OTHER VIEWS The Meaning Of Community E very year as the holiday of Passover approaches, there is a palpable energy at Yad Ezra, Michigan's only kosher food bank. I witnessed it the Sunday after Purim as I spoke with volunteers and clients in the bustling warehouse. Loaded pallets of matzah were begin- ning to take over the shelves. Volunteers stood in line to sign up for opportunities to sort, box, deliver and distribute food that will enable fami- lies to celebrate a seder. People watched as Bernie, our ware- house manager, stacked rows and rows of boxes that would be used to pack- age Passover non-perishables. Generous donors were starting to drop off checks to help fund food purchas- es. Phone calls from clients, eagerly anticipating news of the special holi- day distribution, were coming in on all four lines. Schoolchildren who par- ticipate in Yad Ezra's Food of the Month program were announcing the collection of special treats for us to distribute along with the seder staples. Now, more than any other time of Lea Luger is development director of Yad Ezra in Berkley. year, exemplifies how our community bands together in celebration of this extraordinary holiday. The message of freedom and its underlying responsibil- ity resonate with those who celebrate Passover. The warmth in the air and the taste of spring beckon a rebirth. Just as the Israelites were reborn fol- lowing years of enslavement, Passover rejuvenates our souls with the retelling of our exodus from Egypt and the promise of freedom. The purpose of the seder is to make us mindful that Participating in the good of the greater community and experiencing the universal nature of the holiday creates an atmosphere of unity and oneness. Our history tells us that we can be spiritually free only when our neighbors are LEA LUGER no longer bound by condi- tions such as hunger. Then we Community can experience true freedom Perspective and justice. Recently in the warehouse, Eva Antebi-Lerman, 7, handed me an envelope with more than $60 in it to be used to buy food. She had saved money from her allowance and had also asked family members to con- tribute as well. When I asked her what made her decide to give her donation to Yad Ezra, she replied, "I know how people feel when they don't have enough food in the fridge." Eva pro- foundly understands and lives by the following words of Martin Luther King Jr.: "Whatever affects one direct- ly, affects all indirectly." We at Yad Ezra are privileged to repeatedly witness examples of our community acting as one. How truly fortunate we are to live in such a gen- Saul Zipser of Redford and Bernie Jonas of Wrest Bloomfield distribute produce to erous community. ❑ clients receiving Passover packages Save Your People, Not Just Harvard New York 've gotten into the terrible habit of reading the "Styles" section of the Sunday New York Times. I count the number of Jews marry- ing non-Jews in Jewish ceremonies and in non-Jewish ceremonies. The experience is generally dispiriting for those of us who are concerned with Jewish demography. But this is only a minor manifestation of the crisis fac- ing our community. The crisis is expressed not only in rates of intermarriage, which seem to hover around 50 percent, but in our population statistics, which are at best stagnant and more probably I IN 4/21 2005 36 Michael Steinhardt is chairman of the Jewish Life Network/Steinhardt Foundation and chairman of Jewish Renaissance Media, which publishes the Detroit Jewish News and Atlanta Jewish Times. This item originally appeared in the International Jerusalem Post on Feb. 18, 2005. while this is a new beginning, the importance of our history cannot be forgotten. We as a community are instructed to remember our collective past. There is no "them" and "us," no wealthy and impoverished; we are bound together in one shared destiny. The volunteers are as excited about the Passover distribution as the 1,100 client families who are on the receiving end. reflective of a decline. American Jews are marrying later and having fewer children relative to previous Jewish generations and to their non- Jewish counterparts. But the crisis is not limited to demography. In the area of Jewish lit- eracy, popular films such as Garden State, which take for granted the remoteness of temple attendance for contemporary Jews, only scratch the surface of the malaise. A silent majority of non-Orthodox Jews don't read this newspaper or any of the local Jewish weeklies or indeed anything Jewish at all. These people, who are well on their way to Jewish disappearance, have no repre- sentation in our communal struc- tures; nor does the community occu- py itself with the challenge of meet- ing their needs or preventing their slipping away. Philanthropists have not risen to the challenge of shoring up Jewish identity. Can you name a serious non-Orthodox American Jewish phi- lanthropist below the age of 50? There may be one or two, but it truly would be like looking for a needle in a haystack. Moreover, we are talking about an extraordinarily wealthy community that is generous to secular philan- thropies. no differently with the health of our people. Currently, the Jewish com- munity is facing a dire crisis of identity, affiliation and knowledge. Where is the sense of crisis among our people? The lingering fear of MICHAEL STEINHARDT anti-Semitism, regardless of whether it is based on cur- Special Trending Downward rent reality, summons mil- Commentary According to the Chronicle of lions of dollars for Jewish Philanthropy, the biggest defense agendas and individual gifts of 2002 ranged from Holocaust memorials. But when it $100 million to $375 million. Of the comes to reinforcing Jewish identity, 10 philanthropists, six were Jewish. we come up short. Programs that Not a single one gave anything mean- emphasize spiritual renewal and cul- ingful to a Jewish cause. Today, per- tural joy are funded almost as an haps 20 percent of Jewish giving goes afterthought. to Jewish causes. In the middle of the This is true whether we're talking 20th century, it was about 50 percent. aboUt financing established institu- The absence of philanthropic tions such as day schools or summer investment is painful for those of us camps, or more innovative programs who care about the Jewish future. of identity enrichment such as If a relative is gravely ill, we spare Birthright Israel. Despite its proven no expense to save them. extraordinary impact on Jewish We attempt the riskiest maneuvers identity, Birthright struggles to send and sometimes invest in the most 15,000 students to Israel each year, outlandish cures. We should behave when the actual cohort of interested