Disco With A Dalet Parents learn Hebrew while waiting for their kids in dance class SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN Staff Writer thing Kaplan is more than willing to help establish. "We have always been about families," said Joe Cornell owner Steve Jasgur. W Combined Studies hen Michael Brodsky was part of the Sixth Grade Joe Cornell Experience dance class three years ago, his mom, Susan, spent a lot of evenings sitting in her car in the parking lot waiting for him to finish. But this past October, when Michael's 11-year-old sister, Olivia, started the class, hosted by Congregation B'nai Moshe, Susan Brodsky decided to take advan- tage of an innovative new offering for the dancers' par- ents: a crash course in Hebrew reading. "My girlfriend, whose daughter is in the Joe Cornell class with mine, asked me to join her, so we signed up together, " said Brodsky of West Bloomfield. When she started, Brodsky was a beginning Hebrew reader like most oth- ers in the Hebrew course, which is co- sponsored by B'nai Moshe's Kolel Moshe Lifelong Jewish Learning Institute and the National Jewish Outreach Program (NJOP) in New York. The course uses study texts and teacher guides provided free to congregations by NJOP's Read Hebrew America. "Taking my daughter to Joe Cornell (12 years ago) was not one of my favorite activities," remembers Nancy Kaplan, Kolel Moshe coordinator, who created and organizes the Hebrew course. "I always feltthat it would be appreciated by many parents to find ways to infuse the pre-bar and bat mitzvah pipeline experience with more Jewish, religious and spiritually meaning stuff" Making The Call Kaplan remembers the receptive response she received when she first contacted the Joe Cornell office. "Not only did they agree it was a great idea, they said they would be happy to facilitate it by giving me mailing labels for the parents of the kids who signed up for the classes that were going to be taking place at B'nai Moshe," she said. On the first night of Hebrew class when parents were asked to accompany their children, Dr. Mark S. Roth was invited to speak about the Hebrew course he would be teaching — during each of the two Joe Cornell classes offered at the synagogue. Gayle Docks of Joe Cornell in Southfield said the staff at Joe Cornell hope to be involved not only with future B'nai Moshe NJOP programs but also with similar classes at other congregations as well, some- NJOP coursework has been offered at B'nai Moshe for several years. Joe Cornell classes have been held there for the last three years, but this is the first time they were specifically scheduled to coincide. There are 5-8 students in each NJOP class that coincides with a Joe Cornell class. 'And we love that," said Rabbi Yitzchak Rosenbaum, program director of the New York-based NJOP. Devin Mad g y, 11, of Farmington Hills, in Elvis garb, dances while clutching an extra wig. He sees the parent who studies as a wonderful role model for children who may not exactly relish going to Hebrew school. "All of a sudden, those kids can realize that their parents are involved in Jewish stud- ies, too, and maybe they'll take their own Jewish studies more seriously," he said. Rabbi Rosenbaum finds another plus to parents learning to read Hebrew; they suddenly are interested in going to synagogue services — and taking their kids along — because now they can participate. "We might even steal the idea that is working so well at B'nai Moshe," Rabbi Rosenbaum said. While not connected with Joe Cornell classes, Read Hebrew America wurniggiumi courses are also offered at other Detroit- , o area congregations, including Keter ;Torah, B'nai David, Young Israel of Southfield and Ann Arbor Chabad `2. House. At Machon ETorah, study !,7 materials are provided in Russian; Spanish texts are available to those who request them. Sites of Read Hebrew America classes are available by calling NJOP at (800) 444-3273 or by accessing its Web site: www.njop.org There is no charge to enroll in the classes; host synagogues are supplied with materials at no cost. What Are They Learning? .•Shaina .Ketnde4 17, ofWest Bloomfield Right: Hebrew teacher Mark Roth Below: Ashley Cauldron, 20, of 'west Bloomfield teaches the dance class a few moves. The B'nai Moshe Hebrew course that coincides with the Joe Cornell program is NJOP's Level One Hebrew Reading Crash Course. "It is set for those who do not recog- nize Hebrew characters or with a very basic knowledge of Hebrew letters," said Susanne Goldstone, NJOP regional pro- gram coordinator. And that's where Susan Brodsky was when she came to Dr. Roth's class — familiar with the letters from attendance in Sunday school until fifth grade. Learning to read Hebrew has been on Brodsky's mind since last summer when her father-in-law passed away, and she tried to follow the Kaddish service dur- ing the shivah period. The NJOP classes at B'nai Moshe helped Brodsky get far quickly. The program is geared toward teaching students to read individual letters and then to read words and sentences that include only the letters that were learned up until that point. So students are able to read pages of Hebrew in just a very few weeks. Disco on page 58 12/17 2004 57