American
Jews, Rabbi Hirsch said.
However, the North American rab-
bis did press their concerns with
Knesset members such as prime min-
isterial candidate Benny Begin and
others.
The Diaspora rabbis also were
reacting sharply to the recent remarks
by Sephardic Chief Rabbi Eliahu
Bakshi-Doron. He basically said that
the Jewish people are losing more
members to Reform "assimilation"
than they did to the Holocaust.
"If this had been said by anybody
in any other country, it would have
immediately been widely denounced
as a fundamentally anti-Semitic state-
ment," said Rabbi Hirsch.
Especially disturbing, he added,
was that nobody in the government
denounced Rabbi Bakshi-Doron's
statement.
"This really casts a shadow over
Israeli democracy," said Rabbi Hirsch.
"All societies have their extremists;
one of the ways you measure the
health of a society is by the reaction
to these extremists."
In a related development, fervently
Orthodox leaders are raising money
to cover penalties that the High
Court of Justice is imposing on the
heads of some local religious councils.
The court is imposing the fines on
those council leaders who ignore a
recent court ruling ordering them to
allow Conservative and Reform repre-
sentatives to attend council meetings.
Last week, the court fined the head of
the Jerusalem council some $7,300
for failing to abide by the ruling.
That fine and other actions,
including the arrest of some
Orthodox believers who had attacked
a group of what they considered
Christian missionaries led to a mas-
sive protest in the Mea Shearim
neighborhood Sunday attended by
several thousand Orthodox. fl

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