On Glass For Inside Your Home FAMILIES from page 37 15% off Mirror Walls Call for free estimate 15% off Euro Showers Enhance the beauty of your home. Elegant designs for all decors. Custom options available 15% off Bath & Tub Enclosures Shower Doors starting at $ 199 installed (Parklane PV Series Swinging door up to 36") Mirrored Bi-Fold Closet Doors starting at $299 installed For Series 1 4'x8' Free Estimates! FOGGY WINDOWS GOT You DOWN? We fix insulated windows! If your windows are older, no warranty, company is out of business...CALL US! Store Hours: Mon-Fri 8-5 • Sat 8-1 2 www.hendersonglass.com Bloomfield Hills Commerce Twp. Farmington Southfield 2388 Franklin Road 248-333-9348 2891 Haggerty Road 248-624-2288 31205 Grand River 248-476-0730 24055 W. 10 Mile Road 248-353-1500 Looking for Retirement Options or Senior Care Providers? Order New Lifestyles today! THE SOURCE FOR SENIORS It's a FREE guide that includes: • All options, from Active Adult Communities to Alzheimer's care, including home care and valuable products and services • Comprehensive listings, of all licensed providers • Articles and advice to help you make a decision • Easy to use, with descriptions and locations of facilities New LifeStyles is available for your area, as well as over 40 areas throughout the country. Call Today! It's FREE! wwvv.NewLifeStyles.com 1/23 2004 38 still get together every month or so years after the trip," said Temple Israel Rabbi Paul Yedwab said. "Family camp fami- lies do the same." Ahuvia sees the site of meetings as crucial. "Providing venues in which peo- ple can connect with each other is the key," she said. "Those venues need to enable people to talk; and they need to occur regularly, so people have a chance to develop friendships over time." She also looks to subdivide the con- gregation into groups, including others in similar life-stages. Like many congre- gations, Beth Israel offers a monthly Tot Shabbat service, geared toward families with small children. Many congrega- tions also hold youth Shabbat and jun- ior Shabbat programs to bring together families with same-aged children. The Library Minyan, a monthly edu- cational Shabbat morning service at Shaarey Zedek, brings together adults looking to celebrate Shabbat in an inti- mate and interactive service with Rabbi Lauren Berkun, Jewish Theological Seminary Midwest Rabbinic Fellow. In perhaps one of the most family-ori- ented areas, most congregations also hold Shabbat and holiday celebrations together, like Shaarey Zedek B'nai Israel's yearly Passover family seder and the Downtown Synagogue's annual Chanukah party. The Simple Things 1-800-820-3013 OR visit us online at: Some of the Temple Israel Minyan Group are, seated Batya Berlin, Esther Ressler and Estelle Seltzer. Standing are Henrietta Levine, Saul Ablecop, Alan Nathan, Sidney Levine and Ben Gurvitz. Sometimes being made to feel . part of a big family is as uncomplicated as sharing in the simchah moment, an opportunity at Beth Shalom for congregants to share good news — like the birth of a child or an upcoming vacation — during Shabbat services. For Young Irael of Oak Park mem- bers, feeling included can be as easy as New LifeS les ()nil THE SOURCE FOR SENIORS Callers requesting New LifeStyles may also receive information from providers in their area. 801720 sitting down to the computer and join- ing other congregants in Rabbi Reuven Spoiler's synagogue chat room. The online chat room was established for members to share everything from newspaper articles about the situation in the Middle East to request to share a ride to New Jersey. At the Sara Tugman Bais Chabad Torah Center in West Bloomfield, Rabbis Elimelech Silberberg and Rabbi Avrohom Wineberg have become online employment agents of sorts. "We thought if we could ask our members to let us know what available positions they knew of, we might find young families interested in moving into our community," Rabbi Silberberg said. "Then we decided if any of our current members were in need of these services, we would be there for them, too." For some, a simple phone call makes a memorable connection. "In several of our Synagogue 2000 congregations, a major effort is made to • call every member family at Rosh Hashanah to wish them a happy new year — for `friend-raising,' not fund- raising," Dr. Wolfson said. Gathering for services may be the core of congregational life, but it's the Shabbat invitation, the drive to the supermarket, the hospital visit that extends the hand of family outside the synagogue doors. "We need to make sure that not just the clergy is there when someone is in need, the congregation has to reach out, too," Rabbi Nelson said. "The shul is not just supposed to be a destination — a place to do your - Judaism," Lynne Schreiber of Young Israel of Oak Park said. "It has to be an extension of your family." 11]