Torah Portion . World Sabbath service brings together worshippers of many religions. Above left: The Rev. Kenneth Flowers ofDetroit's Greater New Mt. Moriah Baptist Church speaks at the 2001 World Sabbath prayer service. Above: The Rev. Edward Mullins of Christ Church Cranbrook in SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN Staff-Writer VIT hen the Rev. Rodney Reinhart found- ed the World Sabbath of Religious Reconciliation two years ago, his hope was to gather leaders of all faiths in prayer for justice and peace. "In light of the recent terrorist attacks, this year's event takes on more meaning," says the Rev. Reinhart of Nativity Episcopal Church in Plymouth. "The Sept. 11 attacks on Washington and New York brought home to us the horror of religious intoler- Bloomfield Hills and the Rev. Rodney Reinhart of Nativity Episcopal ante, terrorism and war." Church in Plymouth sign a proclamation establishing the first World The third annual worship service, led Sabbath in 2000. by members of various religious faiths, will take place 7 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 26, at Christ Church Cranbrook in dent of the Council of Islamic Organizations of Bloomfield Hills. Michigan; and the Rev. Kenneth Flowers of Detroit's "We came to understand that we, as religious leaders, Greater New Mt. Moriah Baptist Church. have a great responsibility to work for justice and peace With the memory of the Sept. 11 attacks fresh in his in the world," the Rev. Reinhart says. mind, the Rev. Flowers will speak to the future. Faith responses to the Sept. 11 attacks will be given "What happened Sept. 11 is truly one great tragedy by Rabbi Herbert Yoskowitz of Adat Shalom Synagogue in the history of humankind," he says. "We recognize in Farmington Hills; Victor Begg of the Unity Center that the Holocaust and slavery were other great Muslim Center of Bloomfield Hills, who is also presi- tragedies in the world, but this is one in which a terror- a r litt i lgork. e-..iyitatioa tospea. at he World Sabbath of tgeiis Reconciliation came.at.an ideal time for Rabbi rbeit Y6skOwitz. 'tUrning..from Israel just days befote the interfaith s service , the AdatShalotn Synagogue rabbi will 7.%.-ti esh 5 000fa:t .-tart the event *and then share with the acted PartiCiPallts exPeriences of insPitation from his nine-day triP- . The rabbi's travels included visits to Detroit's Partnership 2000 region in the Central Galilee as part of a hospice team. "There, I visited a 25-year-old Arab-Christian woman who was in the end stage of colon cancer," he says. "My part in helping her was to speak of spiritual matters, helping her reckon with her own maker, helping her see what she could leave her family. "I wanted her to live, even though we may disagree about politics. And what I learned from this young woman from Nazareth was that she was taught to accept help from everyone." In meeting with his cousin, the chair of surgery at Shaarey Zedek Hospital in Jerusalem, Rabbi Yoskowitz says, "I was inspired by our Jewish value system of help- ing people regardless of what community they come from. My cousin told me that when patients are brought into the hospital, terrorists with more serious wounds are treated before Jews with lesser maladies." Reflecting on his trip, Rabbi Yoskowitz says, "I came away thinking about how we as Jews have so much to teach the people of the world about how everybody should act toward all human beings." At the service, the rabbi hopes to speak of the purpose of the event. He'll tell the group that "each Shabbat Jews say the words, shavat vyenafash, God rested on the Sabbath day and gave us all the potential for new souls. "A lot of people need new souls — like people who not only kill other people's children, but delight in killing, sacrificing their own. Shabbat is an ideal it is a time to receive a new soul." — Shelli Liebman Dorfman, staff writer — ❑ ist attack affected an entire nation on one given day." The Rev. Flowers wants to "bring about a sense of hope and under- standing and resolve to go forward in peace in a non-violent way." But he says, "we recognize 'we must let justice roll down like water, right- eousness like a mighty stream (Amos, 5:21-24).'" Begg says, "Sept. 11 resulted because everything in the world revolves around religion somehow" He sees the World Sabbath service as part of a non-violent solution. "We need a mechanism for people to show disagreement through dia- logue," he says. "We need people to talk and to listen." Prayer, Music, Information The service will include a prayer for peace by Imam Hassan Qazwini of the Islamic Center of 1/25 2002 37