11 4 Volunteers Hadas Corey, 14, and her mother, Lisa, of Birmingham with Ruth Farber of West Bloomfield High Teen joins volunteers in helping seniors visit gravesides of loved ones. Robert A. Sklar Editor adas Corey, 14, feels blessed to have such a wonderful family and is eager to give back. Helping seniors visit the graves of their loved ones is among her favorite mitzvah moments, and she has had plenty of those through her work with Volunteer Impact. "Helping is such a nice feel- ing," said Hadas, a Birmingham Seaholm High School sopho- more. "I'm so fortunate — instead of taking life for granted, I've chosen to give back to sen- iors in a very special way." Hadas gives back through Kever Avot, an annual communal event of Temple Israel in West Bloomfield and Ira Kaufman Chapel in Southfield. The event allows seniors without the means or ability to get to the cemetery to recite Kaddish at the grave- sides of family and friends dur- ing the High Holiday season. Just finding the graves can be a chore. This year, 100 Temple Israel volunteers, including youths like Hadas, assisted 85 Jewish seniors picked up by bus at 10 assisted care and independent living complexes. More than 200 graves at 12 cemeteries were visited. In a dvar Torah as volunteer chaperones gathered at Temple Israel on Sept. 25, Rabbi Jennifer H September 29 2005 Tisdale said: "This fulfills a beau- tiful tradition and mitzvah going back a long, long time." "I'm so proud of you:' said Herbert Kaufman of Ira Kaufman Chapel. "I'm sure God also is proud of you because you are doing God's work." It's the human connections that make Kever Avot work. Hadas and her mother, Lisa Corey, accompanied Ruth Farber, 79, of West Bloomfield as she vis- ited the grave of her husband, Edward, at Machpelah Cemetery in Ferndale. They were married 17 years when Edward died in 1966 age 43. Lisa accompanied Ruth last year as well; the two have kept in touch since. Most of Ruth's family lives out of state. The Coreys took a few minutes to visit the graves of Hadas' great grandparents Sue and Harry Rubenfire and her grandfather Joseph Corey. "She has a good heart," Ruth said of Lisa. "This mitzvah is one of the best things that you can do; I can't tell you how much it means to have a companion when you visit the cemetery" Ruth, a mother of four, loved having Hadas along this year. It means so much to me to have a young person to talk to and enjoy,' said Ruth, who lives at Hechtman Apartments on the Eugene and Marcia Applebaum Jewish Community Campus in West Bloomfield. Ethyl Green of Southfield with Kever Avot volunteer Marcy Bell of Wixom at the Machpelah grave of her husband, Ralph, who died in 1972 at age 59. "She connects well and is fun to be around:' Hadas said about her new elderly friend. "It's a great experience, meet- ing all the seniors and hearing their stories:' Lisa said. "Ruth is such a bright, lovely lady. "I get more out of this than you might imagine." All of which explains why Lisa has worked seven of the eight Kever Avots and Hadas five of them — since she was 8 years old. ❑ Kever Avot, Hebrew for "Graves of Our Ancestors:' is an 8-year-old effort of Temple Israel's Robert Sosnick Family Life Center. Ira Kaufman Chapel spon- sors it with assistance from the temple's Hanley and Susan Yorke Builder Endowment Fund. Fleischman Residence in West Bloomfield donated snacks and lunches. Breath of Spring of Bloomfield Township provided a flower for each senior. The program is open to the community. 23