Spirituality Remembering Sukkot Past I. Rabbi Dovid Potter explains the rituals- of Sukkot at the Fleischman sukkah party 2. Norman Goldin hands lulav and etrog to Lucille Ittigson in the Fleischman sukkah. Both are resi- dents of the Fountains at Franklin. SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN Staff Writer s eniors from seven area facilities celebrated the holiday of Sukkot with friends, neighbors and family. 3. Ted and Laura Revelle Schwartz of Farmington Hills provide the musical background at the Menorah House barbecue. Memories At the Fleischman Residence/Blumberg Plaza in West Bloomfield, old and new friends met at a program described by Sheyna Wexelberg-Clouser, director of outreach for Jewish Home and Aging Services' Jewish Community Chaplaincy Program, as "a time to reminisce, enjoy and share memories of the sukkah (booth)." The afternoon of Oct. 18 at the Fleischman sukkah brought together seniors' groups from the Fountains at Franklin, the Trowbridge, the Heatherwood and the Heritage, all of Southfield, and the Regency Street of West Bloomfield. "This is the beauty of what the chaplaincy program is about," Wexelberg-Clouser says. The program was overseen by Rabbi Dovid Polter, who with fellow JHAS chaplain Rabbi A. Irving Schnipper make 75 visits to Jewish seniors in area nursing facilities and assisted-living centers each month. "Working with the chaplaincy, - we like to work with the senses," Wexelberg-Clouser says, referring to the scents and sights of the sukkah. "What better place is there to sit and talk about memories of when they were young. " Telling A Story Sukkot Cookout At the fifth annual Sukkot barbecue at the Menorah House in Southfield, 75 residents and their families celebrated at a party in the nursing-care facility's sukkah. The group enjoyed the music of vio- linist Ted Schwartz and his pianist-wife Laura Revelle Schwartz, who is a music teacher and nursing-home music thera- pist. "They played nice, quiet, classical- type music," says Dennis Hayes, Menorah House administrator. "They played Yiddish songs — dinner music." Sharing chicken, salmon, salad and peach cobbler, Hayes says the Oct. 17 event received rave reviews from resi- dents. "It's nice to see them enjoy them- selves and have a party with their fami- lies," Hayes says. "Most of them can't get out much. This was a chance for them to entertain in their own home." A pilot program took off with speed as seventh-graders from Congregation Beth Shalom's religious school met with residents of the Coville Apartments in Southfield. The Oct. 18 program in the syna- gogue's sukkah was the second of 10 visits between the two groups in the intergenerational program. Overseen by Shirley Jarcaig, pro- gram coordinator the Jewish Home and Aging Services' Jewish Community Chaplaincy Program, and Shoshana Ben Ozer, Beth Shalom's religious school director, the curriculum is dif- ferent at each visit. This Sukkot- themed afternoon revolved around stu- dents interviewing the residents of the Southfield apartment complex about their holiday memories, highlighted by the blowing of the shofar. The project was a combined effort of Beth Shalom, Coville Apartments and the JHAS Chaplaincy program. "The hope is for this program to be used as a model for other afternoon schools," says Shevna Wexelberg- Clouser, director of outreach for the JHAS Chaplaincy Program. 'Jr was very successful." 7_ 4. Lana Sherman of Oak Park helps her son, Aaron, 3, sing the alphabet to his great-grandmother Ethyl Glickstein of Menorah House. 5. Sidney Riskin, Menorah House resident and council president, is vis- ited by his daughters Marleen He fan of Oak Park and Elayne Urnovitz of Huntington Woods. With them, at back, is Monorah House Rabbi Herschel Klainberg. 6 In the Fleischman sukkah, Sylvia Weinstock of Hechtman I Apartments in West Bloomfield, center, holds the lulav and etrog. 7. At Menorah House, Rebecca Kass, center, shares a meal with her chil- dren Steve Kass of Huntington Woods and Charna Yellen of Southfield.