EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK The Way We Live I t was billed .as a spiritual warm-up for four weeks of adult Jewish study. We came to the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield last week — 600 strong, repre- senting every stream of Judaism — in search of a spark to sharpen our focus on learning through Detroit Jewry's Seminars for Adult Jewish Enrichment (SAJE). We got it, too. _ Giving the third annual Shiffman Family Lecture, Rabbi Eddie Feinstein of Valley Beth Shalom, a Conservative synagogue in Encino, Calif, did his best to bring us back to our spiritual roots as Jews. Exuberant, provoking and uplifting, he quickly-pinpointed our problem: that, in the face of assimilation, apathy and igno- rance, we've lost our spiritual way. "When Jews seek spiritual wisdom," he said, obviously irked, "we inevitably go everywhere but to our own traditions to ROBERT A. find it." SKLAR SAJE, which began on Tuesday, is Editor meant to be a midwinter commitment by adults to bolster their Jewish identity. For some, it's a once-a-year commitment to learning. For many, it's a commitment to more study. With more than 500 registrants in each of its four years, SAJE is the largest Jewish adult education program in metro Detroit. Program sponsors are the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit, the Detroit Jewish News and the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's Alliance for Jewish Education and Agency forJewish Education. What is faith? It's knowing, even when times are tough or evil is lurking, that "tomorrow is another day" and "has possibilities for oneness," he said. It's knowing the "world will break your heart" and shock you with its deadly fury. And it's knowing that, in . its brokenness, "the world can be made whole again." History has proven that. The Shoah and its aftermath — how a Jewish state emerged within three years of Hitler's death camps — is just one example. What moved me most was the rabbi's stirring account of his family's near-death experience with an earthquake in 1999. The family home jumped "seven feet off its founda- tion and we had a clearer view than we wanted of the San Fernando Valley" This wasn't somebody adrift in hyperbole, but someone who had found "oneness" under the broken pieces and who had found inspiration to make his part of the world 'whole again. "We're agents of God to make it one," he said. He was saying that, as Jews, we must resolve to partner with God to mend, heal and fix — ourselves, our family, our community, the world. And we must do so -because it is right, not for gain. "Judaism teaches to live big heroically, to take on a bro- ken world and make it better, more significant," he said. Setting A Standard "Ah-hah!" I thought, as I put his talk, "A Brief History of Chutzpah: Our Ability to Say 'Yes' to Life," into context. He had just reinforced what SAJE, taught by a volunteer faculty of clergy, communal professionals and lay leaders, is all about. Sure, it's about adults learning Jewishly, but it's also about them demonstrating to kids that Be A Hero it's good to study their heritage — that it's not Cults, Jews for Jesus, Buddhism — too often, only fun, but also a way to become "one" with they're more appealing than Judaism. I guess, God and make the world a better place. to a lost soul, they seem more inviting and Rabbi Feinstein The ultimate reward of living an exemplary engaging. life, Rabbi Feinstein said, is the privilege of Can we combat these tempting lures? "Yes!" saying: "My life was good, my life mattered. exclaimed Rabbi Feinstein, who teaches in the My life made a difference. I'm proud of what I did." Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the University of Tasting the spiritual nuggets from. Rabbi Feinstein's Judaism in Los Angeles. thought-provoking message brought to mind the 18th-cen- He then talked about living as a Jew "at one with God." tury chasidic master, Rabbi Nachman of Bratslav, who said: Don't fret, he said. You don't have to be a talmudic scholar "Faith makes you truly alive. It fills every day with good to grasp the secrets to a "good" Jewish life. They resonate when troubles come, as theY surely will. Take comfort in in common texts like the Shabbat siddur, the Passover your faith." Haggadah and Purim's Megillat Esther. SAJE is a spiritual road that adults can take to a deeper "Breathe their meaning," he urged. faith in God, a road they can share proudly with their kids What they teach, he said, is that we must live heroically. and grandkids. That's our God-giver' purpose for being. "If you don't live That's why I was happy for Bloomfield Hills' Cis Maisel your life with purpose," he said, "you live it by accident." Kellman, who in 1999 endowed SAJE with a generous gift. As Rabbi Feinstein spoke passionately about faith, it "This is what I had hoped SAJE would do — bring us became evident why Harlene Appelman, director of together," she said as she settled in for the Shiffman Family Federation's Alliance for Jewish Education, had insisted Lecture in the JCC's Handleman Hall. he be the keynoter at SAJE's Jan. 10 kickoff event. He As I left the JCC, I pondered Rabbi Feinstein's send-off. really does, as she said, "treat every single person he It was perfect for a spirited group of adults ready to learn. comes in contact with as if they truly were created in the When bad things happen, he said, you shouldn't ask, image of God." "Where is God?" but rather, "Where am I?" I was intrigued by how he defined faith: a trust in God Clearly, as he put it, "It takes courage to be a Jew." that "the world is worth living for." ❑ TENDER 271 WEST MAPLE DOWNTOWN BIRMINGHAM 248.258.0212 Monday-Saturday 10-6 Thursday 10-9 For related story: page 51 Open a Tender Charge Today 1/18 2002 5