The Neuman Family and Staff of On The Bookshelf STAR DELI Michigan's Finest Deli Carry-Out and Tray Catering Specialists 352-7377 24555 W 12 Mile Wish Their Friends and Customers A VERY HEALTHY AND HAPPY PASSOVER We Will Be Open During The Holiday To Service Your Traditional Needs For Passover EVEREST EXPRESS 23331 ORCHARD LAKE RD. SOUTH OF 10 MILE RD. FARMINGTON (248) 474-8024 fax: (248) 474-2770 FINE NEPAL CUISINE EXCITING DISHES! GREATTASTE! ND HEALTHY,TOO! W - TRY OUR WONDERFUL VEGETERIAN DISHES COUPON , 20% OFF D NNER Hours: Mon-Thurs 10 am-11 pm Sat 4-11 pm • Sun 4-9 pm Dine in • Carry-Out • Catering Open Lunch & Dinner 6 Da s 2484153-7344 Tues.-Thurs. 1 1-10 p.m.; Fri.,Sat. 11-11 p.m. Sun., 11-9 pm, • Closed Mondays 2086 Crooks • Rochester - With Coupon 3/22 2002 84 ' • Bar Mitzvah • Bat Mitzvah • Anniversaries • Showers • Weddings Expires 3/31/02 Kidnapped Proclaimed to be a future zaddik, or holy man, a boy becomes a contested commodity. SAN DEE BRAWARS KY Special to the Jewish News S hai Fhima was dressed like an ordinary New Jersey teenager in high-top sneakers and a baseball cap when he first met Rabbi Shlomo Helbrans on a Shabbat evening in Brookyn's Borough Park in 1992. The 13-year-old boy, who was visit- ing relatives, stood out amidst the Chasidim, all wearing black. Rabbi Helbrans fixed his gaze on the boy and called him to sit close to him: He said that he saw light shining from the boy's face. The rabbi's wife, Malka Helbrans, later explained to Shai's mother, Hana, that this meant the boy was special, that he'd be a holy man able to speak directly to God: a zaddik. This is the beginning of an extraor- dinary drama revolving around Shai. He was kidnapped and secretly shuf- fled between yeshivot in Brooklyn, Monsey (N.Y.), Canada and France; his mother, an Israeli immigrant divorced from Shai's father, was accused of abuse. Shai was thrust to the center of two ensuing court cases: kidnapping charges against Rabbi Helbrans and his wife, and a custody trial pitting his mother against other rabbis who wanted to raise her son. In the first book to deal with this story, The Zaddik: The Battle for a Boy's Soul (Prometheus; $26), Elaine Grudin Denholtz unfolds the com- plex events and raises significant questions about what it means to steal another's soul. She explores whether Shai was seduced and brainwashed, or took on a religious life by choice, or whether he was an ordinary but troubled boy strug- gling with existential questions com- mon to teenagers. In 1995, Hana Fhima approached the author, who teaches research writ- ing at Fairleigh Dickinson University in New Jersey and has written several books and plays, about writing this book. Denholtz says she hadn't heard of the case when she met with Hana for the first time at a New Jersey hotel, along with the two New Jersey lawyers, Larry Meyerson and Steve Rubenstein, who took on Hana's case on a pro bono basis. "When I looked into her eyes and saw how distraught she was," Denholtz says, "I just knew I had to write this." Denholtz spent six years researching and writing The Zaddik. She inter- viewed many of the key players includ- ing Hana, lawyers on both sides, judges, an NYPD detective named Captain Bill Plackenmeyer whose determination kept the investigation going, journalists and experts on cults. She also studied 2,500 pages of court The Bf!itie for oV Sou/ 'ELAINE GRUDIN DENHOI.TZ transcripts. Although she tried to interview Rabbi Helbrans while he was in prison, his lawyers turned down her requests, and she says that it was also not possi- ble to speak directly with Shai. Although the narrative includes some minor inaccuracies about Chasidic life, the book is compelling reading. Denholtz does an impressive job of pulling together the maze-like path of events from the 1992 kidnapping to Shai's return to Israel in 1996, where he joined his father. In between, Shai ran away several times. The author is most effective in con- veying Hana's struggle, the enormous KIDNAPPED on page 87