Synagogues SYNAGOGUES from page TEMPLE BETH EL 7400 Telegraph, Bloomfield Township, 48301, (248) 851-1100. Rabbis: Daniel B. Syme, David Scott Castiglione. Cantor: David Montefiore. Services: Friday 6 p.m., 7:30 p.m. Saturday 10:30 a.m. Sunday 9:40 a.m. Friday early service: family kabbalat Shabbat. Later service: Brotherhood Shabbat. Saturday b'nai mitzvah of Rachel Hannah Dickerman, daughter of Charlene Haines and Steven Dickerman; Joshua - Douglas Finn, son of Risa and Mark Finn. TEMPLE BETH EL (FLINT) 5150 Calkins, Flint, 48532, (810) 720-9494. Rabbi: Karen Companez. Cantorial soloist: Aleksander Chernyak. Services: First Friday of the month 6:15 p.m.; second Friday 8 p.m.; all other Fridays 8 p.m. TEMPLE BETH EL (MIDLAND) 2505 Bay City Road, Midland, 48642, (517) 835-4822. Guest teacher: Hal Greenwald. President: Stuart J. Bergstein. Services: Friday 8 p.m. once a month. Regularly scheduled High Holiday services for the tri-city area. TEMPLE BETH EMETH 2309 Packard, Ann Arbor, 48104, (734) 665-4744. Rabbi: Robert D. Levy. Chazzan: Ann Zibelman Rose. Services: Friday 8 p.m.; Saturday 10 a.m. Family service once a month at 7:30 p.m. replaces 8 p.m. Friday serv- ice; call for specific dates. BETH ISAAC SYNAGOGUE 2730 Edsel Dr., Trenton, 48183, (734) 675-0355. Services: Friday 7:30 p.m. Congregational leaders con- duct services throughout the year. TEMPLE BETH. ISRAEL 801 W. Michigan Ave., Jackson 49202; (517) 784-3862. Rabbi: Jonathan V. Plaut. Rabbi emeritus: Alan Ponn. Cantorial soloist: Clara Silver. President: Dr. Cathy Glick. Services: Friday 8 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. the first Saturday of the month. CONGREGATION CHAYE OLAM 4875 W. Maple Road, Bloomfield Twp. 48301-2805, (248) 851-7485. Cantor: Stephen L. Dubov. Services: Friday 7:30 p.m. Sunday 9:30 a.m. TEMPLE EMANU-EL 14450 W. 10 Mile, Oak Park, 48237, (248) 967-4020. Rabbi: Joseph P. Klein. Cantor emeritus: Norman Rose. Services: Friday 7:30 p.m. Saturday 10:30 a.m. Friday, Faculty Appreciation Shabbat. Saturday bar mitzvah of Andrew Schwartz, son of Robin and Robert Schwartz. TEMPLE ISRAEL 5725 Walnut Lake, West Bloomfield, 48323, (248) 661- 5700. Rabbis: Harold S. Loss, Paul M. Yedwab, Joshua L. Bennett, Marla Hornsten. Cantor: Lou Corrsin. Cantorial soloist: Neil Michaels. Rabbinic intern: Jennifer Tisdale- Kroll. Services: Friday 7:30 p.m., 8 p.m. Saturday 10:30 a.m. Friday later service b'nai mitzvah of Alexandra Hartman, daughter of Andrea and Michael Hartman; Benjamin Young, son of Mindy and Joel Young. Saturday baby naming of Emma Jordyn Gloetzner, daughter of Elana and Michael Gloetzner. B'nai mitzvah of Evan Hughes, son of Jodi and Paul Schaefer and John Hughes; Nicole Hertzberg, daughter of Sima and Neil Hertzberg. Havdalah bat mitzvah at 6 p.m. of Gabrielle Pollock, daughter of Lisa and Fredrick Pollock. TEMPLE KOL AMI 5085 Walnut Lake, West Bloomfield, 48323, (248) 661- 0040. Rabbi: Norman T. Roman. Rabbi emeritus: Ernst J. Conrad. Cantorial soloist: Susan Greener. Services: Friday 6 p.m. Saturday 10:30 a.m. CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK 1924 Coolidge, East Lansing 48823, (517) 351-3570. Rabbi Emeritus: Morton Hoffman. Rabbi: Richard Baroff. 2/ 6 2004 56 The Good, Bad And Ugly: A Young Nation Exits Egypt 55 Jeffrey Ableser. Cantor: Marci Shulman. Services: 5:45 p.m. the first and last Friday of the month; 8 p.m. inter- mediate Fridays. Torah Portion Cantor: Pamela Jordan Schiffer. Services: Friday 8 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. TEMPLE SHIR SHALOM 3999 Walnut Lake, West Bloomfield, 48323, (248) 737- 8700. Rabbis: Dannel Schwartz, Michael L. Moskowitz. Cantorial soloist: Penny Steyer. Services: Friday 7:30 p.m., Saturday 11 a.m. Friday, Yoga meditation service. Saturday, Ma'at Shabbat 9:30 a.m. REFORM/RENEWAL CONGREGATION SHIR TIKVAH 3900 Northfield Parkway, Troy, 48084, (248) 649-4418. Rabbi: Arnie Sleutelberg. Services: Friday 7:45 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. SECULAR HUMANISTIC THE BIRMINGHAM TEMPLE 28611 W. 12 Mile, Farmington Hills, 48334, (248) 477- 1410. Rabbis: Tamara Kolton, Adam Chalom. Founding rabbi: Sherwin T. Wine. Services: Friday 8 p.m. Tu b'Shevat seder. JEWISH CULTURAL SOCIETY 2935 Birch Hollow Drive, Ann Arbor, 48108-2301, (734) 975-9872. Board president: Karla Rice. School principal: Ramona Brand. Shabbat services first Friday of every month 7:30 p.m.; cultural Jewish celebrations, secular bar/bat mitzvah programming, cultural Sunday school. JEWISH PARENTS INSTITUTE JCC, 6600 W. Maple, West Bloomfield, 48322, (248) 661-1000. Director: Marilyn Wolfe. Alternative cultural Jewish celebrations; secular bar/bat mitzvah cere- monies; adult programming; cultural Sunday school from nursery through teen. SHOLEM ALEICHEM INSTITUTE 28690 Southfield, Suite 293, Lathrup Village, 48076, (248) 423-4406. Co-presidents: Alva Dworkin, May Moskowitz. Holiday observances; Friday night oneg Shabbat; cultural events. WORKMEN'S CIRCLE ARBETER RING 26341 Coolidge, Oak Park, 48237, (248) 545-0985. Chair: Arlene Frank. Michigan district director: Ellen R. Bates-Brackett. Year round holiday observances, Nokh Shabbes Havdalah once a month; secular bar/bat mitz- vah; Sunday school. SEPHARDIC KETER TORAH SYNAGOGUE 5480 Orchard Lake Road, West Bloomfield, (248) 681- 3665. Rabbi: Michael Cohen. Services: Friday at candle- lighting time; Saturday 9 a.m., Minchah 1 1/4 hours before the end of Shabbat; Sunday 9 a.m.; Monday 7 a.m.; Wednesday 9 p.m., Thursday 7 a.m., 9 p.m. TRADITIONAL B'NAI DAVID 6346 Orchard Lake Road, Suite 100, West Bloomfield, 48322, (248) 855-5007. Cantor: Ben-Zion Lanxner. Services: Saturday 9 a.m. MANS FLEISCHMAN RESIDENCE 6710 W. Maple, West Bloomfield, 48322, (248) 661- 2999. Rabbi: Avie Shapiro. Services: Saturday and Sunday 9:15 a.m. Minchah Monday-Friday 4:30 p.m.; Saturday 1:30 p.m. Maariv Monday-Saturday 5:30 p.m. YES H IVAT AKIVA 21100 W. 12 Mile, Southfield, 48076 (248) 386-1625. Services: During the school year, morning services at 7:30 a.m.; afternoon services at 2:40 p.m. The commu- nity is invited. able in Egypt?" We Jews have always had a charming sense of humor. Moses tells them that God will do the fighting and they should keep their mouths shut. Indeed, God pro- tects His people; and the next time they open their mouths it is with songs of praise. But shortly after, Israel is complaining again, about th he fog of ____" has become water, about the food, about the a common expression in desert and about Moses himself. the media, with the most Even he complains to God, voicing frequent application being his fear that the people are about to the "fog of war." stone him. Cataclysms of violence have a way By the end of our por- of obscuring morality so tion, the internal Israelite that defenders become bickering gives way to attackers and vice versa, and another battle, this time the arguably noble princi- with the nation of Amalek. ples which inspired a war Perhaps Israel needed an succumb to the grisly reali- external distraction to over ties of prevailing in battle. come its incessant infight- Perhaps the most difficult ing. Yet the bickering had aspect of conflict is main- taken a toll, and many taining internal discipline, Israelites were killed. so that a group remembers RABBI DANIEL Indeed, it took a miracle to its values and acts upon get them through the bat- NEVINS them on the battlefield as tie. Special to the well as in the serenity of According to the Torah, Jewish News home. when Moses raised his Our dramatic Torah por- hands, Israel prevailed. tion captures the peaks and valleys of When he lowered his hands, they got conflict. There are beautiful, inspir- routed. The rabbis in the Talmud ing moments — the song of Moses (Rosh HaShanah 29a) ask why the and Israel; the timbrels, dance and hands of Moses had such power. song of Miriam and the women; the They answer that when he raised his splitting of the sea and the manna hands, the people looked to heaven, falling from heaven. Yet this portion remembered the source of their also preserves incredible bickering strength and subjugated themselves and confusion both within the to God. Only in this way could they Egyptian camp and among the prevail. Israelites. What was true then obtains today. You would think that after 10 When we Jews fight among our- plagues and the departure of the selves, we cannot succeed in even the Israelites, Pharaoh and his people best of circumstances. But when we would cry, "Good riddance!" But in unite and remember that God is the chapter 14, they instead ask, "What source of our strength, there is no is this we have done, releasing Israel obstacle that can stop us from suc- from our service?" What follows is a ceeding. Let us recall the raised dramatic chase and an even more hands of Moses and transcend our dramatic disaster for Egypt as the differences so that we may emerge Reed Sea comes crashing over their from this trying era with integrity, chariots and troops: "Horse and rider strength and peace. E [God] has hurled into the sea!" So much for staying on- message. But what is truly surprising is the amount of infighting among the Israelites leading up to, and follow- ing, the miraculous crossing of the Why do you think the Israelites sea. When the Israelites reach the sea complained so bitterly about the and hear the Egyptians hot in pur- desert? Was slavery not as bad as suit, they turn on Moses and ask why we think, or was the "fog of nos- he took them into the desert to die talgia" distorting their memories? — "were there too few crraves avail- What painful memories do we obscure and for what purpose? Daniel Nevins is a spiritual leader at Adat Shalom Synagogue. Nk7 Tu b'Shevat Shabbat Beshallach: Exodus 13:17-17:16; Judges 4:4-5:31. T Conversations