,,kka • litia d4 (h/laii Get= Cauthier From Center To Synagogue JCC programming is designed to com- plement the role of the synagogue in communal life, and nearly all of its spe- cial programs are held in collaboration with area synagogues, Jewish agencies or the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit. "The sense is that we are a portal to the synagogue," says Rabbi Greenwald, who has established a teaching relation- ship with Eilu Eilu, the Conservative movement's adult Jewish learning pro- ject. "By getting people into the build- ing who are without roots in the Jewish community, we can funnel them to the synagogues." Lawrence Wolfe, JCC president, says, "To do that effectively, we need an educator on staff to reach out to enhance the 90,000 Jews in our com- munity to have a place to learn, play and relax." Rabbi Greenwald's discovered the potential for a rabbi in community work while working for the community relations committee of the United Jewish Federation of Pittsburgh. Growing up in Atlanta, he graduated from the University of Georgia. Later, he spent two years at the Hillel of . North Carolina and a year in Israel as a social worker at an absorption center. He received a master's degree in social work at the University of Pittsburgh before attending rabbinical school. David Sorkin, executive director of the JCC, sees Rabbi Greenwald as hav- ing found his railing. "He has a sense of community and the heart and soul for communal outreach," Sorkin says. "The Center is just what I had hoped it would be — a real old-fash- ioned shuk (marketplace)," Rabbi Greenwald says. "There is such a diversity of Jewish life here, that I can start in the morning early in the health club and proceed to work my way through throngs of singing children, teenagers pounding the basketball floor, seniors in a wood- working class, grown men and women donning in-line skates and tempting fate, staff learning Torah and much, much more." He sees his mission as enhancing the "Jewish" in Jewish Community Center, working to help deepen the Jewish experience within programming and work environments. He says, "We have to take everyone and anything having to do with the Center and boost it up a notch Jewishly."❑ Taut Cicchini Sor L714en Peace Begins At Home is. And not all those who participate are Jewish." Torah Center hosts relationship therapy workshop. SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN StaffWriter T Le Talmud tells us our whole purpose in life is to bring peace into the world," says Rabbi Elimelech Silberberg. "And you can't do that without peace in your marriage. Motivated by the premise that mar- riage is a divine providence, Rabbi Silberberg says his congregation will host "Getting the Relationship You Want," a daylong workshop to help couples learn how their marriage holds the key to personal happiness. The workshop will be held Sunday, Jan. 21, at the Sara Tugman Bais Chabad Torah Center. It will include discussion of communication skills, spousal compassion, fulfillment in mar- riage and utilizing marriage for emo- tional healing and growth. Rabbi Shmuel Stauber and his wife Rivka Zahler-Stauber, certified Imago relationship therapists, will lead the workshop. Imago therapy is based on the theory that individuals carry inside themselves an image of intense relation- ships both with their parents and between their parents. "These are the relationships that should last forever," he says. "They form the template, or imago, for our own relationships.". The workshop will include segments of guided imagery to move what is in the unconscious to the conscious level — so memories of parental relation- ships can be realized. "This is not just inspirational or ser- monic," Rabbi Stauber says. A misconception is that the work- shop is for those with troubled mar- riages, he adds. "The point is to get a glimpse of what's possible in all mar- riages." Only about 1,500 Americans are trained in Imago therapy, but much fewer have studied the additional two years required to present the workshop. Rabbi Stauber and his wife may be the best proponents of the workshop, having been introduced to the therapy method as suspicious participants. "We went for our own relationship," Suits • Sportcoats Tuxedos • Slacks • Shirts Topcoats • Raincoats Shoes • Sweaters • Socks Ties • Cuff Links Custom Buttons Ask for Sheila Blum- Fashion Consultant Taut Cicchini or (Women Rabbi Shmuel Stauber he says. "I went asa real skeptic, and left with a complete paradigm shift and trained side-by-side, hour-by-hour with my wife to lead our own workshops." Rabbi Stauber also will speak on rela- tionships on Saturday, Jan. 20, at the synagogue, a talk that can stand alone or act as a segue to the Sunday workshop. A program of the Torah Center's Hyman and Sonia Blumenstein Outreach Institute, the Staubers' visit will be co-sponsored by Dr. Claude and Rivka Schochet in memory of Yenta Baila bas Velvel Schochet. ❑ tionship You e . filace from 9:30 Sunday, Jan. 21, at Ba is Chabad W Maple, d Breakfast and . Babysitting is reservation. $100/cou- reServations; $125 at the , uber will speak at 8:30 Skirt Suits • Pants Suits Blazers Slacks • Shirts Topcoats • Accessories PERSONALIZED SERVICE IN YOUR HOME, OFFICE OR IN OUR SHOWROOM BY APPOINTMENT 271 MERRILL BIRMINGHAM • 48009 (248) 646-0535 1/0 DETROIT JEWISH NEWS •TN a turs ay, Jan. 20, at the syna- ue. $36/couple; $25/couple for -ihop participants f;' For information or reservations on either event, call (248) 855- 6170 . INTERNATIONAL NEWS PLUS 372 Oullette Avenue • Windsor, Canada 1/12 2001 55