M ara „w wte c 1111111 \WcK cd 'Mt Hadassah members display signs supporting gun control at Sunday's Million Mom • March in Washington. SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN Staff Writer 111: ost of the 750,000 individuals who ral- lied for stricter gun control Sunday, May 14, at the Million Mom March in Washington, D.C., have now returned home. Fortified with stories, reflections and impressions of the march, they have much to share about its purpose, benefit and impact. • In Michigan, some 3,000 marchers, many of them from the Jewish community, traveled the long distance to the Mother's Day rally. "The thrill of being with determined women was exhilarating," says Arlene Victor of Bloomfield Hills. "There was a sense of women united in grief for those mothers who lost children." As incoming president and founder of the Detroit chapter of Women's Action for New Directions, Victor traveled with members of her Southfield-based political activist organization. The group moved its national board meeting from Boston to Washington, D.C., to enable members to attend the march. • Victor was especially struck by the words of Rabbi Eric H. Yoffie, president of the New York- based Union of American Hebrew Congregations, which represents the Reform movement. He was the only clergy member to speak at the rally. People cheered for everything he said. I felt so proud to be a Jew. "One thing I remember so well is when he said, `If lawmakers don't change the laws, we have to change the lawmakers.' Then, he said, 'Shalom.'" The message "enough is enough" was repeated throughout the rally, often by mothers who lost children or held signs that read: "A gun killed my child." Gorchoff says throughout the day she was surrounded by many wearing pink, black and white Million Mom March T-shirts. But she also noticed a group from Colorado wearing T-shirts reading: "We are Columbine." "It's one thing to watch a tragedy on TV, and another to see the people who really were among the catalysts for the rally. It is a connection to tragedy in a different way. It's a club you don't want to belong to," Gorchoff says. Rena Kirshenbaum of West Bloomfield was Detroit-area participants reflect on their journey and make plans to continue the fight. "He laid it out there so clearly," she says. "He blamed Congress for their cowardice and the National Rifle Association for their duplicity" She says he answered his own question, "'Is gun control a religious issue?'" with a resounding, "'You bet!'" Corky Gorchoff of Farmington Hills agrees that Rabbi Yoffie made an impact, even with the primari- ly Baptist group on her bus. "He was phenomenal, making such an impression. He was so well received. MARCHING ON on page 20 2000 17