ROYAL OAK tiae-Atrze 318 West Fourth Street • 248-544-7949 Judge, the Catholic priest killed at Ground Zero, had been sta- tioned. After Kalinsky photographed the rabbi and the company of beefy firefighters, he nearly cried as he told the men that — though he'd taken pictures of Ali, Michael Jordan and the pope — he consid- ered the firefighters the true role models for our age. Each firefighter then hugged Kalinsky. 9-11 has left an impact on the rabbinic world as well, Potasnick says. He's noticed "more of a friendship" between rabbis of the different denominations since the attacks, and "a little more understanding of our human differences." This book will help break down preconceived notions about rabbis, Potasnik says. Since many of the book's subjects don't wear typical rabbinic garb, the book "will show you can't define people by their appearance," he says. CJ (lava elq leers :dig !MAN ACE S: SM Rabbi Rachamim &min- , the director of Chabad of Venice, is pictured in a gondola on a Venetian canal on the cover of "Rabbis — The Many Faces of Judaism," to be published in October. Rabbis In Action While Rabbis defies conventional wis- dom about Jewish religious teachers, Kalinsky says he took pains to paint respectful portraits of his subjects. He'd heard of one book of off-the-wall rabbinic pictures but wanted to take a different approach. "Just do what you do, and I'll pho- tograph you," he told the rabbis. And he did. There's Rabbi Niles Elliot Goldstein, founder of the New Shul in New York's Greenwich Village, striking a karate pose on a New York City roof (the Twin Towers still visible in the background), and Ethiopian Jewish leader Rabbi Yosef Hadana, clenching his fists in front of a stained-glass window. It was while capturing a rabbi in action when traveling in the former Soviet Union in 1988 that Kalinsky began conceiving this project. The photographer discovered an old rabbi hunched over a desk in the Moscow synagogue, his wife sitting opposite, and an unidentified man sit- ting in the shadows. It turned out that the mysterious observer was a KGB agent whose job was to watch over this Jewish religious leader all day. The agent and rabbi never spoke. That photo later ran in the New York Times and generated a strong response, Kalinsky recalls, in part because it spoke about the lack of reli- gious freedom in the Soviet Union. RabbiS came into Kalinsky's life again when his wife was diagnosed with brain cancer in 1994. He sought . Rabbi Shalom Paltiel's help, and the rabbi — with his own wife present — held Kalinsky's wife's hand while she lay in a coma. Though the doctors gave her only a few months to live, she survived for another year. The photo of Paltiel, of Chabad Congregation in Port Washington, N.Y., also appears in the book. Later, another rabbi told Kalinsky he would "find an angel," and four years later he fell in love and remarried. It was his second wife who convinced him to dedicate a book to rabbis. Aided by Rabbi David Saperstein, head of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism in Washington, D.C., and Lubavitch leader Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, Kalinsky drafted a list of can- didates and began contacting them. Slowly Kalinsky began meeting rab- bis such as Rachamim Banin, the director of Chabad of Venice, whose picture, in a gondola on a Venetian canal, graces the book's cover. After several trips and 18 months of interviews, planning and shoots, Kalinsky finished taking most ofhis pictures. The vivid color photos form a photo- graphic tapestry for the coffee-table size book, which is set to retail for $39.95. This rabbinic mosaic shows that many rabbis are "not only spiritual leaders, but they are leaders of the Jewish people," Schneier says. "Each one is making [his or her] own contribution to the Jewish people." ❑ rficafisaray, fe6614 10 . s\oyarGak. Oeafre $.60 gpm pan wk. Over tote tt et ∎ Royal Oak MI Fai 248-544-79t3.3 , gos, \ -. " - " Tickets available at ticketmaster outlets including Marshall-Fields (.( an ipti=q)) and Harmony House, online at www.nipp.com or tibWalrtnaster www.ticketmaster.com , or by calling 248-645-6666 Wobodwnpartieularpreteents 9/ 6 2002 133