1 5 Vo OFF . r I I I .. . . I Arts & Entertainment i 1 All Take-Outs over $25 I i Monday - Thursday only. One coupon per customer. I I I After 3:00 p.m. Not good with any other offer. Expires 11/30/02. I .1 I. I. Father Of Us All 1 Book examines the legacy of the biblical patriarch Abraham, the man at the heart of the world's three great monotheistic religions. :Buy One Dinner Get The; : . Second Dinner 1/2 Off! : . 1 of equal or lesser value 1 I I Monday - Thursday Dine In Only. One Coupon Per Table. Not Good With Any Other Offer. Expires 11/30/02. 1. 1 1 1 J DEBRA B. DARVICK Special to the Jewish News LUNCH SPECIALS $495 Don't Forget...The Sheik caters all occasions B ruce Feiler's latest book, Abraham: A Journey to thC Heart of Three Faiths (William Morrow; $23.95), is sure to fly off the shelves every bit as quickly as his fifth book, Walking the Bible: A Journey By Land Through the West Bloomfield Five Books of Moses, published last 4189 ORCHARD LAKE AT PONTIAC TRAIL IN WEST BLOOMFIELD year. Feiler, an intrepid and gifted (248) 865-0000 reporter whose ear is attuned to issues Open 7 Days a Week for Lunch & Dinner simultaneously global and personal, has written a must-read book for this post-Sept. 11 world. Indeed, that day's terrorist attacks were the impetus for this nonfiction exploration of the legacy of the biblical patri- arch Abraham in the Jewish, Christian and Muslim traditions. Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful As Feiler recalls it, he was working (1 atmosphere of casual elegance on a sequel to Walking the Bible when 1 I his brother phoned that fateful BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER September morning and told him to look out the window of his Manhattan OPEN 7 DAYS: MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. apartment. At that moment, he wit- West Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313 nessed the Twin Towers falling in lower Manhattan. "It was the most beautiful day any 000624550 4 011\111kka tem.... --11111 - of us could remember," he says, "and like everyone else, I was mute for sev- eral weeks. "Then, in the weeks that followed, 70 14 everyone began to hear these ques- V4 • tions: Who are they and why do they hate us? Why can't the religions get along?" Feiler heard one name echoing II LUNCH SPECIAL DOLLAR SUSHI! II behind those conversations. II , "One man stood at the heart of all I I three religions that seemed to be at II war — Abraham. I realized that he is I PER PIECE 11 CHICKEN II Every Day TERIYAKI I 14 the father of 12 million Jews, 2 billion Christians and 1 billion Muslims. Rice • Soup • Salad I until 2:30 EVERY SATURDAY UNTIL 4 PM II L ..... That's half the humans alive today. I. (.9 But who was he?" 22030 Farmington Rd.(at 9 Mile Rd.) (248) 426-0203 Feiler's answer to the question, 65, 9 Mile Rd. "Who is Abraham?" is a fascinating DINE IN OR TAKE OUT X exploration of the man whose relation- Monda - Saturda 11-9:30 • Sunda 4 -9 ship with God changed the world. And pursuing that answer gave the author a new understanding of his Jewish identity. 007110 te THE GALLERY RESTAURANT 111111 FARMINGTON Sushi House 95 ------------ CALLTOOM FOR A SUBSCRIPTION 2002 96 248.539.3001 The patriarch Jews hold dear is also deeply meaningful to Christians and Muslims. And in true Jewish form, the book's original question has left Feiler with another question, one that he now poses to his readers: "Can Abraham be a vessel for reconcilia- tion?" A Tangle Of History In addition to a crack reporter's deter- mination to go the mile for his story, Feiler has a novelist's eye for detail. "No one is alone in Jerusalem: even the stones know your father," he writes. As he enters a Judaica store in the Old City, his eye falls upon a cardboard box filled with shofars. He writes: "A tangle of polished rams' horns claw out of the top like some snarl of pet- rified squid." The analogy is as jarring as it is effective. Feiler brings this same eye for detail to the task at hand — learning from scholars and clergy Abraham's history and how each of the three monotheis- tic religions used Abraham's legacy to define their own flock's identity. Feiler takes a subject as complex as that tangle of rams' horns and pulls out each strand, dissecting its history, its theology. Abraham is a crash course in com- parative religion and a provocative challenge for self-examination, as the author shows how each religion claimed Abraham's legacy for itself and its followers. Feiler's encounters with theologians and other experts in the field are as instructive as they are challenging. He relays his conversations with the likes of Reverend Petra Heldt, a German Lutheran minister who heads the Ecumenical Theological Research frater- nity in Jerusalem; Sheikh Abu Sneina, the imam of El-Aksa; and Jon Levenson, a professor of comparative religions at Harvard and a leading authority on the history of Judaism. They provide food for thought and discussion to last weeks if not months or years.