The Scene
The Ticket Dilemma
On The High Holidays
ALLISON KAPLAN
Special to the Jewish News
IV
ay back at my bat mitz-
vah, the rabbi explained
how I was becoming an
adult in the eyes of
Jewish law. But only now, 14 years later,
is my synagogue enforcing that status.
According to the congregation I
have attended since birth, I no longer
count as my parents' child.
Talk about tough love.
What this really means is it now
costs $75 if I want to go to High
Holiday services with my family.
Rolling Stones tickets don't even cost
that much.
Yet in shopping around for a
High Holiday venue — now that
I'm a castoff, er, adult — I find that
Rolling Stones
tickets
don t even cost
that much.
MAY THE NEW YEAR
BRING HEALTH AND HAPPINESS
TO ALL OUR FRIENDS
Florence Abel
Linda Franklin
Kate Browner
Anu Gandhi
Lauren Bruss
Iris Goldstein
Lillian Hoard
Sharon & Andy
Collins
Jeff Katzen
Dennis P. Dickstein Connie Kramer
Olena Drobot
Esther Liwazer
Irene Eagle
Marcia Miller
Rosalie Fox
RALPH
MANUEL
'
$75 is actually a bar-
gain. Some syn-
agogues go
as high as
$300 for
non-mem-
ber High
Holiday tickets. I've
seen others advertise "Only $150
per person!" as if Rosh HaShana
and Yom Kippur were an end-of-
the-summer clearance sale.
Did Ticketmaster get hold of the
High Holiday account? As a Jewish
twentysomething, I find myself
somewhat disillusioned this time of
year. Okay, sure, Fryi getting married
in nine months. I'm financially
independent. Nobody tells me what
time to go to bed. I pack my own
lunches.
Allison Kaplan is a freelance writer in
Chicago.
Renee Miller
Melanie Mitchell
Sheila IL
Morganroth
Sheila Rose
Robert Schuman
Judy Stein
Kimberly A. Szaro
Susan Weinstock
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9/10
1999
Detroit Jewish News in