To Life! ON THE COVER 'Let All Who Are Hungry Come And Eat.' COMMUN ITY CARE Shelli Liebman Dorfman - Staff Writer 0 n March 11, George Orley of Bloomfield Hills was called to the Torah at Congregation Shaarey Zedek as a bar mitzvah. But it was during the weeks prior to that Shabbat that he came to accept an important responsibil- ity of adulthood: helping care for those in need. Joining with a new genera- tion of supporters, George chose MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger as the recipient of dona: tions he asked his friends to make instead of buying him bar mitzvah presents. "We enclosed a card in each of the 140 kids' invitations, telling them in lieu of gifts we hoped they would make a donation to Mazon," said George's mom, Diane." At his bar mitzvah party, informational material was placed on each table describing Mazon and its benefits. Supporting hunger relief was an easy choice for the 13-year-old. "The kids I know don't have to look for a meal, they just have one said George, a seventh-grader at Cranbrook Rabbi Berkun Schools in Bloomfield Hills. "The kids who get food because of the donations wouldn't die without it, but they would be hungrier." 30 April 6 • 2006 Detroit embraces MAZON's mission through youth, schools, synagogues. According to Rabbi Jonathan Berkun, Shaarey Zedek's b'nai mitzvah families are encouraged to support the Los Angeles-based Mazon. The organization allo- cates donations from the Jewish community to prevent and ate hunger among those of all faiths and backgrounds in the • United States and around the world, including Darfur, Sudan; tsunami-hit Asia; and in the Hurricane Katrina-devastated Gulf Coast. "I explain that in the shtetl, when a rabbi was asked to offici- ate at a simchah, he first asked that all the hungry people in the neighborhood be fed," Rabbi Berkun said. He encourages modern-day b'nai mitzvah to follow the Mazon "3-percent solution" creed to contribute 3 percent of the cost of their party as a symbolic way to continue this tradition. "Just as we are about to sit down and celebrate, we, too, are first making sure that those among us who are hungry have food to eat," he said. "I believe this type of donation helps the celebrating family as well as the entire community remember one of our primary mis- sions as Jews – to help those who are less fortunate." Diane Orley said, "We had a positive response to the request for dona- tions. I wish we had asked the adults to do the same thing. We are very passionate about Mazon; and my husband, Randy, and I plan to make a further donation to Mazon in honor of George's' bar mitzvah?' Way Back When Detroit has had a Mazon connec- tion for nearly 20 years, almost since author and teacher Leonard Fein – founder of Moment maga- zine and the National Jewish Coalition for Literacy — estab- lished the national group in 1985. That year, the organization dis- tributed $20,000 in cash grants. Now more than $3 million is granted annually to more than George Orley gets ready to light a candle at his bar mitzvah celebration. 300 hun- ger-relief agencies worldwide,_ including emergency food provid- ers, food banks, multi-ser- vice organi- zations and Rabbi Yedwab advocacy groups seeking solutions to the hunger problem. Locally, Mazon — which is the Hebrew word for "food" — began with a bang. "When I first came to Temple Israel, the national Mazon orga- nization was brand new," said Rabbi Paul Yedwab. "Rabbi [A. Irving] Schnipper and I were very excited about it and we created the Mazon Council of Metropolitan Detroit with the support of most of our area Conservative and Reform rab- bis?' -A Detroit-based initiative asking b'nai mitzvah celebrants to make donations to Mazon in honor of their guests was taken to the national level. "Within our own congrega- tions, we tried to think of ways to make it easy for people to get involved," Rabbi Yedwab said. "Iry Kramer, our original director, created a brochure that would be given to each of our b'nai mitzvah?' Representatives from each affiliated congregation met regularly. It Ivas through those meetings that Mazon branched out in a remarkable way, with