Incredible Journey Bais Chabad Torah Center to celebrate its first 30 years. SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN StaffWriter S halom Michlin of West Bloomfield remem- bers when services at his synagogue were so sparsely attended and so casual that, as a young man, he once did a handspring on Shabbat morning. But those were the days when the Sara Tugman Bais Chabad Torah Center founders met in the living room of Claire and the late Ted Schulnick's West Bloomfield home. Thirty years later, Michlin and his wife, Sarah, are among the honorees who will celebrate the thriving congregation's 30th anniversary at a dinner Sunday, May 16, at the Shriners Community Center in Southfield. • The Michlins will receive the Torah Center's Founders Award along with Helen and Jacob Reisman and Carole and Erwin Hollander, all of West Bloomfield. "When I came to Detroit in 1975, there was no Orthodox community in West Bloomfield," said Rabbi Elimelech Silberberg, the congregation's rabbi. "There was just a small core group of eight or nine people who were running Shabbat morning services." The once-a-week gatherings were held in the Lubavitch Foundation of Michigan headquarters, then in Farmington Hills. They were led by Rabbi Yitchok Lifshitz, who lived in Oak Park, but spent each Shabbat in the building. High Holiday services were led there by the late Rabbi Yitschak Meir Kagan. "One day, Rabbi Lifshitz told me instead of daven- ing in the Lubavitch building, we would be going to the Schulnick's home," said Michlin, then a 20-some- thing single young man who attended the earliest serv- ices. "I remember we cut through a path in the woods and through two subdivisions to get there." After a few weeks of meeting in various homes, the group was able to access a classroom in the Ealy Elementary School in West Bloomfield. "When I was a student at the University of Michigan and met my wife — who was from West Bloomfield — we would come to our parents' homes for Shabbos and meet at Ealy on Saturday mornings," Michlin said. The Hollanders and Reismans were part of the orig- inal group too. "In fact, the rabbis were brought to West Bloomfield by Erwin Hollander — the syna- gogue's first president," Rabbi Silberberg said. "He went to Rabbi Berel Shemtov, the Lubavitch Foundation director for help." The Reismans were among other Holocaust sur- vivors who were founding members of the congrega- tion. "They came from religious homes, with strong roots, but gave it up when they came to America," Rabbi Silberberg said. "Then they began to look for something more traditional, wanting to come back to their rich heritage, and found it here." The Beginning In the early days, Michlin said, "There were so few of us that if anyone went out of town, we used to try to find someone to take our place so there would be a minyan." Rabbi Silberberg remembered walking his neighbor- hood, stopping at homes with mezuzot and knocking on the doors to find enough people for a minyan. "I took my son with me, hoping it was harder to refuse a cute little kid," he said. "We were starting a shul, and we needed to go out and find members. It was not like I accepted a position in an established synagogue in an estab- lished Orthodox commu- nity." And establishing the synagogue was not some- thing to be done alone. Joseph Farah "This was for a husband- Rabbi Silberberg and-wife team. My wife, Chaya Sarah, and I included our children, too. We were trying to show people about Judaism, and we knew it was important for them to see our family and our Jewish home." During the Ealy School days, the group met only on Saturday mornings. But in 1982, when they moved into their own building on West Maple east of Orchard Lake Road establishing the first Orthodox synagogue in West Bloomfield, there came additions. First, there were Monday and Thursday morning services, then Sundays, then other weekday mornings, and, later, Minchah (afternoon services) and Maariv (evening services). "We finally became full-service — much more than just a place for davening," Rabbi Silberberg said. "We have become an outreach Torah center — the Hyman and Sonia Blumenstein Outreach Institute — with a Judaic book and tape library, a mikvah [ritual bath], with untold numbers of people dropping in for study." They hold regular courses in Judaism with a special emphasis on Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism) and organize Shabbat retreats and a yearly mission to Israel. Staff now includes administrator and adult educator Rabbi Avrohom Wineberg, rabbinic intern Shmuli Raskin of England and educator Marty Goodman of West Bloomfield, son of synagogue founder Sara Tugman. Beyond The Communi ty The Torah Center also has a priority in "mitzvah pro- gramming," Rabbi Silberberg said. At the upcoming dinner, the congregation will present the Community Service Award to Rochel Henya (Rae) Sharfman of West Bloomfield, for her efforts in such programs. "She is the person who spearheads our activities that go beyond our community," Rabbi Silberberg said. "She is involved in activities that bring donations to victims of Israeli terror and is active with the Children of Chernobyl. She was prominent in the 1970s for helping Jews get out of Russia." The dinner, which is chaired by Jerome Katz of West Bloomfield, will also be highlighted by a talk by Joseph Farah, a pro-Israel journalist, who will speak on "The Media Versus Israel." "We are a shul that is Israel-oriented," Rabbi Silberberg said. "We are always looking for ways to make us aware of how to help Israel. Joseph Farah is a true friend of Israel. He is an Arab and is not Jewish, but he can look to tell us what to do to mitigate the effect of those who are media-hostile toward Israel." Rabbi Silberberg is thrilled that the Torah Center, now flourishing with a membership of 120 families, is surrounded by synagogues of all denominations, including three Orthodox congregations that were founded after his. "Not only have we grown, but the whole Jewish community has grown," he said. "It feels great to see how the shul has progressed and developed," said Michlin. But one thing hasn't changed. The former North Farmington High School gymnastics team member said, "On Simchas Torah, I'm still known to come to shul and take a walk across the room — on my hands." 111 The Sara Tugman Bais Chabad Torah Center annual dinner will take place Sunday, May 16, at the Shriners Community Center (formerly Congregation B'nai David), 25350 Southfield Road in Southfield. 5 p.m. hors d'oeuvres; 6 p.m. dinner. $150 per person. RSVP: (248) 855-6170 or e-mail Rabbi Wineberg at: Aw2468770@aol.com 5/ 7 2004 59