Sports
The Jewish News is seeking favorite family recipes
for a community keepsake cookbook.
Every family recipe has a story...we want yours!
Please submit your recipe and story to:
The Detroit Jewish News
27676 Franklin Road • Southfield, Michigan 48025
Fax: 248-354-6069
E-mail: annabelusa@aol.com
Fill out below gr attach recipe/story and photo to this prepaid form.
nclude your name and address on back of photo if you would like it returned.
You may be contacted for a story or more information.
Recipes must be kosher style.
(No pork, shellfish or combination of meat and milk products.)
RECIPE (AND STORY)
Please submit by July 2, 2001
Golf outing
Helps Campers
The Jewish Community Center of
Metropolitan Detroit will hold its Dr.
Larry D. Sills Memorial Golf Classic
on Monday; June. 4.
Proceeds of the event will fund
scholarships for children to attend the
JCC Summer Camps.
The outing will be held at Tam-0-
Shanter Country Club in West
Bloomfield, and will include golf, a
raffle, silent auction, lunch, dinner
and cocktail hour.
Admission is $325 per golfer, and
sponsorship opportunities are avail-
able.
For information, call JCC
Development Director Nevin Kanner,
(248) 661-1250.
InLine Hockey
Championship:
Adult Division (17 and up): Stu's
Crew 4, Smarts 1. Stu's Crew had to
win twice. In the second game, Craig
Perlmutter had two goals and one
assist.
UCLA Lineman
Keeps It Kosher
Tech 11 cylilia
F.141:1FESSIONAL DIVING WATCHES
METALS
TIME
FINE TIMEPIECES / DIAMONDS / JEWELRY
5/18
2001
100
322 S. MAIN • ROYAL OAK, MI 48067
(248) 582-9344
Los Angeles/JTA — When Eyoseph
Esi Efseaff arrived at UCLA's campus
on a football recruiting visit, he star-
tled the coaches with an unexpected
request: His food had to be strictly
kosher — even though Efseaff isn't
Jewish.
The 6 foot 3 inch, 282-pound offen-
sive lineman, now an 18-year-old fresh-
man at UCLA, is a Russian Molokan,
one of a group of Christian dissidents
who broke away from the Russian
Orthodox Church in the 17th century.
They refused to recognize the reli-
gious supremacy of the czar and they
follow the Bible literally — including
its dietary laws, although most do not
have their meat ritually slaughtered.
Because of their beliefs, they were
persecuted and forced to resettle in
other parts of the Russian Empire —
in southern Ukraine, the Caucasus,
Central Asia and eastern Russia, where
many still reside.
In Russian, Molokan means "milk
drinker," a moniker that began after
Molokans defied the prescribed
Orthodox fast days by drinking milk.
Efseaff's great-grandparents immi-
grated from Russia to California,
where most of the estimated 20,000
Molokans in the United States live.
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