Candle Power Chanukah fun takes place all about town. Engine Kagan ofTest Bloomfield lights the Lego 711010171h, with the help of Rabbi Ybstf Alisholovin West Bloomfield, while Elizabeth Kgan, 4, looks on. SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN Staff Writer C hanukah in the Detroit area began this month with a electrical-powered blaze of light that burned in unique ways and unexpected places. At the Jewish Community Center in Oak Park, a line of cars and vans — each with an electronically lit menorah affixed to the top — lined up just before the time the first Chanukah candle was to be lit. "The menorah-crowned cars were followed by three Hummerzines [Hummer limousines] and five Michigan State Police cars," said Levi Stein, 16, of Oak Park, who organized the event, arranged through the Lubavitch Yeshiva in Oak Park. With the vehicles in place, Levi Greenberg, 18, of El Paso, Texas, addressed the crowd in front of a large freestanding menorah, whose candles were lit with 12/17 2004 16 long torches. "He stressed the fact that the main lesson of Chanukah is lighting up the darkness," Stein said. "This may serve as an example that we must light up the world, as dark as it may be, with the light of Judaism, fighting against assimilation — the message delivered time and again by the Lubavitcher Rebbe, [the late] Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, in accor- dance with his goal that the everlasting message of Chanukah reaches every single Jew around the world." Those involved in the Dec. 7 event may not have reached every Jew in the world, but they certainly made their mark, traveling — to the sound of music blaring — in the parade of cars from Oak Park, through Huntington Woods and Birmingham then to their final destination, the Sara Tugman Bais Chabad Torah Center in West Bloomfield, where the partying continued to the sounds of live Hebrew music. . Throughout the remainder of the holiday, the Lubavitch Yeshiva students distributed menorahs and Chanukah literature to groups including Jewish shop- pers in area malls, residents in senior centers and stu- dents at Michigan State University in East Lansing. More Celebrating On the other side of town, at the Chabad Jewish Center of Commerce, the lighting of a 10-foot tall menorah marked the first giant menorah lighting cere- mony ever in the township. Amidst the latke eating and song singing, guests of the Dec. 12 event were invited outside for the light- ing. "It was a great feeling, a warm feeling, even though we were outside," said Estie Greenberg, center program director and wife of its executive director, Rabbi Schneor Greenberg "The highlight was when we all stood in the snow