What Does It Mean To 'Choose Life'? Shabbat Reeh: Deuteronomy 11:26- 16:17; Isaiah 54:11-55:5. T he Torah reading begins with Moses, speaking in the name of God and declaring, "Behold, I set before you this day a blessing and a curse, the blessing if you obey the com- mandments ... the curse if you disobey." The passage is difficult to accept. Our simplest understanding is that if the peo- ple keep the Torah, they will be reward- ed. If they don't, they will be punished. Good things — blessings — will happen to good people, those who keep the Torah. Bad things will happen to bad people. But how could Moses or any mortal make such a promise? As we continue reading, we discover a similar passage that provides us with a fuller understanding of Moses' words. We find that the blessing and curse are intertwined with the choice between life and death.. "I call heaven and earth to witness against you this day, that I have set before you life and death, the bless- ings and the curse, therefore, choose life." (Deuteronomy 30:19) What does it mean to choose life? Is Irwin Groner is rabbi emeritus of Congregation Shaarey Zedek. don't need an accountant to inform us life then ours to choose? As a rabbi, I see that the hours soon become days and people who are struggling to live know- weeks and months. The simple act of ing that the outcome is uncertain or turning off the TV and opening a worse. What does it mean to choose life? worthwhile book is an example of What is the relationship between choos- choosing life. ing life and being blessed? In Hebrew, the modern term for I quote Sigmund Freud, who taught going out and having a good that in the human psyche is time is levalot, which actually not only the will to live, but means to wear something out, also the will to die. Every to turn a usable garment into human struggles with the task an outworn rag. Its equivalent of strengthening the will to live is the American phrase "to kill and overcoming the will to time." We should recognize die. We are all aware of that the inherent destruction aris- danger in certain lifestyles: the ing from the failure to manage danger of sexual promiscuity; time, to discipline one's use of the danger in the use of drugs time. that affect one's state of con- RABBI IRWIN We can identify a third way sciousness; the danger in the to choose life in the broadest consumption of alcohol; and GRONER sense of the word. Not just life the danger of smoking. Special to the as the avoidance of death, but "Choose life" means reject all Jewish News life in its fullest meaning. that which weakens or dimin- This emerges in a revealing ishes our health and strength. verse in last week's portion "Man does Why do people take these risks, not live on bread alone, but by every- entering a twilight world so treacherous thing that proceeds from the mouth of and fraught with peril? The answer is God does man live." they want to flee the present moment. The commentaries distinguish They seek to escape the burdens of between existence and life. Bread gives choice and decision. Life is often stressful us existence, the ability to stand on our and painful and they wish to drop out feet, to work, to survive. But that which and retire from life itself emanates from God's mouth provides A second way of choosing life is by life's meaning and purpose and eternal not wasting time. If we count the period value. spent in front of the television set, we "When I light the Shabbat candles standing next to my daughter and grand- daughters, I feel the love and warmth of Shabbat enter my soul, and I am reunit- ed with my mother and grandmother and all the Jewish mothers before me." — Adele W Staller, Southfiele4 retired To submit a candlelighting message, call Miriam Amzalak of the Luhavitch Women's Organization at (248) 548-6771 or e-mai• miriamainzatald@juno.com CONSERVATIVE ADAT SHALOM SYNAGOGUE 29901 Middlebelt, Farmington Hills, 48334, (248) 851- 5100. Rabbis: Daniel Nevins, Herbert Yoskowitz, Rachel Lawson Shere. Rabbi emeritus: Efry Spectre. Cantor: Yesvey Gutman. Cantor emeritus: Larry Vieder. Services: Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9 am., 8:30 p.m.; weekdays 7:30 am., 6 p.m.; Sunday 8:30 a.m. Aufruf of Kimberlee Rubin and Jason Levey; Shira Anchill and Aaron Herskovic. 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 am.; Friday, 7 p.m.; Saturday, 9:30 am. 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 am. CONGREGATION BETH ARM 'Ar", :ki7e 8/13 2004 56 5075 W. Maple, West Bloomfield, 48322, (248) 851-6880. Ritual director: Joseph Merrnelstein. Rabbi emeritus: A. Irving Schnipper. Cantor Emeritus: Shabtai Ackerman. Guest rabbi: Aaron Bergman. Visiting scholar. Dr. Howard Lupovitch. Services: Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9:30 am., 8 p.m.; weekdays 7 am., 7 p.m.; Sundays and civic holi- days: 8:15 a.m., 5 p.m. Bar mitzvah of Nathan Mosseri, son of Paula and Eli Mosseri. BETH ISRAEL (FLINT) G-5240 Calkins Road, Flint, 48532, (810) 732-6310. Cantor emeritus: Sholom Kalib. President Leonard Meizlish. Services: Saturday 9:30 am., 6 p.m.; weekdays 7:30 am., 6 p.m.; Sunday and legal holidays 8 am., 6 p.m. lvriah reli- gious school (810) 732-6312. BETH ISRAEL (ANN ARBOR) CONGREGATION 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.; week- days 7 a.m., 6:30 p.m. Bat mitzvah of Anna Greenblatt, daughter of Sharon and Stanley Greenblatt. 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 p.m.; Monday-Thursday 7 am., 6 p.m.; Friday 7 am.; Sunday and legal holidays 9 am.; Sunday 6 p.m. Haftorah, Susan Liebowitz. ISAAC AGREE DOWNTOWN SYNAGOGUE 1457 Griswold, Detroit, 48226, (313) 961-9328. Chazan: Cantor Usher Adler. Baal Kriah: Rabbi Craig Allen. Cantorial soloist Neil Barns. Ritual director Dr. Martin Herman. President Dr. Ellen Kahn. Services: Saturday 8:30 am. CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK Rabbis: Joseph H. Krakoff, Jonathan E. Berkun, Eric S. Yanoff. 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 am.; Monday, Thursday 7:15 a.m.; daily 6 p.m.; Friday 6 p.m.; Saturday 9 am., 8:15 p.m.; Sunday 8:30 a.m. Exception service times: Aug 16 and Aug. 18 7 am. 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., 8:15 p.m.; Sunday 9 am. Exception service times: Aug. 16 and Aug. 18 7 am. TEMPLE ISRAEL 2300 Center Ave., Bay City, 48708; (989) 893-7811. Cantor: Daniel Gale. President: Dr. Jonathan Abramson. Services: Saturday 9:30 am. A liberal, egalitarian congre- gation serving the tri-cities area. Religious and Hebrew education programs for children and adults. Victor Frankel, a psychiatrist who was a survivor of the Holocaust, wrote of his experience. He discovered in the camps the most important drive within humans is not pleasure or power, but meaning. Those who clung to a higher meaning, who were involved in working out a mathematical or scientific problem or who kept a journal or who were writing a Sefer Torah or who were helping oth- ers, often managed to survive, even the death camp of Auschwitz. This search for purpose beyond physical survival, this quest for self-transcendence, this yearning for the infinite is what comes forth from God's mouth, as it were. This is the true meaning of the life that we alone can choose. An individual can commit suicide in one moment or in a lifetime of wasted moments. The years a person is given are not under our control, but we do have the moments God has given us. If we choose not to waste those precious moments, then we have chosen life. ❑ Conversations What does it mean to you to choose life? In what ways is life yours to choose? Remember that choosing good is in your control, but life and death? INDEPENDENT AHAVAT SHALOM 413 N. Division St., Traverse City, 49684, (231) 929-4330. Rabbi: Chava (Stacie) Bahle. Weekly Shabbat celebrations, holidays, year round programming, children's education. Summer programming for downstate visitors. 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, follow- ing 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; weekdays 7:30 a.m.; Sunday 9 am. 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 academic