Cover Story ■ I n PillaYer Diverse worshippers join together to pray for peace and healing of our nation. KERI GUTEN COHEN Story Development Editor T he Spiritual Day Tricentennial Choir, more than 100 strong, set the tone for an interfaith prayer service Sunday, Sept. 23, at Fort Street Presbyterian Church in downtown Detroit. The powerful voices uplifted the spirits of more than 1,000 people of all faiths, races and ethnic groups gathered as Americans united in efforts to heal our nation in the wake of the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the United States. Organized primarily by the Detroit office of the National Conference of Community and Justice (NCCJ), the service featured readings and remarks by leaders from Christian, Jewish and Moslem religions. Rabbi Daniel Syme of Temple Beth El showed the crowd a kippah he always wears at the Detroit office of the High Holidays that his son Josh had made at age 5; Josh is now 22. "We can't stand idly by to let those in his generation and future generations grow up in fear," said Rabbi Syme, who participated in the service though his mother was dying in the hospital. "We are here today Jews, Christians, Muslims — unit- ed as citizens of the United States, the greatest democracy in the world. We have joined hands and hearts in pain and sor- row to participate in a memorial, but we're also here at a moment of truth in human history Each of us must declare no more rationalizing, no more murder that's enough." Rabbi Marla Feldman, director of the Michigan Board of Rabbis, read a psalm during the service. She observed that the crowd was "tremendously diverse, with more faiths than those represented on the program." UNITED IN PRAYER on page16 9/28 2001 14