Umg siaps JAMD Bids On Land An Unbroken Chain There's expanding hunger among Metro Detroit Jews. Last year, Yad Ezra, the Berkley- based kosher food pantry, distributed a record 844,000 pounds of food to impoverished local families. "One in 38 Jewish individuals the Metro Detroit relies on food from Yad Ezra every month," says Lea Luger, the executive director. "In 2004, more than 500 new families came to Yad Ezra at least one time for assistance." Who are these people? "They are unemployed, underem- ployed, disabled, elderly or in emer- gency situations," says Luger. "Sometimes, they just can't make ends meet without additional help." Yad Ezra is a front-line support agency directly serving families in need. Each month, it distributes free groceries to 1,100 families represent- ing 2,500 people. Yad Ezia is part of a food chain that begins with farmers, manufacturers, wholesalers, restaurateurs and corpo- rate executives, who donate food and money to Second Harvest, America's largest charitable hunger relief agency. Second Harvest relays the food to 200 Luger food banks that, in turn, serve food pantries, soup kitchens and homeless shelters. "Yad Ezra's leadership feels most for- tunate that our community continues to remain strongly linked to this food chain," Luger said. "Donors of all backgrounds and ages volunteer their time, food and funds to help ensure that the link remains unbroken." Brown (2,1cha Don't Know© defamation is not uncommon, this incident was unique in its scope and the fact that so many white boards bore the same messages," the story said. But because the graffiti was not damaging and therefore does not con- stitute a crime, DPS is investigating it as a hate incident. — Harry Kirsbaum, staff writer Region on Feb. 3. "Hamas feels it is in severe trouble," said Brown, assistant director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center in Herzliya, Israel. "Their popularity among Palestinians, even in their heyday, never broke 30 percent. Their support is plummeting, their leaders are dead. And how strong can your organization be if you let people know who cur- rently runs your organization —he'd be dead?" 2005 — Goldfein a UTE S a42 The Israeli elec- tions have weak- ened Hamas, said Israel-based writer and lecturer Cameron Brown during a talk with members of the Zionist Organization of America, Michigan Quotables Often it occurs that Christmas Day will fall dur- ing the same week as the Jewish community's cele- bration of Chanukah. In addition, this year anoth- er Christian holiday coincides with a Jewish one. Which one? SZIP1.61A1 — SOOZ ui ABP uo trj m!mnd pug keppd poop :Jamsuy says. "There is sufficient space to build sports facilities and to expand the academic wing, if necessary "We are excited about this possibili- ty although we are realistic enough to know that much needs to be done to turn this into a reality." Since opening five years ago, JAMD has been housed at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. The 161-student school currently uses portable classrooms plus space inside the JCC. — Keri Guten Cohen, story development editor Middle East Update —Robert A. Sklar, editor U-N Hate Incident Swastikas and the initials KKK were drawn on some white eraser boards at a University of Michigan dormitory on Jan. 30. According to the Michigan Daily, the U-M Department of Public Safety dispatched officers to Markley Little Hall after receiving a report of racist graffiti on dormitory doors at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, DPS spokeswoman Diane Brown said. "Brown said that while whiteboard The board of the Jewish Academy of Metropolitan Detroit has submitted a bid for the William Tyndale College property. The bid was accepted Feb. 1, according to a letter sent this week by Rabbi Lee Buckman, head of school. The college, which comprises 45,000 square feet, is located on 28 acres of land on the southwest corner of 12 Mile and Drake roads in Farmington Hills. "We have a 30-day due diligence period to conduct a range of surveys and to secure the funds needed to acquire this property" the statement Excluding Israel, Turkey and more recently the Palestinian Authority and Iraq, "every example of democracy is symbolic in nature," he told a crowd of 75. These symbolic democracies are led mostly by the same leadership since the 1970s, have a terrible educational system, including a 25 percent illitera- cy rate among Arab males and 47 per- cent among women, he said. But hope lies with P.A. Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas, he said. "He was dealt a very, very poor hand," he said. "Here's a guy who had 2 percent of the vote when he started. He had no institution. His hand was poor. With what he had, he played it very well. Not perfect, but no one is perfect." The event also was sponsored by the B'nai B'rith Great Lakes Region. — Harry Kirsbaum, staff writer Do You Remember? February 1985 "Unlike others who considered therapy a last resort for the mentally ill, my mother considered it a learning experience. My parents were allergic to Jewish rituals and observance, but they had strong ideas about what it meant to be a Jew. You were supposed to be brilliant, you were supposed to change the world, make a difference and get a good education." — Author-therapist Harriet Lerner, profiled in the January issue of Hadassah magazine. Thousands of Holocaust survivors and their fami- lies will meet in Philadelphia at the inaugural assembly of the American gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors. The event will coincide with the 40th anniver- sary of the liberation of the German death camps. The survivors will also seek to evaluate the pos- itive effects of the moral dimension of the Allied victory over Nazi Germany. — Sy Manello, editorial assistant AIN 2/10 2005