Cover Story SUMMER READING Any Lunch or Dinner Monday-Thursday Only with this ad • expires 6/30/03 (coupon not valid with any other offer) • 30005 ORCHARD LAKE RD. SOUTH OF 14 MILE RD. FARMINGTON HILLS 248.932.9999 146 CENTRE ST. NORTHVILLE 248.735.0101 A/so: CLINTON TOWNSHIP SHELBY TOWNSHIP , from page 71 The duo maneuvered their way to the pressroom at the Grammy Awards, where Cojocaru managed to ask a question of Barbra Streisand. He liked Los Angeles so much that he decided to make it his home. After that, his life changed. He began freelancing and wrote a syndicated column that ran in more than 100 newspapers. In 1994 he joined the staff of People as the mag- azine's West Coast style editor. Over the years he has appeared on the most coveted red carpets, includ- ing the Golden Globes, Academy Awards and the Cannes Film Festival. He has developed runway friendships with the likes of Joan Rivers and been spoofed on Saturday Night Live. "I went into this business to be noticed and now that I am, I'm con- tent," he recently told the Los Angeles Times. "I get clothes at a discount. I get my hair blown out whenever I want. I made my dreams come true." — Alice Burdick Schweiger THE REBBE'S ARMY INSIDE THE WORLD OF CHABAD-LUBAVITCH By Sue Fishkoff (Schocken; 321 pp.; $26) coffeebar & café Just North of Maple across from Meijers 6343 Haggarty Road West Bloomfield, MI 48322 248.699.7400 Ag /fast Place Th Tow Beat Tim _garniture • ITALIAN GRILL - ii\ N9 0 yti\oodt Ifotlioth R es+. eutr attri_ ,1450. tAeA0 Family owned and operated for over 50 years. Gtutotlii-y Foodt • GttAatlii-y Cocks-otils Gtutotlii-y Seyvice Rush Hour Specials - Appetizers '2 99 (mon-fri 3-6pm) 6/20 2003 72 ere are lots of numbers in Sue Fishkoff's new book, The Rebbe's Army: Inside the World of Chabad- Lubavitch: 1,300 pieces of gefilte fish imported for a Passover seder in Bangkok; five gallons of coleslaw for Shabbat dinner on campus in Binghamton, N.Y.; a $3.5 million new Chabad synagogue in Boynton Beach, Fla.; a $20 million Jewish Children's Museum in Crown Heights, Brooklyn; 3,800 husband- and-wife teams of emissaries in 45 states and 61 countries — all of which point to the boldness of Chabad, the magnitude of its vision and the large platform the move- ment has created. There are lots of stories too, like that of an emissary's wife who often wakes up in the morning to find stu- dents asleep in her living room. Their home is part of the campus Chabad house, and their door is always open. And there's the young woman who moves from New Jersey to 248.626.6969 - Yes...we take reservations! 6480 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD • WEST. BLOOMFIELD • Just North of Maple Anchorage, Alaska, who seeks a con- nection with the local Jewish com- munity. When she tries contacting the local Reform rabbi, his secretary calls her back and sends a brochure with dues information. Then she leaves a message for the Chabad rabbi who returns the call himself and invites her to dinner with his family. Fishkoff looks closely at the Chabad world and its success in out- reach, through the lives and work of its emissaries, known as shlichim. They are "the rebbe's army; the rebbe is, of course, the late Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, who died in 1994 at the age of 92. The shlichim — the "best and brightest" Lubavitch young couples — are sent, soon after their marriages, to out- posts where they might be the only observant family in town, with the aim of bringing as many Jews as pos- sible back to their Jewish roots. They arrive in their new towns or cities — where they will spend the rest of their lives — with limited funding for their first year and then must raise their operating funds themselves; sometimes they arrive with only the names of a few local Jews. But they seem to hit the ground running, opening nursery schools, offering classes, hosting holiday cele- brations and much more. The Rebbe's Army is, as the author notes in the prologue, a reporter's book; it's rich in telling anecdotes and thumbnail portraits — it's not meant to be a scholarly study nor an historical analysis. Fishkoff's narrative is infused with the sense of joy radiated by, her sub- jects, which she is generously open to. While offering a sympathetic view, Fishkoff also explores the conflicts and controversies in the relationships between Chabad and the larger Jewish community. A significant question that Fishkoff explores is how they man- age to raise so much of their institu- tional funding among non- Lubavitch Jews. "Chabad is a challenge to the American Jewish community," Fishkoff says. "American Jews want to study Torah; they want to have fun with Judaism rather than some- thing that is somber and morose; they want it to be meaningful." She believes the other denominations can learn from Chabad. — Sandee Brawarsky