Metro Far left: Shterni Kesselman, 10, of Oak Park and Mushky Mishulovin, 12, of West Bloomfield try out the new gym. Left: Stein family: Chana, Levi, Rabbis Bentzion and Mendel outside the girls division building. Living Jewishly An enhanced place o study opens for Lubavitch girls school students. Shelli Liebman Dorfman Senior Writer I f, as Rabbi Mendel Stein of the Lubavitch Cheder said, our students should be like Abraham, welcoming guests to his tent:' then the school's tent just increased its capacity to teach those who welcome. With the school's newly expanded and renovated girls division building comes a more comfortable, safe and stimulating environment, Stein says. A $750,000 donation from Ed and Gloria Meer allowed an addition to both levels of the school's Lillian Schwarcz Education Center building on Coolidge in Oak Park. It was enlarged from 11,000 to 14,000 square feet with four new classrooms and a teacher's lounge. The donation for the Meer Family Annex also funded renovations for the entire building, including a new roof, heating and cooling system, security system, floors, ceilings, furniture and lighting. Some walls were moved, merging smaller rooms into larger ones, like a gym, something the school never had before. A playground will be added in the spring. "The building was in great need of the improvements',' said Levi Stein, the school's communication director. "Now " Hadas and Dennis Bernard A16 December 20 * 2007 the students will have a place to play indoors and outdoors and there is more office space in a building that is up to date with everything new and fresh" Students were relocated to the Bais Chabad of North Oak Park during the construction, which began last summer. The 100 students who use the building — including girls from preschool to grade 8 and boys from preschool to sec- ond grade — moved back into the facility Nov. 20. Boys from third grade through high school meet in the boys division building on Nine Mile Road in Oak Park, which also is used for college level classes. Now that the construction is complete, Rabbi Bentzion Stein, director of both schools, says, "There is a whole new excitement that makes the children look forward to coming to school every day. The staff, as well, feel that the school is on a whole new level." One-Of-A-Kind "Aside from having all aspects of regular school, the uniqueness at Lubavitch Cheder is that not only do stu- dents complete their own studies, but they share what they learn with the community,' said Mendel Stein, the school's development director. "One of the styles of outreach of the Chabad Rabbi — Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson — was street out- reach," Stein said. "They follow that theme every single day from the first day of school, in class and in the community, including visits to senior citizen homes and passing out menorahs and Shabbat and holiday literature in the super- market to any Jew, no matter if they know a lot or a little." He says,"The school model is the idea of someone dedi- cating his life to the Jewish people, learning it as a way of life and how to share it with everyone else. It's no wonder a majority of our alumni still do outreach work full time in the community" Last month, 100 alums gathered at a reunion in New York during the International Chabad Conference. For Mendel and Levi Stein and their father Bentzion Stein, the school has been a place of learning and a place for family. Bentzion's wife, Chana Stein, is principal of the girls division and their daughter-in-law, Chaya Stein, is a teacher. Bentzion and Chana's nine children all attended the school and they have a grandchild who is a current student. As the finishing touches are placed on the girls building, plans are in the works for the Harry and Wanda Zekelman Center, which will be a brand new boys school building on the Nine Mile Road site, created with a $3 million donation from Alan Zekelman of Bloomfield Hills. II JARC Transportation Advanced Hebrew Farmington Hills-based JARC has established the Hadas and Dennis Bernard Family Transportation Program. The program will help meet the transportation needs of people with developmental disabilities in JARC's Shetzer Independent Living Services (ILS) programs ensuring participants can work, shop and socialize. "Hadas and I felt that transportation was an area greatly impacted by state funding cuts and is going to be needed even more as JARC's population ages ; ) said Dennis Bernard, a longtime JARC board member who is intimately familiar with Michigan's fiscal challenges as co-chair of Federation's government relations oversight committee. Joyce Keller, JARC's executive director, said, "This gift will ensure that people served by JARC will have an even greater ability to be included in their communities." The Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit's Alliance for Jewish Education, FedEd, will offer two classes for advanced Hebrew students who are interest- ed in improving their conversational skills by reading articles from Israeli newspapers and discussing current events. Classes begin the week of Jan. 9 and are offered 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Sundays and 10 a.m.-noon Wednesdays. They will be held at the Max M. Fisher Federation Building, 6735 Telegraph, Bloomfield Township. The Hebrew Department also has a selection of Hebrew materials for independent study. Call Nira Lev, (248) 205-2541, for assessment and class placement. To register by phone or for information, contact Marion Bronstein, (248) 642-4260, ext. 372, or e-mail Bronstein@jfmd.org.