Filling Karol Friedman, Jewish Vocational . Service vice president, shows fifth- and sixth- graders some of the items packaged by workers in the organization's adult workshop. DIANA LIEBERMAN Copy Editor/Education Writer :E t was called the Care Van — a school bus commissioned by the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit for a tour of local Jewish social-service agencies. The bus carried 18 fifth- and sixth- graders and their families to the Jewish Community Center and the Fleischman Residence, both in West Bloomfield. Then it went across town to the Southfield headquarters of the Jewish Vocational Service. "The purpose of the day was two- fold," said Kari Alterman, Federation's director of community outreach and education. "First, they saw, in action, some of the agencies they learned about at Tzedakah Fair in January. And they also learned how doing volunteer work makes the Jewish community a better and stronger place." Most Conservative, Reform and Humanist congregations now require volunteer work as part of the bar or bat mitzvah experience. But 12-year- olds rarely know what agencies are available in the Jewish community, or what these agencies do. This was the first of two tours designed to remedy that situation. The second is scheduled for 9:45 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 7. The program was the idea of Douglas Bloom, co-chair of Federation's Annual Campaign 2002. Marcia Liebson, educational direc- tor at Temple Emanu-El, went on the Care Van with her nephew, Ben Levin, 11, of Oak Park. "I thought it was very good, and Ben thought it was very good," Liebson said. "I wanted to see what it was like and to see if I should tell people to go on the next one. And I will." For his part, Ben, who is going into sixth grade, has decided to volunteer at the Jacob's Ladder program. It is a series of short-term classes for seniors who live at the Fleischman Residence, Hechtman Apartments and Meer Apartments, all in West Bloomfield. - At JVS, the visit included a video and a tour of the agency's Southfield facility. In all, JVS runs programs at six sites. "The Jewish Vocational Service is a sectarian agency that provides services on a non-sectarian basis," Barbara Nurenberg, the agency's president, said on the video. "For many people, 'I am my job and my job is me' is where they're coming from." Karol Friedman, JVS vice president, was among the agency's tour guides. "Everybody has different abilities," Friedman told the young people. "We want everyone to be able to work at the top of their ability." This may mean helping laid-off executives polish their resumes — along with their self-confidence — through individual and group sessions. Or giving a boost to newly divorced or widowed homemakers seeking their first paying job; running a sheltered workshop where those with mental or developmental impairments can earn a salary; or providing work for retired senior citizens who want to stay active. JVS runs a transition program, with job coaching and shadowing, for grad- . ; uates of the Detroit Public Schools' special education programs. The Southfield headquarters of JVS also houses one of the two sites for the Dorothy and Peter Brown Jewish Community Adult Day Care Program, where seniors with Alzheimer's disease or other forms of dementia can spend the day in activities that give respite to their family caregivers. The other pro- gram site is in West Bloomfield. As the tour wrapped up, Katie Hess, who will celebrate her bat mitzvah at Temple Israel, had begun to consider volunteering at Fleischman, while Stephanie Indianer, of Congregation Beth Ahm, had decided to work at Yad Ezra, the Berkley-based kosher food bank. Lea Selitsky, whose bat mitzvah will take place at Temple Emanu-El, said she wants to do "something with ani- mals." Fortunately, Gail Greenberg, pro- gram coordinator at Jewish Experiences For Families, had a good Jewish answer right up her sleeve. "Try CHAI [Concern for Helping Animals in Israel]," she said. "They're on the Internet." ❑ 8/ 2 2002 33