RESTAURANT MID-EASTERN, CHALDEAN & AMERICAN • Lambchops • Lamb Shish Kabob • White Fish Curry • Tabouleh • Hommus • Vegetarian Entrees • Fresh Catch • Chicken Shawarma • Etc. • Fresh Juice Bar • Cocktails and Wine 6123 HAGGERTY RD. (JUST N. OF MAPLE) BLOOMFIELD AVENUE SHOPS WEST BLOOMFIELD (248) 668-1800 27060 EVERGREEN (AT 11 MILE & EVERGREEN) LATHRUP LANDING LATHRUP VILLAGE `God At The Edge' BRIAN SELFON Special to the Jewish News R abbi Niles Goldstein, 34, is a busy man. He presides over the New Shul in New York's Greenwich Village. He is the national Jewish chaplain for the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association. He's also the one who answers your questions on Ask The Rabbi on the Microsoft Network. And now he has written God at the Edge (Bell Tower: $22.00), his fifth book. God at the Edge uses Goldstein's personal adventures as case studies in spirituality. His terrifying encounter with a grizzly bear launches Goldstein into a polemic on the fear of God. His night in jail (he was arrested for rip- ping down a urinal — if you've ever caught a whiff of a NYC bathroom, you understand exactly why he did it) although physically imprisoning, proves spiritually liberating. In his book and in his life, Rabbi Goldstein hikes, canoes and dogsleds his way into a better understanding of God. In the spirit of the book's subtitle, "Searching for the Divine in Uncomfortable and Unexpected Places," the Jewish News interviewed Rabbi Goldstein on a dirty street, across from a reeking dumpster, in heart of the most savage and unforgiving area of Manhattan: Greenwich Village. "Today I Am a Boy" describes author David Hays' journey as a 66-year-old member of a bar mitzvah class of 12-year-olds. (248) 559-9099 COUPON GOOD AT BOTH LOCATIONS 150""/o OFFS Lunch or Dinner I With purchase of a second lunch or dinner entree of equal or greater value L • Dine In Only • 1 Coupon Per Couple I • Not Valid With other Offers • Expires 12/31/2000 .1 MI= Catering For All Occasions 11•1111110•1•111111•111 ■ 1111UM JN: Why do you look for God in "uncomfortable and unexpected" places? NG: As I mention in the Introduction [to God at the Edge], my inner machinery is much more attuned to Sturm and Drang than equanimity. So part of it is just my disposition: I'm not the kind of person who can easily access inner peace. The experiences that I tend to have, either because I seek them out or because they find me, have been tumultuous, sometimes scary, sometimes dif- ficult and often very exciting. I have certainly found profound spirituality in, and the book is really my attempt to process, a lot of these dark experiences. JN: Can people not "at the edge" find spiritual satisfaction? NG: I mean "edge" in a metaphorical sense. You don't have to run into a grizzly bear to experience fear in life. By "edge" I mean that point where the finite confronts the infinite, where mortal collides with the eternal, and anything can bring that about. `GOD AT THE EDGE' on page 88 Rabbi Niles Goldstein has stared down a grisly bear and mushed across Alaska, been in prison and watched animal sacrifices at a Tibetan shrine — all the while searching for God. AT THE EDGE Searching for the Divine in Uncomfortable and Unexpected Places-- DETROIT JEWISH NEWS JN NOW OR SALE FtwAri AT: INTERNATIONAL NEWS PLUS 372 Oullette Avenue • Windsor, Canada NIL ELLIOT :0 11/3 200