,ning a collection of programs
crund the country, divided by
e group that takes you
k 'o gh life-cycle events and
about how Federation can
into it,
-- Harlow Appelman,
meter of Detroit Federation's
4,m
Alliance for
Jewish Education
usSiOns on Jewish edu-
Mirrors what we're doing
fns of the Alliance for
wiSh Education and in terms
of our global planning of Jewish
education. A lot of what I heard
is a lot of what we're doing. You
get to feel that you're proud to
be from Detroit. We're really
considered a community of
excellence.
— Judah Isaacs,
executive director
Detroit's Agency for
Jewish Education
"I learned that Detroit's COJES
(Commission on Jewish
Eldercare Services) is working so
magnificently. Other commu-
::ties with limited dollars and
competing demands on
resources know that we all need
to be coordinating services, and
want to know how Detroit
developed COJES, and
Elderlink, the phone system
that we have and the intera-
gency transportation network.
"Since the presentation, we have
g:::.heard from Cleveland, Kansas
Columbus and Chicago
asking to learn more.
Marsha Goldsmith Kamin,
executive director,
newish Apartment and Services,
Detroit
—
"Humanistic Judaism belongs as
a legitimate part of the Jewish
spectrum and of the General
Assembly because it serves an
important segment of the
Jewish population that cannot
be served appropriately by other
denorninations.”
— Rabbi Sherwin Wine,
Birmingham Temple founder