The Saab Sales
Event.

(Typical Swedes. No flashing lights. No confetti. Just a great
deal on the car ranked "Best Mid Luxury Car in Initial Quality
in the J.D. Power and Associates 2001 Initial Quality Study.")

AJCommittee haggadah
for Thanksgiving places
Sept. 11 in perspective.

LEASE A SAAB 9-5 WAGON

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so Security Deposit

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Tired of going to "art galleries"
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custom frame shops?

ON THE
AVENUE
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Conte to

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Heartwear Deeig no

THE FIRST-EVER STUDIO SALE!

CONTEMPORARY RINGS, PENDANTS, EARRINGS
November 17, 18, 19 (11am -4pm)
No appointment for these 3 clays only!

11/16

2001

22

Thanks Amid
Tragedy

20% OFF ANY REGULARLY
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call for Hours:248

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AMY SARA CLARK
Jewish Telegraphic Agency

New York
nn Schaffer didn't think she
could celebrate Thanksgiving
as usual this year, so soon after
the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11.
"To come to the table and not
acknowledge what has happened
would be very difficult," said Schaffer,
director of the American Jewish
Committee's Belfer Center for
Intergroup Relations.
When Schaffer found she wasn't alone
in these concerns, she and colleagues
decided to create a "Thanksgiving
Haggadah" to help people incorporate
into the annual fall holiday a memorial
to the victims of the attacks.
"With Thanksgiving approaching,
we began to wonder how we could cel-
ebrate and still acknowledge the deep
pain and sense of loss that so many in
our community are feeling," Schaffer
said. "We felt that some ritual and
some words would help us through
this. As Jews, we are accustomed to
framing significant events with appro-
priate blessings, prayers and readings."
The haggadah model strikes an appro-
priate mix of mourning and hope in the
traditional Thanksgiving gathering.
"'Haggadah,' after all, means a
telling,"
b, Schaffer said. "You can use a
haggadah for almost any event."
Haggadahs are used for Passover and,
sometimes, for Tu b'Shevat.
The Thanksgiving version takes
some of the Passover rituals and
applies them to themes of mourning
and giving thanks.
Sections include "Why is this
Thanksgiving different?" "What have
we lost?" "What have we learned?"
and "What do v,re tell our children?"
The haggadah includes special activi-
ties for children, such as "Four
Questions" that children answer, not
ask. The four-page booklet also includes
quotes from the Bible, rabbis and poets
and several transliterated prayers.
The AJCommittee sent the haggadah
in early November to rabbis across the
country, encouraging them to make
copies for their congregants. They also
posted the booklet on the group's Web

A

