/0 6111 111 11Ul o YAD EZRA feed/V the fewheit Hungry Yad Ezra, Michigan's only kosher food pantry, would like to extend heartfelt appreciation to the following synagogues, their leadership and members who supported our annual YOM KIPPUR FOOD AND DONATION DRIVE: Adat Shalom Synagogue Cong. Beth Ahm Cong. Beth Shalom Rabbi Daniel Nevins Rabbi Herbert Yoskowitz Rabbi Jay Strear Beverly Liss, President Rabbi Charles Popky Ronn Nadis, President Rabbi David Nelson Sharon Alterman, President Cong. B'nai David Cong. B'nai Moshe Cong. Shaarey Zedek Cantor Ben-Zion Lanxner Harold Strom, President Rabbi Elliot Pachter Leonard I. Wanetik, President Cong. Shir Tikvah Temple Beth El Rabbi Arnie Sleutelberg Joan Slyker, President Rabbi Daniel B. Syrne Rabbi David S. Castiglione Alan May, President Rabbi Irwin Groner Rabbi Stephen Weiss Rabbi Leonardo Bitran Rabbi Joseph Krakoff Lawrence Berry, President Temple Emanuel Temple Israel Rabbi Harold S. Loss Rabbi Paul Yedwab Rabbi Joshua L. Bennett Rabbi Marla Hornsten Norton Stern, President The Birmingham Temple Rabbi Sherwin T. Wine Rabbi Tamara Kolton Rabbi Adam Chalom Charlie Paul, President Beit Kodesh Jeffrey Kirsch, President Rabbi Joseph Klein Beth Applebaum, President Temple Kol Ami Rabbi Norman T. Roman Lee Schottenfels, President Temple Shir Shalom Rabbi Dannel Schwartz Rabbi Michael Moskowitz Bunni Lieberman, President Young Israel of Oak Park Sanford Singal, President Young Israel of W. Bloomfield Young Israel of Southfield Richard Luger, President Rabbi Elimelech Goldberg Dr. Daniel Gotlib, President Cong. TChiyah Sandy Hansell, President Cong. Beth Isaac Rabbi Jonathan Siger Neal Freeling, President • Aish HaTorah • Akiva Hebrew Day School • Hechtman Jewish Apts. and Services • Hillel Day School • Lighting Supply Company • The Jewish News We've been making house calls for more than 100 years. Find out how our family of services can help your family today. IN-HOME CARE • HOSPICE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT .0 4N 2000 80 Visionary Thinker Honored as one of America's 100 most visionary thinkers by a national maga- zine, Rabbi Lerner combines a range of experiences to formulate his ideas. For 20 years he worked as a psychotherapist with the Institute for Labor and Mental Health, which he helped to establish. He holds two doctorate degrees, in psychotherapy and in philosophy, and founded and edits the magazine Tikkun, a bimonthly Jewish critique of politics, culture and society. Four years ago, Rabbi Lerner established his Bay- area Renewal synagogue, which is dedi- cated to the principles of tikkun olam — the obligation to be involved in healing and transforming the world. Rabbi Lerner is also the author of seven books, including Jewish Renewal and Jews and Blacks: A Dialogue on Race, Religion and Culture in America, Sincere thanks to the following schools, organizations and businesses for their support and assistance: 10/27 environmental effects of their activities. "If a society isn't producing people who have awe and wonderment in the grandeur of the world," he said, "it isn't worthy." VISITING NURSE ASSOCIATION, INC. Providing Mine Can' & Hospice Services Since 1898 written with Cornel West, Harvard University professor of African American Studies. At the SEMCOEJL dinner, Rabbi Lerner challenged the group to go fur- ther than its environmental stand. He urged them to also focus on a non- environmental issue — the hunger for spirituality. SEMCOEJL member Mike Sklar of Southfield initially bristled at some of Rabbi Lerner's suggestions, but at the end of the meeting he said the rabbi was "very thought-provoking" and that he recognized the importance of appealing to people's spiritual ideas. "Rabbi Lerner is enlightening," said Rabbi Arnie Sleutelberg, spiritual leader of Congregation Shir Tikvah. He attended the SEMCOEJL dinner along with group co-founder Catherine Greener and program coordinator Valerie Meyerson. "Rabbi Lerner raised very important and challenab inab issues," added Rabbi Marla Feldman, assistant director of the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit. "Alona with a philosophy of grassroots and b organiz- ing, he has a very ve spiritual approach with b people changing their relation- ships as a very necessary component of change. While I don't disagree with that, we need to deal with practical realities... to work with the institutions in our society that currently exist... So, we don't disagree, but our strategies may be different." El