Arts Life now serving alcohol cocktails sake I Japanese beer j wine On The Tube • sushi & sashimi • teriyaki / tempura • noodles • vegetarian selections r BUY ONE LUNCH OR DINNER GET THE SECOND FOR 1/2 OFF! Defending Jews Oscar-nominated documentary on bias-fighting Sister Rose debuts on Cinemax. Hours: Mon - Thurs 11:30 am - 10:00 pm Fri & Sat 11:30 am -11:00 pm Sun 12:00 pm 9:30 pm Not good w/any other o Expires 5/31/05 MICHAEL ELKIN Jewish Exponent private party room - carryout - catering S 7365 Orchard Lake Road I West Bloomfield (1/8 mile north of 14 Mile Rd. in Robin's Nest Plaza) 2222 Hogback Road I Ann Arbor 734.971.5168 All You Ca» Eat ClAines 13i4 t!! Legs family Friendly Fe r 111 ) tik Kids 2 Free Lunch Lunch M - Sat, 11 - 3:30 Dinner M-Th, 4-10 starting at SS" for adults Dinner starting at $9" for adults Fri-Sat, 4-10:30 • Sun 11-10 1 r r 20% OFF TOTAL BILL Dine-in Only Expires 6-26-05 www 10% OFF 1 CARRY-OUT Expires 6-26-05 we Have 13130 ,11 & `-'114 c --t e." 1`. Fri-Sun on y 26855 Greenfield Rd. • Southfield 248-557-9898 • Fax: 248-557-2038 Across from Hebrew Memorial Chapel 9763g3 NO COUPON NECESSARY SPECIALS Free rice puddingfor all lunches 00/THRU 0 DEC. 31, 2005 Authentic Greek With Touches Of Italy & Spain • Daily Specials • Carry-out & Catering • Private Parties $5 I OFF ALL BOTTLES OF WINE HOURS: Mon-Thurs 1 1-1 0 • Sat 1 1-1 1 Sunday 4-10 OFF LUNCH & ALL DINNERS ANYDAY-7 DAYS A WEEK NO COUPON NECESSARY! ANYDAY-7 DAYS A WEEK JUST MENTION THIS AD! 6263 Orchard Lake Rd. • N. of 15 Mile Rd. Sugar Tree Plaza • West Bloomfield 248-855-3993 974400 What a Shayner Ponim!! Was your mug in the Jewish News? Would you like a copy of the photo or artide for framing? You can order reprints of photos and articles that have appeared in any of our publications. 5/19 2005 104 For price and size information, call Pam at 248.354.6060 ext. 219 or use the online order form at: wwvv.detroitjewishnews.com/reprints 880610 ister Rose explains it all to you. And what she has to explain is seemingly the inexplicable: How an 84-year-old nun has battled for decades to debrief the world on the long, heinous history of anti- Semitism. As Tevye would say, "It isn't easy." But when you're an American mem- ber of the Dominican order of nuns who sees the world is askew and wants to point out the absurdity of bias, who said it would be? What says a lot is Sister Rose's Passion, the Oscar-nominated docu- mentary about Sister Rose Thering, which will have its TV debut 7 p.m. Tuesday, May 24, on Cinemax. Earning its Oscar nod this year in the Documentary Short category, Sister Rose's Passion is anything but short on the passion she has felt for more than 50 years in trying to get Jews their due. One questions why. Were her best friends Jewish while she was growing up on a Wisconsin farm? Did she ever wonder how such a small group could produce so many motion pictures in Hollywood? Was she ever mistaken as Jewish herself because of her first name? Was she a fan of Jewish culture? None of the above: "It all comes from the holy spirit of God," she says of the inspiration which led to her playing an integral part in integrating a Jewish sensibility into Vatican II with its "Nostra Aetate: The Declaration on the Relationship of the Church to non-Christian Religions," which it passed 40 years ago. "What it says is that we, as Christians, can not and will not blame Jews for Jesus' death. Never again. Jews were not responsible; it was the Romans," says Sister Rose, "and no way should [Jews] be looked at that way ever again." (Sister Rose, it should be noted, is not a fan of Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ, which many felt stirred up old feelings about Jews as "Christ-killers.") "Even though we teach this," she says of her anti-anti-Semitic stance, Sister Rose: "Let God do his work." "Christ-killers" is an expression that is "still brought up. Most still believe" in the myth that Jews are responsible for the killing of Jesus. Improving Interfaith Relations "We go right back to our old prejudices when pressed," says Sister Rose, who was introduced to Judaism — or Jews — as a child. "My father was driving. I was young at the time, sitting in the car and he whispered to me, 'We have a new phar- macist in town, and I think he's Jewish."' That whisper became a buzz saw, as "I wondered why my father had whispered it to me." When she brought it up to her moth- er, Rose found the response echoing in her ears. "Jews?" Her mother responded. "They were the ones who killed Jesus." Sister Rose made it her obligation to become more familiar with historical fact. "Some cultures respond more hate- fully," says Sister Rose of those she has encountered over the years, "and hang on to this bias. We have many groups from Poland and Germany that come to this country," and their prejudices