<6- '3' YOU'RE INVITED! COMMENTARY 9th Annual Holiday Walk-Through Saturday, December 4, 1999 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. RENAISSANCE FROM PAGE 39 Taste delicious delights from 8 of Metro Detroit's top pastry chefs, stationed. throughout Bloomfield Plaza stores with a sampling of their wares and a free recipe card! 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. Forte's Ralph Maccioce at L'uomo Vogue Rattlesnake Club's Melissa Weiss at Concourse Card 1 Hour Photo Golden Mushroom's Mark Dorfman at Frames Unlimited Too Chez's Patrick Nettle at Roz & Sherm Tom's Oyster Bar's Melinda Montgomery at Robert Mann Furs and More Townsend's Robert Halabicky at Don Thomas Sporthaus Tribute's Michael Laiskonis at Studio 330 Michael at Sweet Dreams The joyous sounds of the Michigan Opera Theatre carolers as they stroll through Bloomfield Plaza. 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. See The latest exhibit from renowned photographer Monty Nagler, and meet Mr. Nagler from 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. in the Mall-within-the-Plaza. Cyndy Canty from the WNIC 100.3 FM Breakfast Club in the Mall-within-the-Plaza. 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. lake VPieume The 1999 edition of Bloomfield Plaza's Holiday mug! Distribution begins at 12 p.m. in the Mall-within-the-Plaza. Hurry while quantity lasts! A Distinctive Collection of Shops and Services Telegraph at Maple OPEN SUNDAYS THROUGH DECEMBER 19 12 P.M. - 5 P.M. Andiamo Italia West • Bloomfield Plaza Shoe Service • Breath of Spring Florist • Concourse Card 1 Hour Photo • D.O.0 Optique • Damman Hardware Don Thomas Sporthaus • Elaine's Bagels • Fox Formal Wear • Frames Unlimited • Franco Colombo's Barber Shop • GNC • Gail's Office Supply • The Gallery Restaurant • Health Rider Fitness Superstore • Kroger • Lois Gross Dry Cleaners • L'uomo Vogue • Machus Bakery & Pastry Shop • Mail Boxes, Etc. Robert Mann Furs & More • Roz & Sherm • Say-on Drugs • Steve's Deli • Studio 330 • Sweet Dreams • United Good Housekeeper • The Workout Company Build their Imagination! Real rubber tires that move! A real hammer just like Mom's and Dad's! What could be better than getting two toys in one? BRIO Builder-get it today for creative building, and imaginative playing! DOLL OSPtTAL Y SHOP so' BIER 11/26 1999 40 3947 W. 12 Mile Rd. Berkley (Exit Greenfield off 1-696 North to 12 Mile. East 3 Blocks) (248) 543 3115 - Holiday Hours Mon., Tues., Wed. & Sat. 10-6 Thur. & Fri. 10-8 • Sun. 12-4 "Look! I made it myself!" , M999 BRIO' Corporation, gets results! 248-354 6060 ext. 209 Up to now, the system has been slow to shift direction, in large part because the old structure kept vested interests in command. The old United Jewish Appeal, run by donors who'd spent a lifetime fighting for Israel, was a stubborn advocate for keeping things unchanged. Local initiatives — new forms of Jewish outreach, voices of Jewish spirituality, women's groups — had little voice. According to some critics, that was a key reason the new emergency hasn't yet gotten the full- bore response American Jewry is capa- ble of giving. "Right now, the leader- ship and vision are being provided fur- ther down the food chain," said Shrage. Heads of the new United Jewish Communities say they're moving as fast as they can. "None of our pillars is up and running," said UJC president Stephen Solender. "We don't have per- manent committees working yet. This is just the beginning. Up to now, peo- ple really couldn't see what we were trying to do. People here are seeing it come together. But there's another question fac- ing the federations, and it's not so simple to answer. You can't discuss a renaissance of Jewish identity with- out discussing what Judaism is about. That will leave Jews feeling empty and frustrated, as assembly delegates learned. Pursuing a genuine agenda of Jew- ish renaissance means not just focus- ing inward and teaching more Torah. It also means adapting — and expand- ing — the old programs. It means reaching out to Israel, not forgetting about it now that it can take care of itself Renaissance means adapting, not ending, Jewish social services and social activism, so that Judaism doesn't become the only religion in America with nothing to say. The initial moves by the UJC are encouraging. What's needed is much more leadership and vision, to keep Jews engaged with each other and the world. Otherwise, as one UJA ex-board member griped, "it's all just rearrang- ing furniture." "In the end, this is the place where people come together to set the agenda for the Jewish communi- ty," said Rabbi Stuart Weinblatt of Congregation B'nai Tzedek in Potomac, Md. "The question now is how this whole configuration is going to trickle down, whether changing an A to a C is going to have an impact on people's lives." )3