t takes a lot of peanut butter to glue together a relationship between a West Bloomfield syna- gbgue and a Detroit church. But the families of Congregation B'nai Moshe are willing to make the effort. Every Monday and Thursday, Central United Methodist Church on Grand Circus Park in downtown Detroit serves lunch to the homeless. On one Monday, Jan. 15, that lunch was provided by B'nai Moshe congre- gants. This was the third time the syna- gogue's social action committee has 0 sponsored the activity — and this time it was associated with the celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The project started weeks before, as students in the synagogue's LIFE (Learning is a Family Experience) reli- gious education program decorated col- Clockwise from top Organizers and chi peanut butter spreaders Susan Sinai and Naomi Pinchuk of Southfield and Debra Darvick of Birmingham. Caryn Zeitlin, Jenna Sperling and Jordan Gussin of Farmington Hills, along with Mark Feldman ofWest Bloomfield decorated more bags at the last minute. Git Feldman and son Jacob put the finishing touches on some of the lunch bags. B'nai Moshe students Samantha Fine, Sara Nathanson and Andrew Nathanson, all ofWest Bloomfzeld 2/9 2001 35