To Life! KATRINA RELIEF Temple to Temple Emanu-EI members focus hurricane relief to help one congregation rebuild. Keri Guten Cohen Story Development Editor Left: Margaret and Eric Goldstein of Southfield with their daughters emple Emanu-El members saw a concrete way to help a devastated Louisiana synagogue recover from Hurricane Katrina and they went to work immediately. Even before a fund-raising din- ner Oct. 10, the Oak Park temple raised $1,700 for the Northshore Congregation in Mandeville, La. Another $1,300 was realized at the dinner attended by 200 peo- ple, and they're still hoping to send more. Some of the motivation comes from Emanu-El member Eric Goldstein. "When Rabbi [Joseph] Klein first announced that he wanted our congregation to reach out to a sister congregation in the Gulf States that had been hit hard by Katrina, I informed him that my brother Mark was a member of the Northshore Jewish Congregation," he said. "We opened up communica- tions with their president and rabbi and learned about their struggles and efforts to rebuild. "In the midst of their turmoil, Northshore members gathered and sorted clothes to send to a hospital in Mississippi," Goldstein told those at the din- ner. "I would tope our congrega- tion would perform such tikkun olam [repair of the world] when faced with such adversity." Congregants at the dinner also listened to Detroiter Charles Criss, head of temple mainte- nance, talk about his hard-hit family in the Gulf area, particu- larly Mississippi. Members col- lected separate funds for his family as well. Rabbi Klein was pleased by the turnout and generous response and by the connection made with the Louisiana synagogue. "I hope that our relationship Rachel, 10, and Miriam, 6 T 22 Below, clockwise from upper left: Emily Zonder, 8, of Huntington Woods with Alison Diez of Troy, co-chair of social action commit- tee at Temple Emanu-El Social action committee member Mary Gilhuly of Oak Park serves dinner to Arleen Miller of Huntington Woods. Bea Sacks of Huntington Woods, social action co-chair, welcomes diners with Murt Sherbow of Oak Park. Rabbi Joseph Klein and Charles Criss of Detroit and efforts to help them will extend beyond tonight's dinner:' he said to his members. "Theirs is going to be a long-term strug- gle, and it is our responsibility to reach out to them — person to person, synagogue to synagogue — and to help make a differ- ence." Alison Diez, co-chair of Emanu-El's Social Action Committee, said, "Listening to the personal experiences of those who left the Gulf Coast due to the hurricane as well as those with family from the region was quite powerful and moving. While there is still much healing and work that needs to be done, aid- ing our sister congregation with its rebuilding sheds light on this terrible tragedy' Social Action co-chair Bea Sacks and committee member Mary Gilhuly were primarily responsible for organizing the fund-raising dinner. All food was donated by Classic Cuisine. CI October 20 . 2005