TORAH PORTION SPORTS Rebuilding Year The Torah's Treehouse Bloomfield Unified shows its hockey potential. Shabbat Terumah: Exodus 25:1-27:19; I Kings 5:26-6:13. Steve Stein Special to the Jewish News All three are excited about the Chargers' future. "We'll be better next year when everybody is used to the sys- tem," said Haron. Hertz said, "It helps to see a lot of the kids on your team in school every day." Added Werner, "We're developing a game-winning mentality:' Among Bloomfield's assistant coach- es are former Berkley High standouts Bryan Fenster, 24, and Devin Shencopp, 22, Marshall Shencopp's son. Said Fenster, "It's been difficult for the veter- an guys here because of all the coaching turnover, but they're working hard and learning from their mistakes." Devin Shencopp made hockey news t may not be apparent in the victory column, but the Bloomfield Unified high school hockey team isn't on thin ice anymore. First-year coach Marshall Shencopp says it's been a productive season for the Chargers, who were 6-13-1 last week. Shencopp is the third coach in five years for Bloomfield, which is made up of players from Andover and Lahser. "We're making strides in creating a new environment on the team. There's focus and discipline, and we're having fun," Shencopp said. "I love teaching, compet- ing, and seeing the smiles on the kids' faces when they do something they didn't think they can do:' Among the 17 smiling players on the Bloomfield roster are senior forward Chad Schwalb from Andover, junior goalie Bloomfield Unified's Marshall Shencopp, Seth Haron, Brent Jake Clark from Lahser, Hertz, Bryan Fenster, Jake Clark and Devin Shencopp and sophomores Seth when he left the nationally renowned Haron, Brent Hertz and Jeremy Werner HoneyBaked AAA travel program to from Andover. Haron, Hertz and Werner are the lone sophomores on the play for Berkley as a junior and senior. He was a Division 2 All-State honorable team. There also are two juniors and a mention choice in 2001. dozen seniors. "I'm enjoying working with the Clark said his love of hockey kept Bloomfield kids. It's been a great expe- him from leaving the squad after his rience for me because I hOpe to be a sophomore year. He's happy he stayed teacher someday," said Shencopp, an on board. "We're much more organized, Oakland University junior. focused and hockey-oriented;' Clark said. "Now, hockey is more of a sport Bear-Able than an after-school activity. We have a Eli Weiner scored eight points and drive to achieve something." grabbed seven rebounds in helping Schwalb, in his third year on the the Berkley High boys basketball team team, agrees with Clark's assessment. defeat Farmington 46-34 and clinch at "We're more business-like, more least a tie for the Oakland Activities focused, and taking everything more . Association Division IV champi- seriously," Schwalb said. onship. The win gave the Bears a 9-0 Clark is excited about Bloomfield's record in OAA Division IV. They were young talent, specifically the three 15-2 overall. sophomores. "This team is going to In an earlier 84-57 drubbing of win. It's too bad I probably won't be Birmingham Seaholm, Weiner led around for the pinnacle he said. Berkley with 22 points and Matt Haron, Hertz and Werner left travel Weitzman added 10. hockey to join Bloomfield. Defensemen Hertz and Werner played on the same Please send sports news to Detroit Skating Club-based USA Eagles sports@thejewishnews.corn. team for four years. Haron is a forward. I ❑ D in heaven, like the acacia planks on riving north from Eilat earth, are standing,"omdim." In this through the Aravah region way, the tabernacle is viewed as a recently, I admired the aca- microcosm, an earthly approxima- cia trees that dot its rocky land- tion of heaven. scape. Acacia trees look quite unusu- Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai also al, like umbrellas stuck in the sand. teaches a broader principle They provide welcome with his bold statement shade for animals and the mitzvot must all that humans in what can be a be performed "the way rather harsh environment. they grow." The Torah and Acacia trees (atzei shit- mitzvot are not meant to tim) also provided the be frozen in place like pet- wood for our first national rified wood. They must be construction project, the kept pointed in the direc- tabernacle. tion of growth, toward the Since there are so few heavens. Rabbi trees in this region of The growth of Judaism Daniel Nevins wilderness, one might must be organic, continu- Special to the wonder how the acacia ing the process of earlier Jewish News trees came to be abundant generations. The mitzvot enough to build the taber- are intended for growth of the nacle and its sacred accessories. The individual, of the community, and of Midrash asks this very question and the world. answers that our patriarch Jacob The golden menorah was also foresaw this need, and planted the shaped like a tree. With branches trees centuries before the exodus. He and blossoms, it stretched up from further instructed his descendants the ground toward the sky, emitting to take 'the wood with them as they light like the radiance of the heav- departed Egypt so that they would ens. The tabernacle in the desert was be able to build the tabernacle when thus no mere tent. It was a tree the command arrived. To plant a tree house, arranged to simulate and is to plan for the future. stimulate the continued growth of a If you have seen diagrams of the people in partnership with God. tabernacle, you may have noticed This portion challenges us to that it was not built like a log cabin, ensure that Judaism remains both with the beams layered horizontally. grounded and dynamic for future In verse 26:15, we read that the aca- generations. cia planks were omdim, standing upright. The Talmud (Sukkah 55b) Danny Nevins is a rabbi at Adat Shalom teaches in the name of Rabbi Synagogue in Farmington Hills. Shimon bar Yochai that the planks were to be arranged in their direc- tion of growth, with the root side below and the tips above. Actually, he states that "all of the mitzvot can be fulfilled only in the way they Conversations grow, as it says, 'acacia trees stand- Think of a mitzvah which ing; that they stand the way they your family already per- grow." forms. Can you devise a The Halachah derives from this creative way to give it new that the lulav must also be arranged life and new meaning? with the upper tips of each plant facing upwards. Midrashic and mys- tical traditions compare this verse to Isaiah 6:2, which says that the angels ❑ March 2 • 2006 23