WHAT BRINGS US TOGETHER ASA PEOPLE? A SHARED HERITAGE, A SENSE OF FAMILY AND A COMMON LANGUAGE! they can help others. [My son] Seth says he feels 'all nice inside and tingly' when he does." At the end of the month, the family holds a meeting to discuss I the contents of their JEFF scrap- ' book. "We sit and say, 'What did we do special this month? I What did we do to help others?'" Sometimes, it's little moments, like when Seth, a fourth-grader at Berkley's Avery Elementary School, I and Tamara, a second-grader at !Avery, wrote about working together to rake the leaves. Some- times, it can mean a bigger corn- 1 mitment, such as when the chil- Idren went to visit their grandmoth- er in the hospital. And sometimes, I it's a major step; this year, Seth "got to fast on Yom Kippur," his mother recalls. Mrs. Greenberg likes that the scrapbook provides opportunities I to write down a diverse collection of thoughtful deeds. You can't con- :duct a major food drive every day, she notes, but you can always take a few moments to be I kind. The Greenbergs, who belong to Congregation Beth Shalom, have a long history of volunteering in I the community. When Gail, a :native Detroiter, was just 6 years ;old, she watched her first Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy Telethon. "I decided I wanted to help," she says. So she and her brother opened a Kool-Aid stand, earned 1 38 cents, and sent it to the I telethon. Later, she worked at a camp for children with muscular dystrophy. Each year, Mr. And Mrs. Green- : berg continue helping MDA by making a pledge and by working at the telethon phone center, which is overseen by her mother, Shirley Nachman, and her broth- : et-, Michael Nachman. Howard, a technical consultant for General Motors, was in charge of his son's Cub Scout I food drive, which recently collect- ed more than 100 bags of food to donate to the needy. The Greenberg family also are active at their synagogue, where they are involved with the Hebrew school and the PTA. Every Purim, the Greenbergs help take a group of Beth Shalom students to visit seniors at Menorah House in Southfield. Mrs. Greenberg scoffs at the notion that being a "mitzvah hero" is demanding. "First of all, you get back 100 times more than you give; it makes you a whole person," she says. "And really, it takes no time and no energy. Sometimes, it's just a matter of passing someone, catch- ing his or her eye, and smiling. Or maybe it means taking an hour a month and offering to help out. Maybe it's a matter of eating out one less meal, or taking one less morning to sleep late." The best place to start: children. She recalls an afternoon at the senior facility where she works. It was a special event — a talent show. One elderly man stood up and, for his talent, recited the Sh'ma. Among those who sat, attentive and delighted, in the audience, where two young children named Seth and Tamara Greenberg. Why not, Mrs. Greenberg asks, since they have come to view the seniors not as old people, not as men and women with brittle bones who move slowly and who may seem to live in their own world, but as "grandmas" and grandpas." In turn, the residents value every moment being with their young guests — like at the talent show, or when a man who spent most of his day sleeping, and who rarely smiled, suddenly came to toss a ball with Seth and Tamara. "It was truly a blessing, seeing all this," Mrs. Greenberg says. "Children can do that." " JOIN AN AJE HEBREW ORYIDDISH CLASS AND SPEAKTHE LANGUAGE OF OUR PEOPLE. Hebrew Language Classes 13 weekly courses are offered from Beginner Hebrew to Advanced Language and Literature at various times of the day throughout the week. Classes run two hours and are taught by our community's outstanding Hebrew instructors: Nira Lev, Corrine Ben-Ami, Tziona Ragowsky and Nurit Sallen. For more information about a Hebrew class that meets your needs, contact Nira Lev, Director of Hebrew Programs at AJE (248) 645-7860. Tuition: $225 includes materials Yiddish I An elementary class designed to develop basic skills in speaking, comprehension, reading and writing. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Instructor: Rabbi Ahron Davidson Tuition: $160 Advanced Yiddish A course designed to develop accuracy and fluency in oral expression and reading comprehension, and to introduce topics in Yiddish and literature. Students must have basic knowledge of Yiddish (or a combination of Hebrew and German). Thursday, 7:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Instructor Rabbi Ahron Davidson Tuition: $160 Classes run for 14 weeks and begin the week offanuary 15, 2001. Location: Max M. Fisher Federation Bldg., 6735 Telegraph Road, Bloomfield Hills Please note: Sunday's 1.J a.m. Advanced Language anclUterature class meets at Akiva Hebrew Day School, 2100 West 12 Mile Rd., Southfield Registration for Winter/Spring 2001 semester has begun Call Debbie Ornstein at the AJE office, (248)645-7860 or register on-line at www.eRegister.com ❑ agency or jew sh education • 12/29 2000 85