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Detroit Film Theatre Benefit Preview
Meet co-stars Rebekah Johnson and Ben Foster at an
advance premiere to benefit the Detroit Film Theatre.
Tickets $10.00. For reservations and information, phone (313) 833-4686.
41,4
11/26
1999
98
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; • •.-
SUNKIST
DARK THOMPSON
P
1
Detroit Institute of Arts Auditorium
Tuesday, November 30 at 8:00 p.m.
offering ministry.
Teeple chalks this up to her CPE
training which, she says, encouraged
her to examine her feelings toward
Judaism, explore Jewish theology and
view complicated life situations from
different perspectives.
"I was encouraged to learn, and to
understand myself better. Instead of
closing my mind to others, I opened
to myself Starting with my toes, I
turned myself inside out," she said. "I
finally came to a point where I am
comfortable enough with my own
religion so I'm not fighting."
She admits, however, that she once
had a problem with the J-word.
"It was the hardest thing to say
`Jesus,'" said Teeple. "But I learned to
look at myself as a conduit for other
people. I can respect what other peo-
ple believe without feeling like I'm
doing something against my own
beliefs. My goal is to be respectful."
Teeple grew up in Oak Park and
attended the Center for Creative
Studies in Detroit. She majored in
advertising design, and worked for
many years in that field.
Then, six years after they were
married, her husband decided to con-
vert to Judaism. Although she had
grown up in a Jewish household, her
family had been mostly non-obser-
vant, and non-affiliated. She discov-
ered that she loved Judaism, and the
family soon became members of
Temple Emanu-El in Oak Park.
"I began to study with him," she
recalls. "And the more I learned, the
more I wanted to learn." She decided
she wanted to find work that incorpo-
rated her love of religion with her pas-
sion for helping others. She and her
husband ran a design studio, but she
found herself spending increasing
amounts of time in religious activities.
Then one day, she saw an advertise-
ment by Henry Ford Health Systems
looking for a Jewish person to work at
a West Bloomfield hospice. She
applied.
Teeple, the mother of two
teenagers, didn't get the job. One of
the interview questions was whether
she had a CPE. She promised herself
to look into the program.
In 1993, she started CPE at
Children's Hospital. The next fall, she
was one of two students accepted into
Children's residency program.
Normally, CPE participants are theo-
logical students and ordained clergy.
Participants practice pastoral care, take
written exams, participate in seminars
and have individual supervision.
Jew
Teeple stood out from the start —
but not because of her differences.
According to Sister Janet Ryan, super-
visor of the CPE program, Teeple was
an outstanding candidate." "She has
deep compassion and a strong interest.
She is also an artist, and creative. And
"
Andrea Teeple, hospital chaplain
one of the wonderful sides that
Andrea brought to the program was
that she was Jewish," said Ryan.
Being Jewish "enriches everyone,"
Ryan said. "We try to draw from each
person's faith and tradition and use
that in the best possible way in the
ministry," she said.
For Teeple, that can mean using a
Reform rabbinical manual when she
needs a prayer, but she also recites a
Christian prayer if someone requests
it, or the 23rd Psalm.
"There are prayers that I feel totally
comfortable using that can apply to
anyone. People were always asking for
the Lord's Prayer, and I looked at it
and thought it would be totally fine to
use," she said.
While there was once a Christian
fundamentalist who requested that
Teeple — as a Jew — not attend to her
ailing child, more usual are patients like
an elderly Catholic woman who would
ask for "the Jewish chaplain" when she
was repeatedly readmitted to Botsford.
Teeple's duties include running
support groups for staff and families,
preparing a memorial for all who have
died at the hospital, and holding edu-
cational programs for employees and
the community at large on grief,