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July 27, 2001 - Image 82

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2001-07-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

-

‘1111

36 Months

GM Employees

36 Months
Valued Customers
$399oo

AUDETTE

248.851.7200

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Mon. & Thurs. till 9:00 - Tues., Wed., Fri. till 6:00

www.audettecadillac.com

THE FUSION OF DESIGN & TECHNOLOGY

Plus tax, title & license with approved GMAC credit. All rebates to dealer. 12,000 miles/year. S3060.84 total due at sign-
ing for GM Employees and 53094.00 total due at signing for Valued Customers. Must qualify for Cadillac lease loyalty.

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Rabbi Bunny Freedman

"After a Jewish baby takes on
human form and shape it requires
burial, halachically (according to
Jewish law)," says Rabbi E.B.
(Bunny) Freedman, director of the
Jewish Hospice and Chaplaincy
Network in Southfield.
"We also usually try to help them
be at home when they die," says
Angela's Winkler,.who is Jewish.
Rabbi Freedman says all of the
children whose families he has
counseled have been at home. "The
issue becomes whether other siblings
are traumatized by the loss at
home," he says. "My instinct says
the less you hide and shield children
the better. It is better to experience
it than to imagine the experience."
Winkler says: "I like working with
families one-on-one intensely. There
is an instant intimacy with the fami-
ly of a dying child. It is very sad,
but also very gratifying."
Sumner sees prenatal hospice as a
way to "put parents in control of
many individualized, personal goals
for their baby and the time they
may have with him or her.
"No matter how long or short the
baby's life is, they treasure it and are
able to focus 100 percent on him or
her," she says. "The bereaved par-
ents' comments are the most power-
ful testimony to the importance of
this care — and they come through
their loss more intact and actually
grateful for the experience."

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