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September 10, 1999 - Image 114

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1999-09-10

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

unin

113.1Z

rnti)`?

1]n on

I1111.1

to- all
oar 'Wendt
and relative".

to- all
o ar Men&
and relatioei.

MR.AND MRS.
NORMAN ADELSBERG

IRVING & BRENDA ALTUS
& FAMILY

PPY
ew

We wish our family anbrienbs a very healthy,
happy anb prosperous new Year.

113.12 illt13"2

lanDsn

11111.1 Mtn

to- all
our trim&
and relatioeL

to- all
oar Nen&
and relatioeL.

SARI & RON BASKIN

ARLENE & CHUCK
BEERMAN & FAMILY

Yea IA

Y the coming
ear be filled
th health and
ppiness for
all OLIN
and friends.

*.kk,

IE & BUDDY DISNER

aina.,

New Year
At Sea

Finding your faith
thousands of miles
from home.

DEANNA SILVER
JACOBSON as told to
DEBRA B. DARVICK
Special to the Jewish News

4 MRS. JACK EPSTEIN

AM- s

SCOTT, SALLY, JENNIFER, ZACHARY & ISAAC BAKER

„at

Rosh HaShana

MARK & MARLA

A Very Happy and Healthy
New Year to All Our
Friends and Family.

SAM & MINNIE BERMAN

May the New Year Uring
To All our Friends
and Family - [Health.
Joy, Uresperity
and Everything
Goad In life.

111 any things made
Rosh HaShana
different that
year, but the
biggest difference was perform-
ing tashlich by dropping my
bread crumbs, crusty symbols of
the year's past sins, into the inky
darkness of the East China Sea.
I was so high up on the sun
deck that I lost sight of them sec-
onds after they fell from my out-
stretched hand. The ship's
whistle bellowed low and loud.
It is a good enough substitute for
the shofar I didn't hear. Rosh
HaShana had fallen on Shabbat,
traditionally a day when the
ram's horn is not blown. Just as
well since we couldn't find one
anyway.
Bread crumbs and sins cast
away, we began to disburse.
Then Alisa, a student from Mex-
ico, says quietly to someone
holding a siddur, "Can you help
me find the Kaddish?" Those of
us left on the deck stop in our
tracks.
One of the biggest reserva-
tions I'd had after learning I'd
been accepted into the Universi-
ty of Pittsburgh's Semester at Sea
was the realization that I would
be spending Rosh HaShana and
Yom Kippur away from my fam-
ily for the first time in my life. I
wouldn't hear the cantor's famil-
iar High Holiday melodies or be
with my loved ones for our fami-
ly's legendary holiday meals.
I didn't even know if I would
be with other Jews at all; it was
quite possible that I would mark
the Jewish New Year in private,
by myself
But all my friends and family
said holiday homesickness wasn t
reason enough to miss an oppor-
tunity of a lifetime. "Go," my

,

'

RAY & SHIRLEY ABRAMS

?/10

999

36 Detroit Jewish News

'

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