Michigan-native Veronica Zador leads an 11-hour yoga practice in Royal Oak. Yoga instructor Veronica Zador aims to empower. BY JULIE WEINGARDEN DUBIN PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRETT MOUNTAIN cads turn, eyes close, legs extend and students exhale as stress drifts away, and the gentle words of the instructor float through the room. "Let your shoulder blades melt down into your mat," says the familiar voice that has finally come home. It's the voice of Veronica Zador, 54, yoga teacher, grandmother, mother, wife and friend, who smiles warmly at the 50 yoga students, both women and men, stretched out on their backs at the Royal Oak Community Center. It was this "homecoming celebration" where Zador chose to join friends in a first- ever 11-hour yoga practice split between two dates: Nov. 11 and Nov. 12. The lecture-free event was designed for students of all levels and included asana, pranayama and meditation. Zador was the sole teacher. "Veronica is tuned in to people's needs, and she makes everyone feel good no matter what level they're at," says Mimi Holland-Moritz, 79, a yoga student and teacher who attended the event. "Everyone who came has a special feeling towards Veronica — she inspired me to become a yoga teacher when I was 67 years old." Zador, founder of Namaste Yoga and Yoga Shala of Namaste Yoga in Royal Oak, moved to Los Angeles two years ago so her husband of 32 years, Ivan Zador, could take a medical research position. The couple kept their West Bloomfield home where they raised their daughters, Liza and Lara. Today, Liza and her husband, Jason, and their twin 1-year-old sons, Alexander and Andrew, live in the home. Zador, who has been teaching for 18 years, planned the "empower practice" as a way to give thanks to her first and most-loving yoga community. "I've been gone for two years and I thought about how I could give back," she says. "I realized an 11-hour yoga practice would be an enormous thank-you card." Zador is president of the International Association of Yoga Therapists (an organization that teaches yoga therapy worldwide) and is vice president of Yoga Alliance, which has (continued on page 16) JNPLATINUM • DECEMBER 2005 • 1 5