Torah Portion / Synagogues God's Special Bond With The Land Of Israel Shabbat Shelach• Numbers 13:1-15:41; Joshua 2:1-24. Er ow can we understand the "sin of the scouts," of the 10 princes of the tribes? Why did they hold back from attempting to con- quer the land of Israel — especially after they had just seen the miracles of the Almighty in freeing them from Egyptian servitude? Our Torah portion opens: "The Lord spoke to Moses saying, 'Send forth for yourselves men to spy out the land of Canaan which I am giving to the chil- dren of Israel.'" The classical commentator Rashi asks, "What is the connection between this biblical segment of the scouts and the biblical segment of Miriam (at the conclusion of last week's Torah reading)? It is the fact that she was punished for speaking evil words against her brother Moses, and these wicked 'leaders' saw and did not internalize the lesson." Is then the sin of slander the connec- tion point between the biblical segments Shlomo Riskin is head of Israel's Ohr Torah Stone Institute and chief rabbi of Efrat. a.m., 6 p.m. Ivriah religious school (810) 732-6312. ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE BETH ISRAEL (ANN ARBOR) CONGREGATION AHAVAS ISRAEL (GRAND RAPIDS) 2727 Michigan St. SE, Grand Rapids, 49506-1297, (616) 949-2840. Rabbi: David J.B. Krishef. Cantor: Stuart R. Rapaport. Services: Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, 7:30 a.m.; Friday, 7 p.m.; Saturday, 9:30 a.m. BEIT KODESH 31840 W. Seven Mile, Livonia, (248) 477-8974. Cantor: David Gutman. President: Larry Stein. Vice presidents: Martin Diskin, Al Gittleman. Services: Friday 8 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m. CONGREGATION BETH AHM 5075 W. Maple, West Bloomfield, 48322, (248) 851- 6880. Rabbi: Charles Popky. Ritual director: Joseph Mermelstein. Rabbi emeritus: A. Irving Schnipper. Cantor Emeritus: Shabtai Ackerman. Services: Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9:30 a.m., 8:45 p.m.; weekdays 7 a.m., 7 p.m.; Sundays and civic holidays: 8:15 a.m., 5 p.m. BETH ISRAEL (FLINT) G-5240 Calkins Road, Flint, 48532, (810) 732-6310. Cantor emeritus: Sholom Kalib. President: Leonard Meizlish. Services: Saturday 9:30 a.m., 6 p.m.; week- days 7:30 a.m., 6 p.m.; Sunday and legal holidays 8 6/11 56 ness of the land of Israel for the people of Israel. The scouts investigated the land of Israel as any would-be settlers would investigate any land they hoped to con- quer and inhabit; they were blind to,the very special relationship that God had to this land for His people and His promise that they would be able to conquer it. Indeed, the portion concludes with the commandment of ritual fringes appended to our four-cornered gar- ments. Rav Joseph Soloveitchik explains that white represents clarity, logic, rational truth; blue symbolizes the infini- ty of the oceans and the heavens and represents longing, infinity, mystery, supra-rational. Torah, the land of Israel and the peo- ple of Israel are a combination of logic and love, natural and super-natural, mathematic reason and miraculous romance. This message had to be taught to both Miriam and the scouts. Our generation must understand that "to live in Israel and to believe in mir- acles is to be a realist." O • CONSERVATIVE 29901 Middlebelt, Farmington Hills, 48334, (248) 851- 5100. Rabbis: Daniel Nevins, Herbert Yoskowitz. Cantor: Howard Glantz. Rabbi emeritus: Efry Spectre. Cantor emeritus: Larry Vieder. Services: Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m., 9 p.m.; weekdays 7:30 a.m., 6 p.m.; Sunday 8:30 a.m. 2004 and the major transgression of the desert much the slander as it was her inability generation? It seems to me that the issue to recognize the unique prophecy of must be a bit deeper! Moses; and if Moses' relationship to Let us take a second look at Miriam's God was not unique, then the Five Books slander: Miriam and Aaron spoke ofMoses'Divine revelation, likewise against Moses regarding the Cushite would lose its unique status. woman he had married. The biblical text The great philosopher — legalist of explicitly states that Miriam and Aaron the 12th century — Maimonides uses were directing their criticism against the very verses with which we are dealing Moses, not against Zipporah! to prove the uniqueness of Moses' Rashi explains that his siblings were prophecy and therefore of his Torah: upset with Moses "because he had mar- "When God told the Israelites to return ried this woman and now to their homes but directed divorced her." Moses retorted Moses to stand with Him, He that the Almighty had indeed was testifying that Moses was singled him out for special in a constant state of prophecy conduct, insisting — immedi- ... His mind (active intellect) ately after instructing the was bound up with the mind Israelite men to return to their (active intellect) of the Rock wives — "But as for you of Ages, whose glory did not (Moses), stand here with Me leave Moses for an instant ... and I shall speak to you the Moses was sanctified as one of entire commandment ... You, the Divine messengers Moses, shall not return to your (malakhim) (Laws of Torah RABBI family!" Fundamentals, 7,6). SHLOMO Apparently, his siblings did For an individual such as RISKIN not accept Moses' response, Moses, it became virtually Special to the insisting that God spoke to impossible to return home Jewish News them as well, and Moses was and bond with wife and chil- certainly included in the gen- dren; Moses bonded with the eral command to return to the w ives. Divine! They could not accept the notion that Just as the real transgression of Moses had a unique relationship with Miriam lay in her inability to see the God. absolute uniqueness of Moses, so did the From this perspective, the fundamen- real transgression of the scouts lay in tal transgression of Miriam was not so their inability to see the absolute unique- 2000 Washtenaw Ave., Ann Arbor, 48104, (734) 665- 9897. Rabbi: Robert Dobrusin. Services: Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9:30 a.m.; weekdays 7:30 p.m.; Sunday 5 p.m. CONGREGATION BETH SHALOM 14601 W. Lincoln, Oak Park, 48237, (248) 547-7970. Rabbi: David A. Nelson. Cantor: Samuel L. Greenbaum. Ritual director: Rev. Samuel Semp. Services: Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m., 6:30 p.m.; Sunday 9 a.m., 5 p.m.; weekdays 7 a.m., 6:30 p.m. Bar mitzvah of Nathan Samuel Chesterman, son of Elaine Webber and Barry Chesterman. BETH TEPHILATH MOSES 146 South Ave., Mt. Clemens, 48043, (810) 465-0641. Services: weekdays 7:15 a.m.; Saturday 10 a.m.; Sunday 8 a.m. CONGREGATION B'NAI MOSHE 6800 Drake, West Bloomfield, 48322, (248) 788-0600. Rabbi: Elliot Pachter. Cantor: Earl Berris. Services: Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m., 8:45 p.m.; Monday- Thursday 7 a.m., 6 p.m.; Friday 7 a.m.; Sunday and legal holidays 9 a.m.; Sunday 6 p.m. Bat mitzvah of Mollie White, daughter of Julie and Matthew Whitcomb and Lee White. ISAAC AGREE DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE 1457 Griswold, Detroit, 48226, (313) 961-9328. Chazan: Cantor Usher Adler. Baal Kriah: Rabbi Craig Allen. Cantorial soloist: Neil Barris. Ritual director: Dr. Martin Herman. President: Dr. Ellen Kahn. Services: Saturday 8:30 a.m. CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK Rabbis: Joseph H. Krakoff, Jonathan E. Berkun. Rabbi emeritus: Irwin Groner. Cantor: Chaim Najman. Ritual director: Leonard Gutman. Southfield: 27375 Bell Road, Southfield, 48034, (248) 357-5544. Services: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday 7:30 a.m.; Monday, Thursday 7:15 a.m.; daily 6 p.m.; Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 8:45 a.m., 8:15 p.m.; Sunday 8:30 a.m. B'nai mitzvah of Marissa McClain, daughter of Marilyn Madorsky and Robert McClain; Samuel William Shreeman, son of Maureen and Mark Shreeman. West Bloomfield, B'nai Israel Center: 4200 Walnut Lake Road, West Bloomfield, 48323-2772, (248) 357- 5544. Services: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday 7:15 a.m.; Monday, Thursday 7 a.m.; daily 6 p.m.; Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m., 8:45 p.m.; Sunday 9 a.m. TEMPLE ISRAEL 2300 Center Ave., Bay City, 48708; (989) 893-7811. Cantor: Daniel Gale. President: Dr. Jonathan Abramson. Services: Saturday 9:30 a.m. A liberal, egalitarian con- gregation serving the tri-cities area. Religious and Hebrew education programs for children and adults. INDEPENDENT AHAVAT SHALOM 413 N. Division St., Traverse City, 49684, (231) 929- 4330. Rabbi: Chava (Stacie) Bahle. Weekly Shabbat cel- ebrations, holidays, year round programming, children's education. Summer programming for downstate visi- tors. Conversations What lessons can we derive today from the sin of the scouts? GROSSE POINTE JEWISH COUNCIL (313) 882-6700. Rabbi: Nicholas Behrmann. Cantorial soloist: Bryant Frank. JEWBILATION P.O. Box 130014, Ann Arbor, 48103, (734) 996-3524 or 995-1963. Rev. Lauren Zinn. Services: Friday 6:15, fol- lowing dinner. Jewish Roots with Interfaith Wings holds bi-monthly Shabbat dinner, services, kids' programs, family school and Hebrew school for all ages. ORTHODOX AGUDAS YISROEL MOGEN ABRAHAM 15751 W. Lincoln, Southfield, 48075, (248) 552-1971. Rabbis: Dov Loketch, Asher Eisenberger. President: Irwin Cohen. ANN ARBOR CHABAD HOUSE 715 Hill St., Ann Arbor, 48104, (734) 995-3276. Rabbi: Aharon Goldstein. Services: Friday at sundown; Saturday 9:45 a.m., 20 min. before sundown; week- days 7:30 a.m.; Sunday 9 a.m. Times for weekdays and Sunday are for the academic year. ANN ARBOR ORTHODOX MINYAN 1429 Hill St., Ann Arbor, 48014. Rabbi: Rod Glogower. Services: Friday at sundown; Saturday 9:30 a.m. and 20 minutes before sundown; weekdays during the aca- demic year 7:30 a.m.; Sunday 9 a.m. BAIS CHABAD OF FARMINGTON HILLS 32000 Middlebelt, Farmington Hills, 48334, (248) 855- 2910. Rabbi: Chaim Bergstein. Services: Friday sun-